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Irishmom2
Guest
That’s what it sounds like sometimes. 
Not gonna happen. Not even after every Boomer shuffles off the face of the planet. Next!I think they want the Ordinary Form to be entirely replaced with the Extraordinary Form.
There is danger in projecting one’s wishes on something which one has little perspective.I believe it could. If the Baby Boomer population were to pass suddenly, the number of parishioners attending weekly Sunday Mass at my OF parish would drop by 70%, whereas with the EF Parish not too far from where I live, it would drop by maybe 15% - young, traditional Catholics dominate that parish.
God willing, the Church will recognize that the Latin Mass is where the future lies before the time comes that we’re left with a bunch of near-vacant OF Masses and priests who are not trained in the EF.
I agree, and I also think that people who believe that ‘only baby boomers like the OF’ are misguided.Not gonna happen. Not even after every Boomer shuffles off the face of the planet. Next!
What you say was more true a few decades ago than now (yes I’m sure it still exists).I feel that the loudest and longest extremism has come from the “OF only” side. And the denial of that is troublesome because not only is it not fair, it leads to a constant ‘defensive’ posture on the part of those who love the EF, in that from the get go it is THEY who are assumed to be the problem.
Good post. Young people (all age groups actually) of today probably are the least adventurous generations in history.I’m not sure that the Catholic Church can ever be as “safe” as the young people born in 1995 and later want. So I think we’ll continue to see more and more people give up any type of “religion” and count on their own “spirituality” to get them through life. So sad
You need to get your facts straight, and you are wrong. My family is from Asia. My mother and my grandmother spoke fondly to me of the days when only Latin Mass was said there. I recently visited Asia and visited my old retired parish priest. He too was speaking to me about his early years as a young priest saying only the Latin Mass. Furthermore, he even showed me pictures of him—in the early 1960’s—saying the Latin Mass. The configuration of Church I attended as a child was designed for the Latin Mass. The retired nuns in the country of my birth told me the Latin Mass was used until after Vatican II. I also visited the Carmelite nuns. Mother Superior and I were praying in Latin together.Latin Mass was never introduced into Asia by the missionaries. When they arrived in China in the early 17th century, it was adapted to the vernacular.
You didn’t. You still have that option.It’s sad to lose it
Some Catholics think I’m weird, but I love hearing Mass in a language I don’t understand. It engages me on a spiritual and intuitive level. On an intellectual level, I love learning languages, so I can pick up some from prayers that I already know in English. Above all, it conveys a universality to me - so many differences but one bread, one body.Do you travel often and can’t understand the mass in different languages?![]()
Right??? By all means, let’s nitpick how Mass is conducted when we can’t even go.I know one thing. I’m missing the living daylights out of the Latin Mass right about now. I haven’t been in three weeks and it’s driving me nuts!!! ARGHHH!!!
In other words, you’re upset at the rest of us plebeian OFers and want to force us to fall in line with you. Nice.God willing, the Church will recognize that the Latin Mass is where the future lies before the time comes that we’re left with a bunch of near-vacant OF Masses and priests who are not trained in the EF.
Yep. Let’s also nitpick the Mass form when we can’t even attract the secular world to Catholicism in the first place.If trends continue, BOTH forms of the Mass will see lower and lower numbers attending, as will all of the Protestant denominations, and for that matter, ALL religions that are not Christians as well.
I hate speaking for her, but I don’t think she was referring to you. There have been references in this thread to “bring[ing] back full” and “universal” Latin Mass, i.e. banning the Ordinary Form, as well as to Vatican II “derogating” the Mass.Absolutely not —anymore than one would think that a preference of either one - EF or OF—implies a disparagement of the other rite.
Say what??? I’m nitpicking? I want to remind you that the topic of this thread is the LATIN MASS!!! And since that is the Mass that I attend, I was merely saying how much I miss it. Nothing more. Please stop seeing animus where none exists.Right??? By all means, let’s nitpick how Mass is conducted when we can’t even go.![]()
I am here to address this thread alone, not threads from 2004 or even any other thread from 2020. I’m sorry that you’ve felt your EF preferences disparaged in the past. But as far as this specific thread is concerned, there has been no call for getting rid of all EF Masses and imposing the OF on all Catholics.But you will also have had —and if like me you’ve been here from 2004– that’s 16 years—of drumbeats of how SUPERIOR the OF is to the EF.
Those words in bolding are key. You and I both know that the decision is a personal one between the parishioner and God. But the tone of the OP is about EF for all, regardless of this factor. In short, this thread is about superior for all, not superior for some.But for the many whose OF is still lacking in some degree, but whose personal style is receptive to Latin and other parts of the EF, the EF would be superior for their needs to balance horizontal and vertical.