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drforjc
Guest
Ah, yes, Fr. Hunwicke. Very good post.
Ah, yes, Fr. Hunwicke. Very good post.
Hey, a few months ago, before I started my third job, I met a third order dominican sister at a cafe. We talked for a bit, I told her the news that I had heard about sedevecantism, she actually didn’t know anything about it, told me she would rather not pay attention to it. I also asked her about the Tridentine Mass and asked if they gave her pew cards like one of the articles on this site said. She said that the church never had any when she was a little kid. In fact, she didn’t understand the latin, nobody told her, nobody translated it, and I think nobody even taught latin in the school (Don’t know how long that school near our church was around). She said she was ‘happy’ when Vatican II came around and the mass became more vernacular. Of course, I understand the feelings of some traditionalists: You had something that you were raised up taken from you. I’ve had that done to me several times. So, just to ask the questions:
- Did you know latin in the Tridentine Mass?
- Did the priest repeat the readings and the gospel in vernacular?
- Did anyone give you pew cards for the Mass?
- Did anyone say when the Church started doing the Tridentine Mass? (Heard it started around 1600s, possibly. But, I know for certain, there are other rites in union with the Holy See) Would love to hear all your answers!
I also grew up prior to Vatican II , however I felt the changes as a breath of fresh air. Yes there was a period of experimentation when a lot of nutty things occurred, but today that seems to have settled down and my only gripe is the lack of quality in many of the modern hymns.Having grown up Catholic prior to Vatican II, and having become very familiar with the Tridentine Mass, what occurred on the first Sunday of Avent in 1969 was stunning. And I know this was so for many Catholics. I also think more than a few Catholcs have come to believe Vatican II was at least in part a mistake. While I believe the Council was well intentioned and in good faith, I also think it was a first step onto that very slippery slope. And at the bottom of that slope is a secular world.
I emphatically agree. Of course the Catholic Church and Vatican II did not secularize society, and neither did Protestantism. That development occurred apart from and in many ways in opposition to religious belief in general. And it occurred over many centuries.Errors is in air quotes as I have heard that some people didn’t understand latin in pre v2 days. Also, i heard that there were cards in the pews that translated what was going on.
.It is my opinion that it was not Vatican II that led to the secularization of modern society but rather the unrest and social uprooting that had already began in the very late 50’s and early 60,s The Viet Nam experience did not help matters either.![]()