tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7747077806405542777.post2179236728743552497..comments2023-06-01T04:31:28.520-05:00Comments on Liturgy & Catechesis Shall Kiss: New Roman Missal: If Not Now, When? Moving Forward with Changejdonliturgyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15729552755992633453noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7747077806405542777.post-61525059586528936052011-02-04T08:46:42.195-06:002011-02-04T08:46:42.195-06:00'Mil gracias to both of you for your encouragi...'Mil gracias to both of you for your encouraging words. Count my husband and me on board, big time. Our instructions on the changes coming and Roman Missal III, have been happening since last October; and, they continue. We're in the Fort Wayne/South Bend Diocese, and we're empowered by the Holy Spirit -- people of God.<br />Again, thank you, muchisimas. Greg and PatGreg and Patnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7747077806405542777.post-85007162143425426892010-08-26T08:21:38.344-05:002010-08-26T08:21:38.344-05:00We don't like change... unless we're the o...We don't like change... unless we're the ones who instigate it. (And even then, we often don't follow through with it.)<br /><br />I've centered my catechetical efforts around Luke 10:27, which I think lines up with the four pillars of the Catechism: mind=Creed, soul=Sacraments, strength=Life in Christ, heart=Prayer. By getting people to understand what they're saying (and what they believe), we can see how the liturgy's rites reflect our faith ("lex orandi, lex credendi"). Then we can discover what the liturgy challenges us to do, how it calls us to conversion and a Christian life. And then we can rest with Christ in our hearts, through prayer.<br /><br />It's a tall order...Jeffrey Pinyanhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/08758581112217835988noreply@blogger.com