I think you bring up a good point or question. Why should someone pray in Latin if they can’t understand what it is they are saying? What does this accomplish? If the goal of prayer is simply to understand every single word someone says, then I would agree that in that case praying in any foreign language would not accomplish that end. But praying in Latin is different. First, regarding understanding, the more one prays in Latin, the more he is able to understand what he is praying. More and more words begin to make sense, and you are able to pick up on it and you can eventually master the language through hard work and dedication, which when done for the purpose of pleasing God is obviously going to be very meritorious. I know personally that in FSSP seminaries and others where they learn Latin, they pray the breviary in Latin from the beginning, and instruct them to pick up on whatever they can. I know from personal experience as well as from the experiences of others that they find this very beneficial and that their soul is able to pray and communicate to God in a very special way without having to know every word that one is praying. Meditation, a higher form of prayer that leads to contemplation, is also quite similar such as when praying the rosary and not thinking about the words one is saying.
In addition, there are also many other reasons and benefits to praying in Latin detailed on
this website such as the fact that praying in this language helps unite one in a special way to the rest of the Roman Church, with popes, and with countless saints throughout the ages who also prayed those same words in that same language. Obviously studying Latin is tremendously beneficial, and praying in Latin only helps someone to be able to pick up on the language all the more.
I have to admit that this has never been our experience. Since our foundation in 1209, anyone who could not pray in Latin, did not pray the breviary, but prayed the Office of the Paters or the Office Office of the Passion which St. Francis wrote in Italian for those who did not know Latin.
In modern times, after 1800, everyone had four years of Latin before entering the novitiate. By the time you started to pray the breviary, which was as a novice, you were at least able to translate in your head. You had to pass eight examinations during those four years. Today, this is still the case, unless you understand Latin, you cannot pray in Latin.
We don’t see Latin as a unifier. To us the unifying force is the liturgy itself, the fact that around the world, since 1209, Franciscans have been saying the same office and the same mass as one family. Unity in diversity was somethng that both founders stressed so as not to standardize the order and make it so structured that it resembled the Latin Church or the monastic life. Francis and Clare were not for uniformity in dress, language, apostolates, culture, or customs. They insisted tha the unifying factor was always Francis. He is the Patriarch. We approach God as his sons and daughters.
During the last 40 years, this has not been a real issue for us. We have been protected from this. Those houses that had men who know Latin well enough, use the same breviary as the rest, but in Latin. When it is not possible, because someone does not know enough Latin, you use the local language, just as we did in 1209.
Back then you traded the breviary for the Office of the Paters or the Office of the Passioin which was intentionally written in Italian and translated to French, Spanish and German, later to English.
We see this discussion as one that is not important. The unity is through the liturgy, not the language. We taught all of our Secular Franciscans the same way. Today, there are about 600,000 of them and they have no hunger for Latin. There are individuals who do,but not as an order. The few individuals who hunger for it can certainly use it in private or with others who understand it. One of their mandates is to spread this spirit to the laity around them, focus on the liturgy, not on the language.
Fraternally,
Br. JR, FFV
