Pope Francis Shifts Power From Rome With 'Hugely Important' Liturgical Reform
Source: New York Times
Pope Francis Shifts Power From Rome With Hugely Important Liturgical Reform
By JASON HOROWITZ SEPT. 9, 2017
VATICAN CITY Pope Francis, who has used his absolute authority in the Vatican to decentralize power from Rome, made a widespread change Saturday to the ways, and words, in which Roman Catholics worship by amending Vatican law to give national bishop conferences greater authority in translating liturgical language.
Its hugely important, said Rita Ferrone, a specialist in Catholic liturgy who writes for Commonweal, a liberal Catholic magazine. She said that by loosening Romes grip on the language of prayers, Francis had restored the intention of the reforms of the Second Vatican Council and erased some of the rollbacks of his predecessor, Benedict XVI. It was especially astute that he put it into canon law because it makes it official.
Francis has not been shy in efforts to reform the church and has tread on some of its most delicate subjects, from challenging the Roman bureaucracy that runs the church to emphasizing acceptance of gays and the divorced.
On Saturday he stepped squarely onto the battlefield of the so-called Liturgy Wars, which, especially in the English-speaking church, have divided liberals and conservatives for decades.
With Magnum Principium, a papal Motu Proprio or a document issued under the popes own legal authority Francis altered a key 2001 instruction by Pope John Paul II that empowered Vatican officials in Rome to ensure local translations adhered to the standard Latin.
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