J
JimG
Guest
“How many times in these electronic pages have I lamented the blatant disobedience in regard to can. 249?”
No. I am saying that in common with a huge number of statements from the Vatican the language used in the canon is unclear. Fr Z thinks he knows what it means but defines it according to his own definition of what language expertise consists of. What we need is an object description, as used in normal educational standard-setting, that accurately describes the level of expertise required. E.g: a vocabulary of X words from Y list, 80% on a standardised grammar test, understanding of a specific list of important ecclesiastical terms, 80% success in taking dictation without error etc. Without such a standard the canon can mean anything, as Fr Z.'s typically excited and extreme utterance indicates. I am saying nothing about what the standard of Latin should be. Just the whatever it is it should be clear, and testable. ‘What Fr. Z thinks’ is neither clear nor testable.What you are claiming is that because the the Canon said understand Latin very well, that it is okay for priests to have no functional ability to speak or read Latin?
Only if the people were elderly retired altar boys who remember their training.If the priest were to turn to the people and say “Pax Domini sit semper vobiscum,” would anyone understand it? Or would everyone just say “Et cum spiritu tuo” in unison?
I have two really crackerjack Latinists at my house, my 10th grader (6+ years of Latin) and my 7th grader (3+ years). They do statewide Latin competitions and have done very well–however, neither of them speaks Latin.I personally think that it should absolutely be a requirement for Roman Rite Catholic Priests to at least be able to read and comprehend Latin and hold a basic conversation in Latin.