OK. Here are some thoughts:
You “feel” that Latin and Greek are “slightly more reverent.”
I don’t feel that at all. I “feel” that Latin and Greek are more theatrical than the vernacular and that many of the traditions are akin to “choreography.”
Are both of us right?
How much importance should be placed on “feelings” in the Mass?
What happens when two people have such different “feelings” about the use of Latin/Greek in the Mass? How is this to be resolved?
I’m reading a great book right now, loaned to me by the prior of our abbey, L’Intelligence de la liturgie (The Intelligence of the Liturgy).
I’m only partway through but the message I am getting is that the liturgy is something to be experienced corporally, that is through our senses, rather than intellectually. That is part of the mystery. Hence the use of chant, incense, bells, processions and other ritual gestures. Rather than “choreography” I see it more as ritual. The book makes the point that ritual is part of the human experience; we all have rituals, from the way we celebrate marriage, birth and death (quite apart from any religious tradition) to the way we get up, eat, wash and get dressed in the morning.
Rituals bring a sense of order, security and great comfort to humans. Yes they play on “feelings”, and that isn’t necessarily a bad thing.
A couple of years ago, my mother-in-law passed on. She was a Pentecostal so we traveled to the West Coast for her funeral. My wife is an Evangelical Anglican for whom liturgy holds no special place in her heart.
But she commented to me that she found the absence of any form of ritual from her mother’s service, disturbing and realized that ritual, order, liturgy, bring a sense of familiarity and comfort to the bereaved. It was just an unstructured service with readings, some kind of sermon, hymns here and there, and some eulogies from her children, more or less on the pastor’s whim.
I found it really disturbing, and so did my wife. But it was her church so we had to go with her wishes.
Somewhere there has to be a balance: a liturgy that one can experience with the senses, that pulls us into the mystery we are celebrating, where we can feel, hear, smell and of course taste God, with all our senses.
I like the Latin, especially for the propers and ordinary. I like the readings though, in the vernacular because for those I have to concentrate to really understand the message (I also always read the passages before Mass so I’m already familiar with them; at the abbey, they are always chanted). However my mother tongue is French and basic Church Latin is no major obstacle for me due to the similarity with French. I realize it isn’t everyone’s taste though, and have no problems with the vernacular, provided it meets the goal of liturgy as a sensorial rather than intellectual experience. There are parts of the Mass to appeal to our intellect (the readings, the homily), but liturgy brings us, or should bring us, mystically into a higher plane that is a foretaste of the communion we’ll experience when we have the Beatific Vision after our earthly passage.