As a professor liturgy and sacraments, I TAUGHT Sacrosanctum Concilium. I comprehend it very well.
As for the rest of your posts, I highlight those elements that will help the moderator identify conveniently those elements which contravene the rules of the forum.
I would like to clarify one thing as I can see how it could have been misconstrued. I meant to write “Roman Mass” and not “Roman rite Mass”. In other words I wasn’t attempting to say one is proper and the other improper. The fact is that there really aren’t any good terms to speak of these two particular forms of the Roman rite today–and we would also do well to remember that there are also still other active forms of the Roman rite.
Latin Mass isn’t a good name because all Roman rite masses are still nominally Latin masses (sometimes people forget that).
Ordinary Form and Extraordinary Form doesn’t quite do the distinction justice either, every Roman catholic has the right for their “ordinary” experience of the Mass to be the so-called “Extraordinary Form”.
Of course Vetus Ordo and Novus Ordor are pretty good, but this still gives a false impression that somehow the Vetus Ordo is a thing of the past (certainly there are many in the Church who wish for just this).
Also Tridentine isn’t quite correct either because it ignores the fact that substantive parts of the Roman Mass were around long before the Council of Trent. Certainly parts of the Roman mass have been with us since the 4th century if not all the way back to the 2nd. Although, to be fair many of these same parts are largely preserved in the New Order form as well so maybe my convention of terming one the Roman Mass and the other the New Order Mass isn’t yet perfect either.
In any case the one thing I like about the latter designation for at least the form of the Roman rite developed after Vatican II is the reflection that this was
not a form of the Mass that developed organically from the ground up, but one that was imposed upon the faithful from the top down. In saying this I am simply stating a historical fact. The salient point here, however, is that it turns the whole idea of the liturgy (the work of the people) on its heard.
In any case the point of my terminology is an attempt to speak more clearly about these two forms of the Roman rite and not to denigrate either one of them.
Other issues such as me speaking of the destruction of the liturgy carried out in the "spirit’ of Vatican II should be clear enough weren’t in any way intended to be taken as a refutation of the Council or the
Novus Ordo Missa. This opinion simply echos many members of the curia and even a retired Pope.