No I would say that the baby boomer generation who wanted the liturgy changed in the first place and have pretty much taken over the liturgy are more like the protestants. And unfortunately this generation is suffering for it. I’m not an ultraconservatist like you may think. But I do see a serious deficiency in the OF Mass. And that is way too much lay participation in priestly duties. Give me back ad-orientum, altar boys (not servers), classical Roman Catholic music (not contemporary), no more EMHC, and then I may like the OF. It’s pretty sad when some protestant denominations, like the Lutheran Church Missouri Synod, or one of the Continuing Anglican churches, can put out a way better traditionally done English Mass than most Roman Catholic churches can.
This is off topic, but just a quick help here. You have to be careful in how you use language and what you say. Otherwise, you’re in conflict with the pope, not the liberals.
First: The Ordinary Form as it is prescribed in the GIRM is the Ordinary form for the universal Church. It is not to be the exception, but the rule.
Second: The Holy Father has explicitly said that there are no deficiencies in the Ordinary Form. Now you’re syaing that there are. Both of you cannot be right. He outranks you; therefore, you have to assent and beleive that there are no deficiencies.
Third: The Holy Father says that mass ad-orientem is Extraordinary, not the norm any longer. You are calling for it to return. You and I can’t call for the return of something that has been told to us by the Pontif is extraordinary, no longer the norm.
Fourth: Whether you call them alter boys or altar servers, it is the same thing. That term is only used in the United States. No other country in the world calls them that. They are called servers in Canon law and acolytes in liturgical law. Each country has a different word for them.
Fifth: You have a preference for classical Catholic music. I assume that you mean Gregorian chant. Gregorian chant still has the pre-eminent place in liturgical music. However, pre-eminent does not mean that it is the only form of liturgical music. There is such thing as classical liturgical music that is not Gregorian chant. Remember such hymns as the ones that we sing at Christmas. They are ot Gregorian chant. Some of oldies but goodies sung during Lent, are not gregorian chant. All Creatures of Our Goid and King, written by St. Francis, was not meant to be sung as Gregorian chant and was meant to be played with a stringed instrument, not an organ. Silent night was written for the guitar, not the organ and it’s not Gregorian chant. A Mighty Fortress, is meant to be played with an organ, but it’s not Gregorian chant. When we say that Gregorian chant has a pre-eminent place in liturgical music it means that it must not be allowed to die and it should serve as a model for future composers of liturgical music. But obviously ever future artist is not going to writ it exactly the same. Also, Gregorian chant in its truest form, as it is done in scholas in monasteries has never been done on a grand scale in parishes, not even in the Middle Ages.
Sixth: The extraordinary minister of the Eucharist is new and it’s not new. It is the revival of a very ancient custom where lay people would take communion from the altar to the home of the sick and shut-ins. Originally, this was done by the deacons. But as the Church grew there were more lay people doing it. It eventually grew out of control and the practice was stopped. In many monastic communities the practice was never stopped. For example, in my order, the friars and the nuns have always brought communion to the sick members of the community. They did not have to be deacons. We have had this practice for 800 years. Remember the famous portrait of St. Clare holding the monstrance? Our Poor Clare nuns have always exposed the Blessed Sacrament themselves, when there is no deacon or priest to do it for them. This practice remaind in many enclosed and mendicant communities for many centuries. Now it has returned outside of the cloister again. It is true that there is no need to have 25 EMHC at mass. We can certainly fix that.
Seventh: The Lutherans and the Anglicans cannot put on a better mass than Catholics. They do not have apostolic succession. Therefore, they can only put on a theatrical performance that looks like a traditional mass. Without apostolic succession, you cannot have a valid Eucharistic liturgy.
We have to be very careful what we say and how we say it, because our passion can pit us against Church authority and Church history. That’s not where we want to go here.
I apologize to everyone, because my response is off topic. I’m only doing this for the benefit of visitors who may read the cited post.
Fraternally,
Br. JR, OSF
