M
Mi_Rose
Guest
No is the answer.
It is very sad, but not a valid excuse.She told me her husband is very devout and prays the Rosary daily but that he hasn’t been to mass besides weddings and things of that nature since the early 70s because he doesn’t like the new mass and the reforms and thinks mass should be said in Latin and just doesn’t go.
Is this a valid excuse? That’s kind of sad.
I agree with @finn, I don’t think that is really what’s going on. Sure, it’s most likely an excuse for some (if not most), but I don’t think it is for a man who prays the Rosary at home.I have to admit, when I find one of these people who no longer goes to Mass because they don’t like this or don’t like that about the Mass, I kind of figure they just didn’t want to be bothered going to Mass any more anyway and they found some excuse to justify not having to go.
Unless this guy lives in a very small, isolated town with one church, he could just attend mass at a different parish. “I don’t like the way they do it here” is a reason to go to a different parish, not stop attending Mass altogether.If the man has that kind of sinful reaction towards the Ordinary Form, I can understand why he doesn’t go. I don’t condone it… but I understand it.
I totally agree with you. My only guess (assuming that he truly is devout) is that the entire Ordinary Form makes him sinfully mad.phil19034:![]()
Unless this guy lives in a very small, isolated town with one church, he could just attend mass at a different parish. “I don’t like the way they do it here” is a reason to go to a different parish, not stop attending Mass altogether.If the man has that kind of sinful reaction towards the Ordinary Form, I can understand why he doesn’t go. I don’t condone it… but I understand it.
Yeah, it’s possible. I tend to think like Bear in this one; he just doesn’t feel like going and saying the rosary is an attempt at rationalization/quieting his conscience.I totally agree with you. My only guess (assuming that he truly is devout) is that the entire Ordinary Form makes him sinfully mad.
You make it sound so simple, but in reality a Latin Mass or an Eastern Rite church is not an available option for many. I found one parish in my entire province where the EF is celebrated. I’m a two-day drive away from it. No Eastern Rite at all here. It’s still not a reason to miss Mass though.I feel for the man, I really do. I often think about how hard it must have been for many people when the mass was changed, and how hard it would have been to accept the changes. But, he needs to find a solution. Find a Latin Mass or even an eastern rite church in his area to fulfill the obligation to attend mass. Simply not going at all is not an option. He has to realize that if he only has one Mass option and attends despite not liking it, solely out of obedience to the Lord, the Lord will reward him for it.
Maybephil19034:![]()
Yeah, it’s possible. I tend to think like Bear in this one; he just doesn’t feel like going and saying the rosary is an attempt at rationalization/quieting his conscience.I totally agree with you. My only guess (assuming that he truly is devout) is that the entire Ordinary Form makes him sinfully mad.
Now, however, the younger do know of what we have been deprived and we need to tell the elders that what was taken from them has been justly given back (even if only in a miserly way in some dioceses).The doctrines of the Fathers are despised; apostolic traditions are set at nought; the devices of innovators are in vogue in the Churches; now men are rather contrivers of cunning systems than theologians; the wisdom of this world wins the highest prizes and has rejected the glory of the cross. Shepherds are banished, and in their places are introduced grievous wolves hurrying the flock of Christ. Houses of prayer have none to assemble in them; desert places are full of lamenting crowds. The elders lament when they compare the present with the past. The younger are yet more to be compassionated, for they do not know of what they have been deprived. All this is enough to stir the pity of men who have learned the love of Christ; but, compared with the actual state of things, words fall very far short. (Letter 90)