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I’ve already read it.
Nothing, obviously.There are some priests even in my diocese who were not taught Latin during their studies at seminary. Wonder what happened there?
I would say rather that, since the Mass is the source and summit of the Christian life, the whole of Christian charity, including social justice initiatives, rest on strengthening the faithful via the Eucharist. Likewise, the expression of God’s life that the Mass gives will always be Christian charity, a charity that leads not to token gift-giving but to true justice. There is a reason the Missionaries of Charity emphasize Mass and Eucharistic adoration so strongly. Whichever form of the Mass is offered, it is of great importance to both the Church and the world that it be done reverently and with great awareness of what is taking place. (cont)Also I don’t agree that social justice is necessarily one of the top functions of the Church. It should be the salvation of souls first and foremost. Social justice is becoming more of an umbrella which encompasses everything from immigration to the environment and often times these goals are prioritized above speaking the truth of the gospel
You never know what might draw a group. We have a priest who says both forms and when he can he will offer the EF and draws a great many people. He offers it not because a group of people are requesting it but because he wants to offer it. As I said it draws a great many people.It would be comparable to going into a parish and changing the Mass schedule to include the EF weekly when the parish has not the requisite group to request it - or may have no group at all.
That’s good news. He sounds like a good pastor.A local priest did exactly this because of a request from a group of parishioners.
The seminary is a different environment from the parish. If the seminary rector and faculty think that requiring an EF class and/or having a regularly scheduled EF Mass in the seminary would be good for formation, then I don’t see why anything should stop them, hypothetically speaking.That is entirely different than requiring it to be a regularly said Mass at the seminary. What is elective is elective; trying to move it to a non-elective status is not the practice of the Church.
For the sake of argument, I’d say it’s a slightly different situation from the FSSP. The FSSP is an EF only institute. It’s part of their charism. For the rest of the Latin Church, the EF is part of the Church’s heritage and is one of the two forms of the Roman rite.It is like saying that those who go to an FSSP seminary should have the OF celebrated once a week.