B
brotherhrolf
Guest
Hey, quit stealing my lines!I agree with you 100% !! But duck, and be ready for “incoming”![]()
Nobody is saying, Cat, that you can’t have your say. Indeed, it is your say which gives me all sorts of angst to deal with - precisely because I know that you have a right to your say. In fairness, however, if I can put myself in your shoes, surely you can put yourself in my shoes even if I stand in opposition to those who are my contemporaries and elders.
I have come to have a deep respect for Deacon Ed. He is my elder. He was in the seminary in NO when I was wet behind my ears in a Catholic boys high school in NO. He sees things from a different perspective than me. Those eight or ten years have obviously made a difference in our perspectives.
I can’t explain the difference. Those ten years made a big difference. The HMC I grew up in was one of the dialogue Mass, people singing and responding in Latin, and then the abrupt transistion to the NO. At age 17 when I graduated from high school, I, like so many of my classmates, was perfectly happy with the HMC under which we grew up. That was almost 40 years ago.
No one is asking Deacon Ed or Cat or anyone else to return to the practices of 40+ years ago. No one and certainly not me. But this irrational fear and loathing of the EF is every bit as unwarranted as the irrational fear and loathing of the OF.
Deacon Ed, I make no apologies that I was happy with the EF in the 60s. As I have said, I didn’t have long hair; didn’t protest the VietNam War and I enlisted. There were a whole bunch of us in New Orleans at that time who were short haired conservatives who followed in their father’s footsteps.
Cat, I make no apaologies that I was happy with the EF. My father was a protestant and did not begin accompanying us as a family to Mass until 1969. ( My Daddy was the one who got me up and brought me to 6am Mass when I was a boy).
Both of you, IMHO are missing the bigger picture. Deacon Ed, we are French? We are Acadienne? I have way too much Irish mixed in to know that my ancestors had to attend Mass along the hedge rows and were dumped on the levees in NO in high summer in 1847.
I ask forgiveness of both of you. Not only was I happy with the EF in 1969, I tend to see things in light of my family’s ethnic and historical experience. It grieves me that my family’s experience is held in such disdain. It grieves me even further that I, as an anthropologist, am ridiculed/disdained for my own deeply held beliefs. Yes, I am engaging in hyperbole but would ask the two of you to consider your own actions in light of hyperbole.
The sword cuts both ways.