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The Twenty-sixth Sunday in Ordinary Time
Matthew 21:28-32 + Homily
16 Minutes 37 Seconds
Link to the Readings:
https://bible.usccb.org/bible/readings/092720.cfm
(New American Bible, Revised Edition)
From the parish bulletin of Sunday 27 September 2020:
“And now for something completely different,” as the entertainment industry is wont to say. Some aspects of liturgical worship are used for reasons that express the psychology of praise. For instance, there are vesture, candles, bells and, especially, holy water. The more that worship is confined to cerebral edification, the less attention is given to the offering of all human senses in the worship of God. After the Protestant schism, the pulpit replaced the altar, and churches became more like lecture halls with comfortable pews for listeners.
By Fr. George William RutlerThe Twenty-sixth Sunday in Ordinary Time
Matthew 21:28-32 + Homily
16 Minutes 37 Seconds
Link to the Readings:
https://bible.usccb.org/bible/readings/092720.cfm
(New American Bible, Revised Edition)
From the parish bulletin of Sunday 27 September 2020:
“And now for something completely different,” as the entertainment industry is wont to say. Some aspects of liturgical worship are used for reasons that express the psychology of praise. For instance, there are vesture, candles, bells and, especially, holy water. The more that worship is confined to cerebral edification, the less attention is given to the offering of all human senses in the worship of God. After the Protestant schism, the pulpit replaced the altar, and churches became more like lecture halls with comfortable pews for listeners.