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Wannabe_Monk_16
Guest
Dear Father,As far as I am concerned, you are always welcomed to step in. You are one of those posters I most enjoy reading because of the thoughtfulness, knowledge, and experiences you bring to bear on the topics about which you write. Your time in an American seminary, at this particular moment in history, would have also given you a distinctive insight.
We shall team up here since you can only speak for the US of that era and I can say relatively little about the US then.
I am not a sociologist but, like you, I appreciate the great work of CARA and rely on their data and their data analysis.
Factors external to the Church were much more important in terms of what happened concerning the regard of outsiders for the Church at the time of the Council.
One thinks, for instance, of “The Quiet Revolution.” That had nothing to do with the Council or the liturgy. It had to do with a rejection of what was seen as overreach by the Church in life and in society by those wanting to be freed from that hegemony. One can understand what they were about. One can also disagree with various results. One can see it through the paradigm of a needed restructuring. But whatever the approach, you have to be honest about why it happened and what motivated it.
But from a European perspective, I can list A LOT of things that caused disaffection for the Church – and the liturgical reform and renewal would be at the very bottom of a long list.
You, OTJM, would have a better insight than I as to the extent that the Quiet Revolution had a mirror occurrence in the United States. I have never really heard it spoken of, as such, though I recognise the fingerprints of it in phenomenon of the 1960s in the United States that I have read about.
Those who selectively look back to the past with nostalgia for some “golden era that was” and to the present with “a lament for what is” do well to go back and re-read their history books.
When the much loved (today) Saint John Vianney took up his assignment in Ars, the number of people attending Mass was, essentially, zero. In the Italy of the 19th century, when Pope Pius IX died, as they were conveying his body for burial (he did not want to be buried in the Vatican, having been a prisoner in the Vatican) there was an effort to throw his bier into the Tiber. It almost succeeded but for the heroic effort of a few.
It was really God’s grace that brought the Church through – and out of – the 19th century. Having taught Church history, it is an era of which I can say some positive things but they are few, far between, and relate primarily to extraordinary individuals who, today, we can see were ahead of their time. These remarkable individuals suffered tremendously, I might add.
Thank you for your perspective and especially for your priesthood.