S
stpurl
Guest
Father Z did not claim that the ‘original language was Latin’, though.
I call strawman here.
I call strawman here.
Perhaps we have outgrown being the “Latin” Church and it would be more accurate to say we are the Western Church? Or even the World Church? Especially now that the Anglican-use has been admitted to the “Latin” Church. Eventually other cultures will start to permeate into the practices of the Church, and that includes language.But his point is that we are the Latin Rite, not Hebrew or Greek Rite. And the Latin goes all the back to Cicero.
I’m sure he is aware, but conveniently leaves it out…I don’t think that Fr. Z is unaware that many prayers and texts were translated into Latin from other languages. The fact that not all Catholic writings were originally in Latin does not mean that the language does not have high value though.
Don’t give the Vatican ideas! Actually they actually tried this; according to some liturgical nerds I know, the Vatican wanted Solesmes to change all of the antiphons and biblical texts from the Vulgate to the Neo-Vulgate. Fortunately nothing ever came of it. Virtually all of Gregorian chant would have to be re-written, and many melodies reworked to make them fit. It would be a Herculean task that would take until the Second Coming to complete.Very well Fr. Let us be Latin Rite Catholics using a pure Latin Rite, not an Ecclesiastical Latin Rite which is bastardised from the Latin language. Want to be a purist - go for it. Every Missal will need to be re-written.
In which diocese is he incarnated? Or is he religious?He has a superior who seems perfectly satisfied with what he is doing, why not let his supervisor determine what Father Z ‘should do?’
Indeed those were his very words. Read the link.“For your Cult, Code and Creed, you are enslaved to translations, which do not provide the riches of the original content”.Father Z did not claim that the ‘original language was Latin’, though.
I call strawman here
^^^^^^As a convert to Catholicism from Evangelical Protestantism, I would say–with respect–that in the limited amount of time that most of us have to “study,” it would be better for many Catholics to study the Bible (with the help of Catholic study guides like Jeff Cavin’s “Great Adventure”) and the Catechism and read up on Church apologetics, rather than spending a lot of time learning Latin. Most Catholics get taken down by teenage Evangelical Protestants when it becomes obvious that the Catholic has no idea what they believe or why they believe it.
If you have more time or can make more time to study than most of us, then go for all of it!
Heaven is Bach’s Mass in B minor.I don’t see Latin helping me get to Heaven.
That, and that the switch to Latin by the Archdiocese of Rome was because it was adopting the vernacular to replace the liturgical language of the Church (greek)!Of course lost on Fr. Z is the fact that Latin is itself a translation from texts in their original languages, with respect to sacred texts, i.e. the Bible.
And fairly late at that–prior to Trent, Latin was not universal in the western church! (neither was the liturgy uniform from diocese to diocese. Some even used the same liturgy as in the East, some used the local vernacular, etc.).The idea that you can only have Mass in Latin, is something out of the Middle Ages.
I refer to it as, “a past that never was.” . . .Fr. Z is entitled to his opinion. I cannot understand the mania for Latin, unless it is some misplaced notion of nostalgia for a time that is gone and can never return
No.The only reason that Latin was chosen was that it was the most universal communication of the day.
The Roman republic goes back another seven centuries or so before that, and Latin was spoken by the roman tribes before that (although it doubtless changed after them . . .).And the Latin goes all the back to Cicero.
As Fr. Nils used to express his frustration about those who thought that Jesus spoke Latin: “What would He have done with Latin? Cussed out Roman Soldiers?”(most of which, by the way, tend to be built on absurd assumptions that Latin enthusiasts believe the Last Supper was conducted in Latin,
He’s at least partly right there: the translation of the Creed from Greek to Latin didn’t just lose some of the “riches of the original content”, but was a significant factor in the Great Schism . . .“For your Cult, Code and Creed, you are enslaved to translations, which do not provide the riches of the original content”.
Uhm . . .that’s kind of what “bastardized” means . . . the irregular becoming the norm . . .Bastardized? What are you talking about? The Church has Christianized the language creating words such as gratia for grace.
Um, no. I had four years of Classic Latin and I don’t “find it difficult to follow the Latin Mass” via a missal. The only thing I have to be careful of is the pronunciation when I answer in Latin as it’s different from how I was taught.Ecclesiastical Latin is different from Classic Latin. Those with an education in Classic Latin even find it difficult to follow the Latin Mass as it’s like a different dialect.