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Many, maybe most, would have known a couple prayers and hymns in Latin I’m sure. Even today many Catholics do. I love singing O Sanctissima alone and in private - in Latin. Though I don’t generally pray in Latin (nor am I generally able to).I don’t have any official knowledge on this, but I’d imagine they prayed in their native language. If you don’t know a language, how could you ever pray in it? Maybe if they knew Latin they may have prayed in it, but it simply wouldn’t have been practical for the vast majority of people.
No. We did not pray in our homes in Latin. We prayed in our own vernacular.
Its interesting that, to this day, public, parochial singing of the Divine Praises is popular and widespread in Eastern parishes, but is still struggling to catch on in the Latin Church. Centuries of the Office being strictly in Latin was probably a major factor here, no? In the Eastern tradition, the Divine Praises would often have been in the vernacular (as they continue to be today). Novenas and other popular devotions didn’t arise in Eastern communities…they simply celebrated the liturgy…No. We did not pray in our homes in Latin. We prayed in our own vernacular.
We knew the Latin for different things…the Our Father and the Hail Mary and the Angelus and the Regina Coeli…but our prayers at home were not in Latin. We might on occasion sing a hymn in Latin, such as the Regina Coeli or the Salve Regina.
The public novena devotions also were not in Latin, which is one of the reasons why they were so popular.
As do I. I rarely have the opportunity to confess in French but my Act of Contrition is always in my mother tongue, the same prayer I learned 57 years ago.Mostly vernacular. In my case that is French. Though I am fluently bilingual and can speak French or English without a trace of an accent (well, other than a native Canadian English accent and a native Québecois French accent), for the life of me I cannot recite any of the “standard prayers” in English. But I can rattle them off by heart in French and I can say the Pater in Latin, because I used Latin for the LOTH every day. I also know all the Marian antiphons by heart in Latin, and many of the antiphons of the Liturgy of the Hours as well, at least those from the normal (i.e. non-festive) Offices.
When I pray outside the liturgy though, I use French, and if I have to say an act of contrition, I say it in French.
Latin is the official language of the Church.
Latin is the most solemn language to address God and Our Lady.
Latin is used in the liturgy of the Roman Rite but of course is not the liturgical language for the Eastern Catholic Churches.Latin is the language of the Church’s liturgy, but a Catholic prayer life is more than just liturgical prayer. God doesn’t expect us to only talk to him with formal prayers. That would be a dismal form of religion.
You don’t have to know an entire language to pray along in it. The EF only has some 600 distinct words, many of them cognates of your English language.I don’t have any official knowledge on this, but I’d imagine they prayed in their native language. If you don’t know a language, how could you ever pray in it? Maybe if they knew Latin they may have prayed in it, but it simply wouldn’t have been practical for the vast majority of people.
I do liturgically at least, for much the same reason (and musically, Latin is the language of the great patrimony of Gregorian chant, and chant tones don’t adapt so well to French though the choirmaster of our abbey has put together some that aren’t horrible).At home I pray in Latin for the most part. Why? Because I’m trying to keep a beautiful language alive.
In all these long years, I have never heard attempts involving mode VII critiqued in that way. But your saying it also brings to mind, though, epic fails that I have witnessed “down through the ages.”/…/ in particular I hate mode VII psalms on the finale “d” and most if not all of the antiphons are in that mode. I can never make that mode sound better than strangling a chicken![]()
You’re welcome!In all these long years, I have never heard attempts involving mode VII critiqued in that way. But your saying it also brings to mind, though, epic fails that I have witnessed “down through the ages.”
Thank you for a hearty laugh at the end of this day.