Lex orandi - lex vivendi
  • ryandryand
    Posts: 1,640
    How we worship influences what we believe which influences how we live.

    Church teaches: What we believe
    Benedict teaches: How we worship
    Francis teaches: How we live

    Discuss.
    Thanked by 1miacoyne
  • I think it's a little simplistic to break the popes down like that. I think Francis focus comes from another understanding of liturgical theology: that lex orandi, lex credendi works in reverse, too. Faith finds its expression in the liturgy, and a people that doesn't even know Jesus in the first place will not be able to be fully receptive to the grace of the sacraments.

    Francis wants the first focus of the Church to be a relationship with Christ (so did Benedict, but it's clearly Francis' emphasis).
  • JulieCollJulieColl
    Posts: 2,465
    Yes, Andrew, that maxim does indeed work in reverse--something I didn't know until I read Pope Pius XII, in Mediator Dei, where he offers a splendid explanation of that ancient maxim which was first found in Prosper of Aquitaine's writings in the 4th c. :

    48. For this reason, whenever there was question of defining a truth revealed by God, the Sovereign Pontiff and the Councils in their recourse to the "theological sources," as they are called, have not seldom drawn many an argument from this sacred science of the liturgy. For an example in point, Our predecessor of immortal memory, Pius IX, so argued when he proclaimed the Immaculate Conception of the Virgin Mary. Similarly during the discussion of a doubtful or controversial truth, the Church and the Holy Fathers have not failed to look to the age-old and age-honored sacred rites for enlightenment. Hence the well-known and venerable maxim, "Legem credendi lex statuat supplicandi" - let the rule for prayer determine the rule of belief.[45]

    The sacred liturgy, consequently, does not decide or determine independently and of itself what is of Catholic faith. More properly, since the liturgy is also a profession of eternal truths, and subject, as such, to the supreme teaching authority of the Church, it can supply proofs and testimony, quite clearly, of no little value, towards the determination of a particular point of Christian doctrine. But if one desires to differentiate and describe the relationship between faith and the sacred liturgy in absolute and general terms, it is perfectly correct to say, "Lex credendi legem statuat supplicandi" - let the rule of belief determine the rule of prayer. The same holds true for the other theological virtues also, "In . . . fide, spe, caritate continuato desiderio semper oramus" - we pray always, with constant yearning in faith, hope and charity.[46]


    Pope Pius XII in the same document also offers this little gem:

    The worship [the Church] offers to God, all good and great, is a continuous profession of Catholic faith and a continuous exercise of hope and charity, as Augustine puts it tersely. "God is to be worshipped," he says, "by faith, hope and charity."
    Thanked by 1Andrew Motyka