as i mull over this thread, here are some thoughts that come to mind:
- holy latin language’
Latin can said to be “Holy” because the Church has choosen it as her language. There is nothing holy about the language per se, except the fact the Church has it as Her own.
We have not been given Aramaic, we have been given Latin. We must respect the Tradition of our Rite.
Again, you misunderstand why Latin is said to be Holy. French, Spanish, Romanian, Itallian and others, have not been choosen by the Church. Yet these languages may be used beacsue of special permission granted through an indult.
i can understand the nostalgia for the perception of the way things were. there is the belief in the traditionalist circles that many of the problems in the church stem from the reforms of V2 (or by carrying them too far), and that by returning to the old way of things we can get back to the purity they believe existed then. i would venture to say that there were just as many abuses back then as there are today. maybe not of exactly the same kind/nature, but humans are fallen creatures and are just as susceptible to the traps of the devil whatever type of valid Catholic mass they attend. returning to the old ways will not stop the evil one, he will just capitalize on some other weakness, just like he always does.
Vatican II was called because the Church was already in poor shape. No one wants to go back to pre-Vatican II days - even the SSPX will say this.
The love of tradition is a love for what has been handed down to us, it is a desire to learn from the liturgy. We see the Liturgy as a transmitter of the faith. The Liturgy is there to teach us, those traditions which are discarded are indeed discarded lessons, history and wisdom.
We do not see the Church as defining the Liturgy, but the Liturgy as that which defines, sustains, and fulfills the Church. Violence to the traditions of the Liturgy is violence to one of our most sacred deposits of faith. In fact Liturgy is as much a deposit of faith as is Scripture and Holy Tradition.
This is how I see the Traditions of the Liturgy - not mere customs, but real lessons, breathing living faith of the apostles and the saints throughout the ages, who have all put their own mark on the mass and who have passed it along.
There is no reason that the NO cannot take these traditions and honour them. It is indeed an abuse of the freedoms granted by the new mass, to take that very freedom and use it as an excuse to discard holy Tradition.