Well, you hooked me with the apricot analogy.
I finished HS in the 70’s - so that sets the generation I’m from, and I moved from the East Coast to Northern California in the late 60’s, so that’s some regional background for my place in all this. I had the challenge of being East Coast accented, moving into an apricot orchard neighborhood, of all places. A SF Bay Area, high rent district apricot orchard community, none-the-less. I’ve have been plagued with being corrected on the California pronounciation so many times that at this point, North is South, South is North and I couldn’t tell you which is which for the life of me.
Ah-men vs Ay-men, I don’t know that I have ever noticed a preference, they sound the same to me.
And yet, I actually have quite an ear for some subtle accent differentiations. I worked for the Govt of Ireland for 3 years (long story that my Irish grandmother never could quite grasp, seeing as I was living and working in the States, with US companies as clients) and I can tell which part of Ireland most Irish accents originate from. It’s fun to come across someone and ask if they’re from Galway (or Dublin, or Belfast …) and have them look at me as though my head just rolled off. They really don’t expect an American to know this stuff!
But Ay-men, Ah-men. I guess that to me it’s more important to know that they both mean we are swearing an oath that what has been said is true, on our soul, on our breath. Even as I sit here trying, I can’t figure out which I “prefer” or have a greater tendancy to say. Argh.
Perhaps it’s because I feel a great love for our seperated Protestant breathren, and try to focus more on where we agree and what we see the same, that I have never even bothered to notice this difference.
It’s funny how when we get into discussing only somewhat significant details here among other Catholics, I can get really opinionated (heaven help me), but with those non-Catholic Christians who Love Christ, and are simply mislead in their distain for the one Holy, Catholic and Apostolic Church, I just want to help them see where we both agree in our amazing love for the Lord.
Go figure,
CARose
I guess I continue to marvel at how we are all different and yet it’s those differences which are necessary to cover all the functions of the Body of Christ.