Call number
264.02 RAT
Status
Available
Call number
Pages
232
Description
Explains of the significance of the Liturgy today, exploring its nature as the central expression of faith, its form, the importance of time and space in it, the role of music and art in relation to it, and the need for renewal.
Publication
Ignatius Press (2000), Edition: Revised Edition Used, 232 pages
Original publication date
2000
ISBN
0898707846 / 9780898707847
UPC
008987078463
Collection
Subjects
User reviews
LibraryThing member vpfluke
This is an excellent book. It shows a wide-ranging thought on the meaning and "spirit" of the liturgy, which is primarily the Eucharist. Ratzinger introduces in the first chapter the sense of "play" that the Eucharist has. This is a surprise due to his presumptive watchdog status as cardinal. Now
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that he is Pope, we see a greater dimension of this man. His love for and absorption in the liturgy is obvious. He introduces the sense of our participation in the exitus and reditus that is common in many religions and is found in theBible. The sense of leaving or being put out there, and the sense of coming back. The life of Jesus Christ is just one example. He also deals with the ideas of sacred place and sacred time. He discusses images and music, and their necessity in the liturgy, He finishes with the interaction of body and spirit in the liturgy. Show Less
LibraryThing member CACPua
The discussion of Liturgy within the Church is endless: norms, structures, guidelines, etc. Through this book by Cardinal Ratzinger, now Pope Benedict XVI, there is a deeper and closer look of what really is celebrated as Christian public worship. The Spirit of the Liturgy, coming from its title,
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poses the essential from the actual, an ideal of reality. Looking at historical developments of the liturgy, this book is a good read for pastors, religious and lay. It is in understanding the celebration, not just from its ritualistic actions but through a spiritual lens of perceiving the transcendental events within each action. It is in this book that we see how the prelate depicts the celebration as a two-way interaction of God to man and man to God. Show Less