R
rien
Guest
Very good points.The prepnderance of self-identified “traditionalist” distaste for Doctor Hahn that I have seen seems to be general annoyance and distaste for the fact that he did not “trad up” and has found the ordinary form to be an acceptable starting or ending point in discussions about the Mass. Additionally his association with FSU and membership in Opus Dei seems to arise the ire or suspiscion of some.
More of a “guilt by association”/“he never became a card-carrying traditionalist” sort of resentment among most. Still one other guy I talked to fancies himself a devotee of St. Tomas Aquinas and broadly rejects listening to anything that does not eminate from a Thomist. You’ll have that I guess.
The fact that ultra-traditionalists and ultra modern liberals have distaste for him, may be a good sign he is a radical orthodox catholic!
Frankly, listening to Dr. Hahns stuff, I find it helpful and illuminating in my appreciation of the Eucharist - and I attend Byzantine Divine Liturgy.
IMO, traditionalists in some cases are more focused on the “law” or rubrics than “faith working in love” that Paul preaches.
FSU gets lots of flack - yet it has generated many, many vocations. I believe they recently surpassed Notre Dame in terms of numbers of theology students.
FSU’s Eucharistic devotions are phenomenal. One of their graduates, Janis Clarke, sang for JP2 in 2002 at the World Youth Day. She has devoted much of her singing career to promoting Eucharistic devotion.
Janis had a trial of critical proportions. A singer promoting Catholcicsm, she lost her voice in 2005. Medical test after medical test could not find an answer. She was about to lose her music ministry. Ironically this happened just after she sang for a pro-life event in Boulder Co. FSU students and professors are at the forefront of this effort too.
Janis is a consecrated virgin. She spent hours in Eucharistic Devotion after this. She felt called still to raise her voice for the unborn.
She attended a Catholic healing Mass in December 2005. After that her bishop prayed over her. On 12/8 her voice returned - Feast of The Immaculate Conception. She has since given testimonies.
Since then she has gone on to produce CDs like “Prayers and Songs for Life”. It features songs she composed for children on Eucahristic and Marian themes.
Janis has a strong devotion to the Eucharist and the Blessed Mother.
She is also charismatic and an FSU graduate - who is heeding the call, as too few do, of Jesus to go out and preach the Gospel to the world.
