I hope this doesn’t sound quarrelsome or rude (mea culpa) but:
Just because words may be spoken (or read) in a language which somebody speaks or reads as their ‘native’ tongue. . .does not mean that the words will be correctly understood. We have all had many examples of this:
Words which have different ‘meanings’ to different people (prayer, for example).
Words which are ‘commonly’ understood in one way in ‘secular’ speech and differently in ‘religious’ speech.
Words which have had their meanings CHANGED (gay old time).
And then, HOW the word is spoken. Remember how Mark Antony, in his speech after Caesar’s death, said NOTHING that the conspirators could find fault with, but it was the WAY he said it “For Brutus is an HONORABLE man”. . .the emphasis was so blatantly meant to underscore that Antony thought Brutus totally the OPPOSITE and he managed to convey that to the people. A priest (or anybody else) can ‘read’ the words and convey through tone, body language, etc. his or her total condemnation, disapproval, mockery etc. of those words but ‘innocently’ claim, “I said EXACTLY what I was supposed to.”
So there are, were, and have been thousands of people who have gone to Mass (and otherwise) and listened to Mass and homilies and other Catholic teaching “IN THEIR OWN LANGUAGE” and --guess what? Many, many, many of them claim that “the Church says X” (and the Church doesn’t). That we can ‘believe X’ (and we can’t.) Worse yet, they use language to convey half-truths or to misdirect people. That the Mass is PRIMARILY, a meal, that Christ is 'symbolic in the Eucharist, that ‘we are Church’, that community is more important that ‘blind legalism’, that ‘our conscience is our guide’, that it matters more that we ‘show up’ than how we look or speak or act. . .
The Mass is not ‘just’ a meal, but, oh, we used “primarily” so you can’t argue about OUR INTERPRETATION, you know. We never talk about anything OTHER than the meal part, but hey, it IS (partly) a meal so la-la-la-la. . .
The Eucharist is not JUST a symbol, but you don’t want kids thinking they’re eating FLESH, you know. You have to teach them GRADUALLY. Well, 40 years on, you STILL HAVEN’T TAUGHT THEM, IT SEEMS!
We are Church. Yes, we are, but the Church is MORE, much more, than just ‘we’, and to leave out the ‘rest of the story’ leads us to believe that as ‘Church’ WE are the primary authority.
Community is more important than blind legalism. Nobody argues with that. . .EXCEPT that what they call ‘blind legalism’ others call simple adherence to rules, and what they call ‘community’ is an attempt to get AROUND the rules by claiming that ‘legalism’ is infringing ON the community (whatever ‘community’ is to them). How ‘dare’ we to judge what ‘community’ A should be doing at Mass? Isn’t that up to the COMMUNITY???
“Our conscience is our guide.” Yes. . .but ONLY if it’s well informed. How often they leave that other part completely out. . .
“*It matters more that we show up etc.” *Certainly it is important to ‘be there’. . .but as we are reminded in the story of the man who came to the banquet ‘without a wedding garment’, just bringing in bodies, bodies who think that just showing up (when they feel like it, however they ‘choose’ to come) is ‘being church’ is ridiculous. How many decent universities would permit students to graduate who showed up for class (if at all) half dressed, were totally unprepared for class, never did any work in or outside class, argued with the professor over the subject and refused to ‘take his word’ for anything, and who then DEMANDED to ‘graduate’ summa cum laude? Yet that is what it appears many people want to do when it comes to church attendance and practice.