I definitely prefer Greek and Latin chant in the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass.
If I hear people speaking Spanish, I often think “What
are they saying?” and listen closely. The same can be said for Latin. When things are said in an unfamiliar language, I believe we tend to focus more. It absolutely adds greater reverence to the liturgy.
This thread isn’t about restoring the Tridentine Mass to the OF, but I’ll say this anyway: the vernacular doesn’t unite or encourage “greater participation” of the laity. If anything, it divides. Here’s my experience:
My parish is located in the Midwest and is about half Hispanic and half white. We have two English Masses and one in Espanol. Old white people attend the Vigil, young white people attend Sunday morning, and all of the Hispanics attend Sunday afternoon. It’s as though we have two separate parishes. Neither ethnic group, despite HUGE attempts at integration, wants anything to do with the other. The Hispanics have their fundraisers. We have ours. They have their own Lenten services. We have ours. Our “bilingual” Masses are not well attended, because neither wants to hear the other’s language.
Cultural and linguistic differences would be trivial if we celebrated Holy Mass in Latin. There’d be no reason to have separate liturgies, and if we could start worshiping together, the other parish events would follow suit.
On a broader scale, if I attended an OF Mass in Zimbabwe, I’m willing to bet that it would barely resemble an American OF Mass. (how does that contribute to the universality of the Church?) Conversely, the Tridentine Mass would be relatively unchanged. No “cultural additions” or “organic liturgy” nonsense.
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When I talk about using the Greek and Latin setting, chant music, etc during the Ordinary Form, people usually roll their eyes and say things like “that belongs in a medieval basilica, not the 21st century” or “I don’t like that.” - the Holy Mass is and should be recognized as timeless. If we make things about what we like, does that not shift the focus off of Christ and on to us?
During the Kiss of Peace, everyone socializes. Our Lord is on the altar, and we turn our backs on Christ Himself! Most of the time, people are STILL high-fiving, fist bumping, and hugging during the Angus Dei!
The more Latin (and Greek), the better!