Pope Francis:
For example, I always try to understand what is behind those individuals who are too young to have lived the pre-Conciliar liturgy, and who want it nonetheless.
Hello, Your Holiness.
You don’t know me. I’m a married, 25 year old Roman Catholic, with a newborn son in tow. I was born into a culturally Catholic family and attended Catholic schools when I was younger. I received all the sacraments of initiation in their turn and went to Mass maybe three or four times a year. The catechesis in school was poor at best though thankfully it appears to be worlds apart from what Americans seem to have to suffer through. So as you can imagine I wasn’t particularly observant of my Catholic faith.
That changed when I was in my late teens. I discovered the traditional liturgy of the Church. Celebrated by a diocesan priest—a monsignor no less!—I fell in love with, and was brought back in to the Church by, the Extraordinary Form of the Roman Mass. My wife was raised entirely with the traditional liturgy and my son has been baptized with the traditional Roman Ritual.
All that attracted me to the traditional liturgy can be summed up rather easily: the clear exposition of doctrine contained in this liturgy and the sheer beauty of it expressed by the traditional tones of Gregorian chant and the inherent reverence that the rubrics demand of the celebrant.
I am aware that the Ordinary Form of the Roman Rite has this as well. But the Ordinary Form suffers from a vast amount of options that make it so that I have rarely assisted at an Ordinary Form that was not a banal, dull, and narcissistic pantomime. Does that mean that they are all like that? No, blessed be God! And I am so incredibly happy for you that you have never been subjected to such a Mass as I have described. But we are not all so blessed as you, Your Holiness.
More importantly
Sacrosanctum concilium has
not been carried by the Church. To say that the Council has been heard is a clear falsehood. Where is the pride of place that Latin has in the Ordinary Form of the Roman Rite? Where is the Gregorian Chant? Where did the Council call for Mass
versus populum? Where did the Council state that Communion was to be received standing and in the hand? Where did the Council call for abolishing altar rails and all forms of traditional piety?
To speak of a Reform of the Reform
is an error, Your Holiness,
because the Reform itself has not even been carried out! The reason I am attached to the traditional liturgy, Your Holiness, the reason that multiple monastic foundations have adopted the traditional liturgy, the reason that some have even
returned to the traditional liturgy, the reason that multiple congregations of religious and non-religious clergy have adopted to the traditional liturgy is because we
are insecure. Insecure at the thought of every parish using its own liturgy. Insecure at the thought of losing a musical tradition that stretches back throughout the entirety of Christian history. Insecure at the thought of top-down impositions of banal, on the spot productions of committees.
Your Holiness, you and I at least have one thing in common. We both have souls entrusted to our care. I have an obligation before God to my wife and my child. And I must in conscience do the very best I can for my son, to raise him to lead a holy life, to know, love and serve God. I believe that can be best accomplished immersed in the traditional liturgy of the Church until
you yourself assure that the Second Vatican Council is actually heeded.