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Elf01
Guest
Which is fine. Provided you don’t imply that other choices are inferior.Even though I think it is celebrated beautifully, I’d still attend the TLM if given the choice.
Which is fine. Provided you don’t imply that other choices are inferior.Even though I think it is celebrated beautifully, I’d still attend the TLM if given the choice.
Oh please give me a break. We can’t escape that old canard can we? I have in my 60 years, of which 40 were in the OF Mass, yet to ever see a “clown mass”.I’m upset that I see clown masses,
I’ve never seen more than about 5. At the abbey, zero.30+ lay Eucharistic ministers at a Sunday Mass,
Tabernacles were not always front and center either before the Council. They were not to be front and center in conventual churches, cathedrals with chapters of cannons and churches with high tourist draw. I can provide documented proof… from 1935.Tabernacles no longer placed front and center
Nothing to do with the form of the Mass.Priests directing the congregation to hold hands during the Our Father and much more.
And other forms of abuses were quite common back then. People going out in the middle of Mass for a smoke, priests tearing through the Mass with blazing speed. And an awful lot of whispered low Masses; though not technically an abuse as it was the norm, it was something that VII wanted, rightly, to change.Some of these abuses were unheard of in the TLM prior to VII.
Everything to do with the attitude of the times, and nothing to do with the OF Mass.But the ambiguity of certain documents and the personal views of certain clergy members have allowed these fruits to spring up.
Given the choice I would take an OF like the one you describe and which largely is the Mass where I worship, over the TLM. But that’s just me.Even though I think it is celebrated beautifully, I’d still attend the TLM if given the choice.
Before Vatican II, while the earlier rite was in effect, Catholics in Italy, Germany, France, Spain fought one another on both sides of violent wars. Some assisted in the Holocaust.I was referring to the benefit of the changes to the Mass and their affect on the Church as a whole.
I don’t even know how that is relevant to what the discussion is about. I’m talking about the Liturgical changes in the Mass, not the entire moral outlook of Catholics as whole before VII.I do not know what effect the reformed rituals have had, but I hope that Catholics would not behave as miserably as they did before Vatican II
I never denied there were abuses. I’d take whispered low masses and priests saying Mass quickly over what I’ve seen today.And other forms of abuses were quite common back then
Our abbot went over that with us a few years ago. The reasons were numerous. One was the accretion of so many rubrical details that priests got lost in the minutiae and were not able to pray the Mass. Liturgy is prayer, and praying the Mass is important. Some examples: very detailed instructions on how to hold fingers/thumbs; on the exact number of swings of incense and their exact placement, of the various types of bows and when to use them (full, mediocre, slight). I’ve posted examples elsewhere, from pre-Conciliar sources. This where the requirement for noble simplicity came from.Not one person has even bothered to show me that the changes in the Mass were even needed.
The point was, I think (and Dovekin can correct me if I’m wrong) was that if we are going to try to correlate the moral decay of the Church to the liturgy after the council as traditionalists are wont to do, then it is fair game to attach the moral decay of the Church before the Council to the liturgy of that time. He’s called you on the fallacy of the argument that liturgy somehow the main influencer of Catholic behaviour.I don’t even know how that is relevant to what the discussion is about. I’m talking about the Liturgical changes in the Mass, not the entire moral outlook of Catholics as whole before VII.
Exactly!if we are going to try to correlate the moral decay of the Church to the liturgy after the council as traditionalists are wont to do, then it is fair game to attach the moral decay of the Church before the Council to the liturgy of that time.