Hello! So, these days one hears much about the Church before Vatican II. Growing up, I was always taught that it was generally bad. I was told that people had no idea what was going on in the Mass. They felt as if Father Joe Smoe was participating in his own thing in Latin while everyone else observed/prayed their rosaries.
No we had missals from the time we made our First Communion and prayed the prayers the priest prayed in our pews in English. Some prayed their rosaries during Mass - I still do from time to time, depending on my spiritual mood and needs at the time.
I have heard that, when it came to private prayer, Catholics simply prayed their rosaries, and never read the Bible.
First off, praying your rosary is not the mechanical process of rattling off 50 Hail Marys. It is contemplation and meditation on the Mysteries of the Rosary (15 back then). I am not sure that private prayer and reading the bible is comparing apples to apples. Private prayer is different for each person and can range from meditating on the mysteries of the rosary to soliloquy with Our Lord, as taught by St. Ignatius in his Spiritual Exercises. We did not, as a matter of course, read the bible as much as read discourses on the bible from the Doctors of the Church. It was believed that this was the best way to keep a Catholic perspective on Sacred Scripture and not fall into the trap of personal interpretation.
But I want to hear strait from the sources. So, pre-concilar (those born before Vatican II) Catholics, share your stories. What was it like growing up in the pre-concilar world? Was it dark and gloomy?
In Buffalo, NY, it was dark and gloomy from January to around the middle of March, but lives followed the rhythm of the Liturgical Seasons. For instance, Lent and Advent were “lived” experiences that directed our lives each day. But we were not gloomy because of anything having to do with Catholicism. On the contrary, we lived and loved our faith and were not embarrassed to wear it on our sleeve. On Saturdays, we would go to the movie matinee (10 cents) - usually a western or maybe sci-fi, and then go to Confession afterwards since it was right across the street (regardless of whether we had grave sins to confess or not).
Did people understand to an extent of what went on at the Mass?
I would venture to say, much more so then than now.
Did people really have an apathy for things like ad orientem, altar rails, and Latin?
We were quite use to it after several hundred years.
What was going to Mass like?
Like it is now in the EF.
Did people understand the Real Presence?
Pew research and statistics say that only 15% of Catholics today believe in the Real Presence. We understood it from our First Communion in 2nd grade - it was critical to our formation as Catholics. It was not something that we even thought to question.
Did more people take the Sacraments more seriously (e.g. more Confession, and less Communion when one was not worthy)?
Yes
Were Masses always celebrated with reverence, or were there cases of priests rushing through the Latin? Were there better priests?
Every priest was different and that remains the same today. There was nothing “magic” about that time that regulated the personality of each priest and how they offered Mass. Some were fast, some slow, some had long sermons, some short, some put you to sleep, some aroused fire in your spirit.
What were vocations to the priesthood/religious life like?
Many, many, many more.
Did you associate with Protestants/other faiths as much?
Never, from the perspective of prayer or joint services. Otherwise, just like today.
What did you think of the changes after Vatican II? Were they good, or bad?
I plead the 5th.
What was the transition period like?
It was VERY quick.
Feel free to answer some or all of these or to say anything else that you wish to say! God bless!