…My personal opinion. One may have the beautiful Tridentine Mass but if one is about that and nothing else
I know of no traditionalist who is about the TLM
and nothing else. It may seem that way to you since that is the most visible aspect of “traditional spirituality” (if we must call it that) and probably the most often debated and discussed. But they are the among the most faithful devout Catholics you’ll meet - at least they are sincerely trying to be.
If they seem a little cold to you - perhaps it’s because they’ve been beat up so much (inside and outside the Church) they’ve got the guard up - and therein might be the problem. Get to know 'em in the real world though…you might just be surprised how charitable they can be.
…like in following the great commission then what? Traditionalists seem to be very weak on evangelizing the world around them. The indult parishes are generally stagnant. Little growth and few conversions. IMO this is a real problem among traditionalists.
Okay, couple of things. I don’t think the indult parishes are generally stagnant. If anything they are flourishing anywhere they are “allowed” - and that is crucial. Further, I think the Holy Father even addressed the good fruit from those adhearing to the TLM - surprisingly so it seems in the eyes of many a prelate.
If it seems traditionalists are weak in bringing in converts (I have no idea on the stats) - that doesn’t seem to be entirely they’re fault. I’m not even sure if it is required by most bishops to have converts come in through RCIA in a NO parish as opposed to the old method used in traditional parishes. See even a non-Catholic who has converted to the Church through a traditional parish might have to go to a neighboring NO parish to enter Sacramentally as per the new regulations post VII. I’m not sure of this - but that would make sense to me.
Another thing…I have a Protestant friend that’s been to the TLM with me several times (keep him in your prayers) - and I still have to reassure him from time to time that we’re actally Catholic…he says the people there are so different (heh, they dress different, they pray different, they act different, etc) and the mass is so different from other’s he’s seen - he has trouble believing that we are of the same religion. Something to think about.
Point being that if the average Catholic looks at us with suspicion - what do you think the non-Catholics think? I guess I’m trying to say that when even fellow Catholics label you as schismatics and “watch out for them”, it’s kind of hard to bring in converts. All in all I think it’s just plain “easier” - culturally speaking - to convert to a NO parish than to a traditional one. If a faithful catholic in a NO parish is an oddball in society - the faithful traditional catholic is really realluy an oddball (in a good way of course).
That being said, I think traditionalists are
more up front about the call to conversion. The muffled call hidden in today’s common practice of ecumenism hasn’t really affected us as much. How it actually plays out in numbers of converts - I’m not sure. Haven’t seen any data on it.
And again - for the record, I owe alot to Scott Hahn, have no real problem with him, and still give out his conversion story when trying to evangilize non-catholics around me. Most recently a baptist fella I met at a bookstore. His name is Scott. Keep him in your prayers too
Peace in Christ,
DustinsDad