Whenever there is a Spanish Mass at our English parish and I see the absolute train wreck that it is where people are looking around wondering where in the Mass they are at, or the myraid of languages being said where people are confused. Where the priest is struggling with the prayers, homily and Readings…all I can say to myself is.
Whatever happened to the one universal language for the One Universal Church?
Bring back the Latin and Greek so we all can celebrate and worship together as one!
Well, the train wreck you are seeing is not perhaps as bad as you makie it out to be; we have a lot of Catholics who attend Mass but whose Catholic education pretty much stopped as of the day after their confirmation.
And the inability to tell what was going on in that Spanish Mass is the same thing that was going on in the 1950’s where the parish did not provide missals or missalettes, and for the large portion of people who did not have a missal, they were just as lost.
I have attended Mass in Vietnamese and Spanish, and I never failed to know where we were at any given point; and given that most parishes have an English missalette in the pew, I was able to follow right along. A friend of mine joked that it was just like attending Mass when we were kids; you could not understand Latin, and you can’t understand Spanish or Vietnamese, but you can worship just the same.
I have also attended Mass (or the Divine Liturgy, or Holy Mysteries) in Church Slavonic and in Arabic and Aramaic; and both parishes had a translation of the language in English.
And in every one of those settings, I was united to and with the others who understood and were conversant in something other than English.
For the record I studied Latin in both high school and college, and I still cannot speak it, nor can I read it - I was taught to translate it. I am not against Latin, and I have no problem with parts of the Mass being in Latin (or Greek; I also took Homeric Greek and studied a bit of koinae - John’s Gospel). However, I find it easier to participate in Mass in English, than in all Latin where I have to read along rather than listen.
What unites us is the liturgy, whether it is in Latin, Greek, Spanish, Church Salvonic, Chinese, Vietnamese, Urdu, Swahili or something else. The readings occur at the same point; the Epiclesus, consecration, or whatever part at the same point, never mind the language it is being celebrated in. What unites us is Christ.