J
jfz178
Guest
I grew up with the Latin Mass and was an altar server for it. I also had to take Latin for two semesters in Catholic high school. The lower track kids took typing instead. Boy, were they way ahead of me years later when computers came in! I admit I got a wave of nostalgia when I attended a Mass in Italian at the Vatican. The Italian sounded close enough to the Latin that I could almost follow it. At least it had the same feel.
But I never thought the Latin Mass was a good idea. Why have a church service in a languages the congregation does not speak? It was native Latin speakers who nailed Jesus to the Cross. Native Latin speakers struck terror into the hearts of people like the Apostles. The only reason Latin became the language of the Church was just so The Emperor Constantine could convert Rome. There was no liturgical reason for it.
If we are going to have Mass in a dead language, I recommend Aramaic, like the Lebanese Catholics use for Mass. It’s the language Jesus actually spoke. What could be more appropriate?
But I think people should understand the Mass, not have to read along with a translation.
But I never thought the Latin Mass was a good idea. Why have a church service in a languages the congregation does not speak? It was native Latin speakers who nailed Jesus to the Cross. Native Latin speakers struck terror into the hearts of people like the Apostles. The only reason Latin became the language of the Church was just so The Emperor Constantine could convert Rome. There was no liturgical reason for it.
If we are going to have Mass in a dead language, I recommend Aramaic, like the Lebanese Catholics use for Mass. It’s the language Jesus actually spoke. What could be more appropriate?
But I think people should understand the Mass, not have to read along with a translation.
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