This is a really good post. I’m glad that you shared it.
However, I’d just like to share my own experience, just to contribute to this dialogue. This isn’t directed at you personally, but at “anti-traditional” sentiments. I’m just using your post as a launching pad, because I think it’s pertinent to my own experience.
For me personally, my own story resembles yours a great deal, with the exception that I converted, and that I felt alienated from faith in the new Mass and finally had it “written on my heart” in the Tridentine Mass.
I feel like that is the case with a lot of young people. The so-called “New Mass,” is well, “Old.” It’s dated. The hymns are dated. They have this “70s” feel to them that embarrass and distract me. To be honest, it doesn’t really foster a big sense of Catholic identity for me and doesn’t build my faith. The clapping, casualness, etc., really alienates me. I know a lot of people think that is unfortunate, but…
I feel like we’re faced with a quandary. To “update” the Mass and make it more accessible to my own experience would, well, make it a sacrilege, because sacrilege is what I’ve pretty much known all my life. No offense, but I can’t stand Marty Haugen’s hymns. They are so
lame. What are we going to do? Bring in speedmetal and gangsta rap? Are we going to refer to each other as “dudes”? That’s not possible.
I don’t mind the Latin, because I can just look it up online. A couple hours on the computer and you can follow anything! I like the reverence and mysticism, because it takes me out of the world that I have to deal with daily, in which I am apparently the only one of my peers looking to save his own soul instead of enjoying himself to the fullest.
The traditional Mass doesn’t just require obedience, it
commands it. It builds a bridge to history, to faith, to the Catholic culture, which is the most sublime part of humanity’s experience. How can I not support it in every way?
I don’t wanna knock anyone. Somehow, the Novus Ordo has produced a number of pious Catholics. It blows my mind, though, that this is the case.
It’s so hard to be Catholic. It really is. We never talk about this much, but I mean, I have to actually tell people about Transubstantiation. And while I see it as the most wonderful thing there is, people constantly call me a nut, a “cuckoo” or whatever other insult.
When these naysayers are in my face, I always show them videos of the traditional Mass. Why? Because of its integrity, because of its undeniable beauty, because of its holiness, because of its Latin, because of the rubrics, the prayers, the saints it produced, and the culture.
With all that said, I have to be honest. I’m sympathetic to the SSPX. Lefebvre did some heroic actions (so did John Paul II) which kept the traditional Mass alive. The traditional Mass is a bulwark against the horrors of secularism. As for doctrine, I don’t know much, but I do know that the Magisterium has a habit of working things out for the best.
No one is trying to take the Novus Ordo away from anyone. Bring back the Tridentine Mass to every parish, and we’ll be eating catfish on Lenten Fridays together.
This post wasn’t directed at any particular person, and feel free to contradict me.