B
beegirl
Guest
I think it would be awesome to attend a latin mass. I don’t think i’d do it every week…just becasue I wouldn’t understand it
…but I think the language is beautiful 
Naw, that’s just an old excuse.Short answer.
There are quite a number of bishops out there who hate Latin and do all they can to discourage any use of it.
why do you associate the lack of EF masses as poor catechisis?I voted EF. My Diocese has only four Parishes that offer the EF, and only one of those offers every Sunday. If I want to go it is either drive 75 miles one way, or cross the state line and attend an SSPX chapel 30 miles away. Our Bishop does not seem inclined to follow Summorum Pontificum.
it is sad and troublesome what 40+ years of Novus Ordo and poor Catachesis has accomplished.
I have had several priests tell me this.Naw, that’s just an old excuse.
I do think quite a few bishops are concerned about the division caused by some Catholics however.
Question for you: Which one?the OF is called the ORDINARY Form for a reason. its the one thats to be commonly used everywhere, at all times.
that is how I feel. one of the parishes in my cluster recently started offering a mass in Latin on the fifth Sunday of the month. I would like to attend but I wouldn’t understand.I voted “no” but that’s not to say I would boycott a Latin Mass. I wouldn’t attend one for the same reason I wouldn’t attend a Mass in French or Spanish or Greek – I wouldn’t understand it.
is there anything else?Question for you: Which one?
This is true, too, in my parish. It’s another reason why I have no desire to attend the EF which is not too far out of my way if I really wanted to go. I have no reason.
- Our parish offers a reverent OF Mass with excellent liturgy, music, and homilies. We have no reason to go elsewhere.
Excellent post and bears repeating. The Mass is not about us, it’s for the Glory of God.I certainly would, at least once. Though I’m sure I’d make it a regular habit; the Mass isn’t about me or what I want, but about the Lord. I wouldn’t care if I didn’t understand the language right off, as only laziness or pride would make me refuse to follow along enough times to learn. I wouldn’t care if the people were cold or warm towards me. I wouldn’t care about not having the standard array of hymns to sing (most especially because I can’t sing, anyway). All that would matter is the theological surety and beauty of the Mass.
So yes, I would be overjoyed to attend one if one were offered at or near my parish.
Hi, you need a good missal that has the rubrics and commentary along with the text of the Mass itself.I had been to a Traditional Latin Mass when I was younger. My Mom would take me to the chapel in my local Catholic high school where they occasionally celebrated that Mass. I didn’t have a clue what was happening, but I had this sense of awe because I was so use to the normal English Mass from every Sunday.
Where I’m at now, there is another chapel that had the Bishop’s approval for the TLM once a Sunday back when that permission was still needed (now they celebrate it twice on Sundays!). So, one Sunday I decided to take my then-girlfriend (non-Catholic but she still goes to Mass with me) to the TLM. Boy, did we have culture shock! Everyone was dressed in their “Sunday best” instead of the jeans we are accustomed to wearing…and we sure did feel like everyone was staring at us (I’m sure some, if not many, were).
We stayed anyway, and I loved the Mass (especially the reverence that was showed the Eucharist), but I don’t think I’ll be going back until I (a) get a suit and (b) learn the basics of Latin for the Mass. With that being said, I’d love to go back and that’s how I voted…but I need to get a and b done first so I can feel more comfortable there.