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Dsivanish
Guest
I was born in 1970 and raised in the Church, so I’ve only ever known post Vatican 2 and I don’t know why so many people seem to not like it. What did it change?
Before I joined CAF I had never met Catholics who had a problem with Vatican II, and I had never even heard of sedevacantism. I still think the V2 nonconformists are disproportionately magnified in the internet rather than in real life.I don’t know why so many people seem to not like it.
They’re on the Internet a lot because they have trouble finding like-minded people in real life.I still think the V2 nonconformists are disproportionately magnified in the internet rather than in real life.
Where I am the biggest change was the Mass. I remember as a child after Mass, everyone gathering around discussing what the new changes would mean.I was born in 1970 and raised in the Church, so I’ve only ever known post Vatican 2 and I don’t know why so many people seem to not like it. What did it change?
And adding to this very recognizable movement of the Holy Spirit was the growing desire for a whole Christian unity (ecumenism) that had begun in 1910 between Protestants and Anglicans with well wishes sent from the Catholic Church. Story here.Before Vatican The Church meant the hierarchy. The most critical change came in Lumen Gentium: “God planned to assemble in the holy Church all those who would believe in Christ.“ The Church as the People of God opened up new vistas for Catholics. The Holy Spirit was not restricted to clergy and religious, but lives in each of us. This was not something new, but a new emphasis on what we have always taught.
Only for a while? I thought they were still in charge!the Church seemed to have been overtaken by hipsters/ hippies/ activists for a while, a
This is often said but it isn’t true. It was generally celebrated in Greek at first, and then in Latin. These were not, in most parts of the Mediterranean world, vernacular languages.The Mass, as it had been for early centuries of the Church is now celebrated in the vernacular.
Except when we look at where Paul sent his letters, we see those areas were Greek-speaking areas for the most part. Even the ones that weren’t, like Rome, still would’ve had Greek be at least a somewhat known language.otjm:![]()
This is often said but it isn’t true. It was generally celebrated in Greek at first, and then in Latin. These were not, in most parts of the Mediterranean world, vernacular languages.The Mass, as it had been for early centuries of the Church is now celebrated in the vernacular.
By the time the New Testament (or at least the Gospels) was written and distributed enough to be used regularly in masses, I believe Greek had become the vernacular for the church.The New Testament, used at Mass, was written in Greek which was also not vernacular. St Peter had to improve his Greek, because it was not his vernacular; that is why his first letter is in good Greek (he had help) whereas the second is not (his Greek had improved enough to write on his own )
Latin is still a somewhat known languagea somewhat known language.
It is . . . the big problem is that those innovations didn’t evaporate in the 1970s, but continue today. There is lasting damage from whatever mindset took root 50-60 years ago, thought its roots were obviously simmering for decades beforehand.That is an impressively concise summary.