I have seen and read such books and would agree that such is the case for some or even many people, I would also disagree that it is true for everyone or even necessary for everyone.
Someone like Bl. Mother Teresa was deeply moved by the liturgy, despite the changes in the form. She lived through both forms.
John Paul II was also deeply moved by the liturgy despite the form.
And there are many of us who are.
I don’t like blanket statements that say it’s 100% better or worse than . . .
Blanket statements can be too broad and not allow room for the Spirit to work through people in given circumstances, as if the form guided the hand of the Spirit in the life of Bl. Mother Teresa, for example.
There is not doubt that the form and the environment has a psychological effect on people that predisposes them to the workings of grace, as grace builds on nature. But as the great Mystical Theologian and Psychiatrist, William James said, more often than not the individual chooses when and how he will allow grace to work, not because grace is absent, but because the individual is not available.
By available he means open to the possibility that God will work through the circumstances in which one finds oneself. This is what Mother did. She did not like everything about the OF, but she believed that Jesus could do anything in her life if she opened herself to him. In the end, the form was not as important to her as the disposition of her soul.
…In essence, there is something to what William James said, grace does build on nature and therefore the form is important. However, the form that moves one person to intimacy with God may be very different from that which moves another. Therefore, a blanket statement that one is superior to the other is not quite accurate given what Mystical Theology teaches us about liturgy and prayer.
One thing that I remember from school was that we were always taught to keep in mind that liturgists and systematic theologians were not mystical theologians. What they said did not always accurately describe what happens in everyone’s soul. We had to balance between Systematic theology and Liturgy to find where the mystics really encountered the Divine.
In the end, it is the union with the Divine that is the goal of liturgy. I would like to see a writing on the form by a Mystical Theologian such as Fr. Dubey or Cardinal O’Malley. It would be interesting to read about the form from the other side, from the side of the soul looking outward, rather than the side of the liturgy looking inward.
Someday, when I’m rich and don’t have to work, I may do that as a retirement project. LOL
JR