I definitely believe you that your experience of the OF is probably as beautiful as the OF could get. I’m pretty sure, though, that the experience of this Benedictine monastery’s OF Mass by many “traditionalists” would not “instantly eliminate all this useless speculation about something way above our pay grade”, i.e., that it would stop the claims that some people make which say the EF is better than than the OF.
And I say this, because I actually just read an extremely interesting article yesterday. Obviously I can’t get into the specifics, because the author was clearly “pitting the OF and the EF” against each other…lol. Very generally, though, he spoke of “merit” and whether one form of the Mass was more meritorious for both the people and the priest than the other form. He brought up two aspects of “merit” - one was “intrinsic” merit and the other “extrinsic” merit. He noted that it is indisputable that with regards to intrinsic value or merit, is equal between the two forms (i.e., both are the Sacrifice of Christ and are infinitely valuable in this regard), but with regards to extrinsic value or merit, the two forms are not equal. And since the author was a FSSP priest, I am sure you can assume which form of the Mass he was advocating as being more meritorious/valuable for both the people and the faithful. Lol.
Anyway, I just mention this because there are still probably a large number of “traditionalists” who believe such things as what this FSSP was writing about, and that therefore, many of these such people would not be satisfied by attending a Mass even such as the one at your Benedictine monastery.
And, just FYI, the FSSP priest in this article laid out six factors in the extrinsic merit of a Mass, and the rite itself was just one factor. And so due to the possibility of variance in degree of the other five factors, he did mention the possibility of the OF being more extrinsically meritorious than the EF, though that was only on the whole and not with regards to the rituals themselves.
Also, one more comment regarding “way above our pay grade” - I imagine that some people who speculate about these things have their “speculations” based on the writings of people for whom these subjects are not “way above [their] pay grade” - just a thought.
Well it is way above our pay grade. We have no authority to effect any change to the structure of the Mass. We may have some limited local authority if we’re in music ministry or on liturgical committees, but our boundaries are (or should be) the Missal as it stands. While it may be fun to speculate on making this or that change to the OF, I think for many it is unhelpful.
I don’t want to get into an argument with an FSSP priest; I’ve heard similar arguments from our abbot advocating the OF over the EF, for theological, aesthetic (he’s a first-class musician and prize-winning organist) and practical reasons. As long as there are humans there will be different ways of looking at things and EF vs OF is no different. I’ve seen EF Masses on YouTube with all the stops pulled and for my tastes I find it over the top and distracting (in particular the vestments…). But then I’ve been to an OF Mass in Italy that would appear, to the uninitiated, to be identical to an EF High Mass. It was in Latin, ad orientem, and with the most ornate vestments I’ve every seen and equal to any EF video I’ve seen. So I don’t think it’s the form of the Mass, the extrinsic merit is rather due to the
effort that is put into it. The FSSP clearly put a lot of effort into celebrating the EF. Back in the pre-VII days though, I’ll bet dollars to donuts that there were plenty of Masses that were rushed, said carelessly, with iffy music, etc. If it came back as the only form, the same disobedient people who ignore the OF rubrics would likely ignore the EF rubrics if the EF became the OF.
What I like about our abbey’s Mass is first and foremost the music (I just happen to love Gregorian chant and sing in a schola), but also how beautifully it all flows with an elegant simplicity, in a church that while very modern in style is recognizable as an abbey church and has a very austere and simple decoration but with noble materials (granite, stone, brick, quality wood, brass, marble) that appeals to monastic simplicity. And also how the complexity of the liturgy is adapted to the degree of the celebration (weekday, feast, solemnity, Sunday, etc.) yet without losing its reverence even in an simple weekday Mass in Ordinary Time (which still has a cappella Gregorian chant).
The Missal is also always followed without fail to the letter, and the music is from the Graduale Romanum.
Compared to the EF Masses I’ve seen on YouTube (there is no convenient one that is non-SSPX for me to attend live), it sort of makes this debate, well,
redundant.