Well, I certainly would agree that there has been organic development over the centuries. Yet in general it has been gradual and more along the lines of additions as with the Gallican influencing the Roman as your quote states.
To give the Roman rite over to a committee which then simply starts stripping and/or altering most of the prayers is not organic development. And a certain type of antiquarianism, where changes are made to try to go back to some unknown rite from antiquity, has been condemned by Pope Pius XII in Mediator Dei paragraphs 62-64. God bless.
Oh I certainly don’t deny that there has been development. I simply deny the claims made by many that the Pian Missal is almost entirely identical to the Mass of Gregory or Gelasius.
I would disagree with you to a degree regarding what you say about organic development and comittees. After all, I am sure that Pius V’s missal was developed by a comittee of some kind.
I also disagree that organic development precludes removing things, or at least I deny this, if it is not in fact an argument you are making.
My general thinking about organic development and the Mass of Paul VI has to do with the unique place that the 20th century holds in all of history. The Church and Her Liturgy have always developed in a way parallel to the culture and the world in general. The Church never compromised with culture, and in the best of times She actually drove culture. However, she has never rejected culture altogether - only what has been found in it that is contrary to the faith. This development was very gradual and slow. It would come in a change in practice here and another there, a council every one to two hundred years, and so on. However in the 50 years before Vatican II, the world changed more than it had in the 500, or perhaps even 1,000, before that. My belief is that Vatican II and the Liturgical reforms following Vatican II are in some way a manifestation of the Church adjusting to the culture - not compromising (and perhaps “adjusting” is the wrong word; I simply mean to refer to what She has done relative to the culture and world over the centuries) - that had changed so rapidly. She had to find a way to reach a people that had undergone what was in past times centuries upon centuries’ worth of change.
I think that Vatican II and the Pauline Liturgy are a product of this. I also think it was guided by the Holy Spirit. Whether Vatican II had happened or not, we would still have the “microwave culture” that we have today, and I think that the vast, vast majority of people - all but the most devout of us - would have had a tremendous difficulty remaining attentive to the EF. In fact, this was beginning to happen as early as the 1940s and 50s. People simply were not paying attention to the Mass as they ought. I think that the Pauline Liturgy really and truly helped many to do so. Unfortunately, the Liturgy was so often abused and not celebrated as intended, but as this changes, we are more and more seeing the benefits of it.
I for one would love to say that it is the Mass, and that it ought not matter if people pay attention to it for that is their own fault. If they will not pay attention to it, we oughtn’t change it to encourage them to. This is almost always my line of thinking, and to a degree I believe it applies here as well. However, I also recognize that our God is a God who has is
defined by removing the obstacles that we ourselves put in our own paths. He went to the degree of becoming incarnate to do this. I really do see the Second Vatican Council and the Pauline Liturgy as an extension of the Incarnation inspired by the Holy Spirit that, just as Christ became man to reach His people, so did Christ deign to come to His people in the 20th century in a way in which more of us could be reached even through the walls we ourselves have erected.
Perhaps now that He has done so, and many of us have begun to return to Him, He has restored the EF of the Mass for those who, renewed in their faith, are ready to devote themselves to Him in such a way so as to attend the EF with the focus and devotion that the dignity of the Holy Mass demands.
Peace and God bless,
Shane