Vatican Authorizes Liturgical Adaptations for Indigenous in Mexico without Changing the Content of the Roman Rite



The Vatican's Dicastery for Divine Worship and the Discipline of the Sacraments, with the authority of Pope Francis, on November 8 of 2024, granted the recognitio of some liturgical adaptations for the celebration of the Holy Mass in the Tseltal, Tsotsil, Ch’ol, Tojolabal, and Zoque ethnic groups of the diocese of San Cristóbal de Las Casas, Mexico.
Cardinal Felipe Arizmendi Esquivel, Bishop emeritus of San Cristobal de Las Casas, explained this on the website Exaudi...
He explained that this is the official recognition of the Church by which these adaptations are approved as valid and legitimate; They are the liturgy of the Church, and not just customs and habits. This is the second time in the entire post-conciliar history in which liturgical adaptations have been approved; the other was for the dioceses of Zaire, in Africa. The Church has adopted what they live and which is in accordance with the Roman rite. If there are deviations in some indigenous customs, we can help them to reach their fullness in Christ and in his Church.
Ritual dances were approved at the offertory, as in Africa, in the prayer of the faithful or in the thanksgiving after communion. The content of the Mass is not changed, but the way it is expressed.
It was approved that women (up to three), should carry out the ministry of incense bearers in the Mass, instead of the priest. Once he imposes and blesses the incense, she or they incense the altar, the images, the Gospel book, the ministers and the assembly. This is not done with the common censer, but with an incense burner proper to their culture.
It was also approved that a lay person, man or woman, in some regions known as principal or principala, who are persons of recognized moral importance, lead certain parts of the community prayer, either at the beginning of the Mass, to initiate the community into the celebration, to name the intentions and to ask for forgiveness, or in the prayer of the faithful, after the priest makes the initial invitation and closes with the concluding prayer, or after communion as a thanksgiving, which the priest concludes with the post-communion prayer. This does not mean removing the priest from his service as president of the assembly, since he is the one who is at the head of the celebration, and he authorizes these moments. This lay person does not pray only in his own name, but rather promotes and guides the prayer of all. Again, the content of the Roman rite is not changed, but only its cultural expression.The Second Vatican Council, since December 4, 1963, had already promoted that there be adaptations in the liturgy. This is what the Constitution Sacrosanctum Concilium says on liturgical renewal:

“The Church does not seek to impose a rigid uniformity in those things which do not affect the faith or the good of the whole community, not even in the liturgy; on the contrary, she respects and promotes the genius and the peculiar qualities of the different races and peoples. She studies with sympathy and, if possible, preserves intact what she finds in the customs of the peoples which is not indissolubly linked to superstitions and errors, and sometimes even accepts them in the liturgy itself, provided that they can be harmonized with the true and authentic liturgical spirit. In revising the liturgical books, while preserving the substantial unity of the Roman Rite, legitimate variations and adaptations will be admitted for the different groups, regions, peoples, especially in the missions, and this will be taken into account in establishing the structure of the rites and rubrics” (Nos. 37-38). “In certain places and circumstances, a more profound adaptation of the liturgy is urgently needed, which entails greater difficulties… The adaptations that are considered useful or necessary will be proposed to the Apostolic See to be introduced with its consent” (Ibid 40).

In order to implement what the Council ordered, the then-called Congregation for Divine Worship and the Discipline of the Sacraments, on January 25, 1994, published the Fourth Instruction entitled The Roman Liturgy and Inculturation. Among other things, it says that “diversity does not harm its unity, but rather enriches it” (No. 1). “The liturgy of the Church must be able to express itself in every human culture, while preserving its identity through fidelity to the tradition received from the Lord” (Ibid. 18). “The liturgy, like the Gospel, must respect cultures, but at the same time invites us to purify and sanctify them” (Ibid. 19-20). “Diversity in some elements of liturgical celebrations is a source of enrichment, always respecting the substantial unity of the Roman Rite, the unity of the whole Church and the integrity of the faith that has been transmitted to the saints once and for all.”  
The San Cristóbal de Las Casas diocese, originating in 1539, serves around 1.6 million Catholics out of a total population of approximately 2.5 million. It covers part of Chiapas, Mexico’s southern state with a large Indigenous population.
The Tzotzil people are an approximately 400,000 Indigenous Maya people in the central Chiapas.
The Ch’ol are also Maya people, numbering around 220,000 and located mainly in the northern Chiapas.
The Tojolabʼal are also a Maya people, across Chiapas and numbering around 85,000.
The Zoque are about 40,000 in number as an Indigenous community mostly in northern Chiapas.
Sources: Exaudi News - The Pillar Catholic 
IMAGE of the San Cristobal Cathedral in Las Casas: GameOfLight, CC BY-SA 3.0, via Wikimedia Commons

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