T
tradcatman
Guest
I’ve heard and read that several Cardinals and Bishops have made this claim. Is this true?
Exactly. When you take into consideration the words of the “Lawyer turned Prophet” and people’s reaction to them (people turned against him quickly and fiercely), you can see that people were going to force their own ideas regardless.Liberals were gonna run with their crazy stuff no matter what the documents said.
Right on.Liberals were gonna run with their crazy stuff no matter what the documents said. I mean we see them questioning what Jesus really said so running amok over VII documents was child’s play.
Maybe some parts reflect conservative (name removed by moderator)ut, but the parts that got implemented after V II were heavily the parts that reflect liberal (name removed by moderator)ut. There’s a lot in the documents that did not get implemented much, and lots got implemented that is not in the documents.The book “The Rhine Flows Into the Tiber” IMO should put this issue to rest.
There were both liberal and conservative views expressed in the documents. For example, the conservatives insisted on retaining Latin in the liturgy. Favored Gregorian chant, pipe organ. The more liberal side opened up the world of vernacular and liturgy formed by committees all the way to the local level. And so forth.
In the end, both got their wish and it does appear to be ambiguous but they all voted for it.