If the point of liturgy is to deliver Eucharist to layfolk it could be a drive thru. There are easier ways to do this.
Try this on for size: Liturgy as Vineyard.
- The Eucharist is the ‘penny’ for showing up and working.
- The penny is a ‘small consolation’ compared to the bigger aims of the Vintner (The Eucharist can only be considered small next to the Beatific Vision, otherwise I think I would be in hot water)
- If you show up with a heart to work (that is, with a recent confession under your belt, [I hate saying ‘in a state of grace’ because that’s a hill St. Joan of Arc was willing to die on that we can’t really know if we’re there. In her words: “If I am not, may the Lord bring me to a state of Grace. If I am, may the Lord keep me there.”]) you get the consolation of the Eucharist.
- The Eucharist powers your work for the Kingdom, as a penny pays for the necessity of ordinary life. To keep providing for your life, you need to keep showing up to work.
- From the Vintner’s perspective, a penny must be a small token to get a lot of work done in the vineyard. He wants laborers (the harvest is great, the workers are few!), he wants fruits (grapes, or the fruits of a virtuous life), he wants to transform the fruits into glory (grapes to wine; people to saints; the world to His Kingdom).
Let’s stretch this analogy. It’s clear that ‘working in the garden’ can be ‘working in His Kingdom’ so maybe the liturgy itself isn’t the Vineyard. So what is the liturgy in this Vineyard framework?
Well, wait a second. I’ve used before the image of that venn diagram. Let me find it.

Heaven above, Earth below, the garden of eden in the middle. The Church occupies this space now. the GARDEN of Eden. Being in the Church is being in the Garden. Is the Eucharist the ‘bread line’? Liturgy is how we give thanks to God, commit to returning to work tomorrow, receive our ‘stipend’? Adoration, Contrition, Thanksgiving, Supplication: We love you Lord, we are sorry for what we have done and failed to do, thank you for giving us your Church, help us in our necessities.
Liturgy isn’t just an elaborate ‘thank you’, though. It’s for God yes, but it’s not NOT for us. Just not ONLY for us, the way a drive thru is for our convenience.
There is a lot of ceremony wrapped up in things that kings do, ritual, pomp and circumstance, etc. The recent Coronation of Charles III comes to mind–anything the King does that is important is wrapped up in ceremony. In the Eucharist, we offer ourselves to God yes but then God steps down from heaven and visits us, too. No soul who receives the Eucharist leaves Mass without a personal audience with the King of Kings.
Liturgy is the ceremony by which we afford the proper respect to the King. Liturgy is the ritual whereby we offer ourselves in service to the King. Liturgy is the garden whereby spiritual work is done for and by the King.
So in Liturgical Comparison, to reduce the Liturgy to “But the Eucharist is Valid” (as I have done, mea maxima culpa) is a mistake.
Just riffin’ here. A lot on the ol’ noggin.
PLEASE NOTE: I have not made any claims in this post comparing the NO and TLM. I’m thinking about why the question is so important. More thoughts are coming on this, but…probably slowly. If anything I’ve said in this post is a heretical error, please tell me quickly so I can correct it–that’s because I’m stupid, not because I’m a heretic.
AMDG
