Having posted this news item, perhaps it’s time I check in for a bit.
I go to Mass in a Benedictine monastery. I think it’s a pretty good representation of what Sacrosanctum Concilium intended.
The propers and ordinary are in Gregorian chant in Latin (with Kyrie in Greek of course). The rest is in French plainchant. The readings are chanted; the only part not chanted is the homily (and the odd announcement which are very infrequent, usually when there’s a special collection for missions, etc.). There’s incense, bells, and the pipe organ where appropriate, and not, when not appropriate (e.g. no organ in Lent except for Laetare Sunday).
Really, it’s very difficult to find fault with it other than the cantors missing a note from time to time or the deacon accidentally reading the wrong gospel. They’re human after all!
I think it points the way forward, should we care to pay attention. There’s no putting the genie back into the bottle. SC wanted full active participation in the Mass. In some places that might mean the vernacular, in other circumstances (such as the World Oblate’s Congress I attended and helped organize in Rome), Latin as a common language is most appropriate. We therefore shouldn’t throw out the baby with the bathwater.
I once had a long and fascinating discussion with our abbot, a very cultured man and an accomplished musician (organ and harpsichord). He is dead set against going back to the EF Mass, and had an excellent explanation for some of the accretions and difficulties with celebrating that Mass compared to the OF; I’ve forgotten too much about the conversation to repeat it here. But based on how the abbey does things, he is very much in favour of well-executed, dignified and reverent liturgies.
I think rather than going back, we need to dust off Sacrosanctum Concilium which appears to have been largely forgotten especially in our parishes, and try to bring back the sacredness to what we have.
That said I’m not suggesting we ban the EF Mass; however I do see a problem of internal division fomenting because of it. Any perusal of this forum should make that obvious. We need to find a way to deal with this division before the “Catholic” in Catholic Church becomes an oxymoron and we split into two distinct ecclesial communities that don’t talk to each other or talk past each other; my wife’s Anglican parish is a case in point, their own “Vatican II” spawned the Book of Alternative Services and that crowd won’t even speak to the Book of Common Prayer crowd, and the poor pastor is stuck in the middle being tugged on both sides. I don’t propose to know the solution, but I don’t think steering the OF mass to be closer to SC will do any harm!