Dear Charlemagne II:
Since I am the original poster, I will try to answer your question. It is up to you whether or not my answer satisfies your desire to be edified. Perhaps it is my imagination, and if so, please forgive me, but I am not convinced that you actually want an answer–but prefer instead to “afflict the comfortable,” if you indeed view those who love the Latin Mass as “comfortable” or complacent. I read your profile…
Let me start off by saying that I am a convert, as I stated in my original post. I was a high-church Anglican, which has a beautiful liturgical tradition–if not in substance, then at least in form. What bothered me about the Anglican Church, however, was that it was essentially a national church. I won’t argue with you about that which you are, doubtless, already aware. The Catholic Church is universal. I lovingly submit to Her authority. I came into the Church in 1997 and have, without reservation, loved every second of the time I have spent in worship there. It is balm to my soul to be a Catholic. I receive the body and blood of Christ at every mass–whether or not it is a Latin mass (which I have attended only once in Austin,) or the so-called “new mass”, which I have attended faithfully for eleven years. Fortunately, I have been blessed with orthodox priests and have never witnessed anything as patently silly as liturgical dance or God referred to as “my mother.” Now, Pope Benedict is generously instructing the bishops to make the Latin mass more available to those of us who feeled called to worship in that manner, and my bishop is heeding the call.
This is a salutary development in my estimation, and I don’t feel inclined to second guess the Pope after spending 43 years as a Protestant. Please allow me to be excited. Yes, I am truly excited about the mass in Latin-- a language in which I am not fluent. I have a missal which translates for me. I don’t care if the priest is facing away from me–he is facing east for a reason, and I have already figured that out.
Ultimately, I am drawn to the Latin mass for the very reasons you apparently are not. I prefer, as Dietrich von Hildebrand puts it, to “better meet Christ by soaring up to Him,” not by “dragging Him down to our workaday world.” Further, to me the Latin mass engenders a sense of the sacred in a way that is not always apparent with the Novus Ordo mass. I want to experience that mystic, reverential, sense on a weekly basis, now that it will be open to me. I don’t want to hold hands with the person next to me or sing popular Christian music, but I am
not finding fault with those Catholics who prefer contemporary worship. I am expressing my personal beliefs and preferences.
I am being very careful. I love the Catholic Church. If the Pope had
not made the Latin mass available, I would still never wish to be anything but a Catholic.The body and blood of Christ are still the body and blood of Christ–whether I attend a Latin Mass or a Novus Ordo. However, if there are those among us who are drawn to the Latin Mass, why do you question that longing?
My original post was nothing more than an invitation to share excitement over my bishop’s kind provision.