On the 12th Anniversary of Summorum Pontificum

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Well, we can argue that the ‘once again’ might not be entirely the case; the OF is a valid rite and, as such, the Church (as in the members who attend the OF) were not sidetracked from eternity and immortality because they attended the OF.

What one could probably say with more accuracy is that Pope Benedict, in S.P., enriched the Church through bringing back the EF rite from where, in many places, it had been considered banished, unnecessary, abrogated, etc. This enables the EF to enrich the OF and for the OF to enrich the EF as well, IMO.

When I was a young girl, my grandparents used to subscribe to Reader’s Digest Condensed Books. Now, these were, for the most part, extremely well done. What were arguably the most ‘necessary’ or important parts of the text were given while parts seen as redundant, unnecessary, or simply not needed were omitted.

To me, the OF is like a condensed book. It gets the point across --or, to be more accurate, it gets what the editor THINKS is the point. It is recognizably what the author wrote, although there are points where in order to move along smoothly words are changed or it is assumed that the omitted parts are ‘already understood’ and need not be ‘listed out’. After reading it, one could answer questions about the characters, plot, etc and respond pretty much as well as somebody who read the ‘unabridged’ text’.

And the EF is like the ‘uncondensed’ book. It contains the whole package, even if to some that implies redundancy, or too much emphasis on ‘unnecessary’ descriptions, be they of people, place, or plot.

Two books which contain many things in common (and one could argue the most integral things) but which differ in exposition.
 
This enables the EF to enrich the OF and for the OF to enrich the EF as well, IMO.
I’m sorry I have no issue with the OF, but how exactly does it enrich the EF? I mean the EF existed much longer in antiquity than the mass some liturgists and theologians came up with in the late 1960s.
 
Well, for example, the OF has two epistle readings (the EF has one). So that opens up more Scripture to be heard at Mass, theoretically. And also there have been more saints added to the canon under the OF and that also could open up more feast days of those saints to be offered with the EF.
 
And also there have been more saints added to the canon under the OF and that also could open up more feast days of those saints to be offered with the EF.
What are you talking about? The EF has many more saints on its calendar than the OF. Paul Vl erased many from the calendar in 1969.
 
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Um, what I am 'talking about" is the fact that there have been ‘additional’, that is ‘more’, saints added since 1969, including St Padre Pio, St Teresa of Calcutta, etc. in addition to the many saints found in the EF canon.
 
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