I tried personally talking to one of them early on when I saw what was going on and was written off immediately as “just another liberal”.
How do you know you’re not?
There is a very concerted and organized plan in place, and a large part of it involves a very strong involvment with recruiting the teenage boys.
You say that as if it’s sinister…but isn’t this the time when young boys are being spiritually formed and discerning, at least initially, the direction their life will go…searching out what God has in mind for them. The Church should be talking seriously with and helping to form these young men for their possible vocations to the priesthood. This, as opposed to forming them to get hip with the teen-life type rock ‘n roll masses and discussing the latest release from rappin’ priest celebrities.
While I am a strong supporter of vocations, I fear we will be seeing a disproportionate number of young men who have been strongly influenced by this anti-Vatican II sentiment.
Perhaps it’s an anti-“Spirit of Vatican II” sentiment. It’s easy to confuse the two when they are all so often closely connected.
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I have heard them already echoing the “Vatican II was the worst thing to ever happen to the Church” mantra and disparaging their own families for preferring the vernacular.
Well, all I can say is that not all those preferring the vernacular are cafeteria and liberal catholics, but all cafeteria and liberal catholics unfailingly prefer the vernacular. The TLM is poison to them.
Further, I think it’s only being honest to say that the council hasn’t been exactly a fruitful one for the Church. It’s been followed chronoligically at least by vast devastation (loss of vocations, converts, and faithful members) and scandal (widespread homosexuality infiltrating the priesthood, open heresy being preached from too many pulpits, etc.). If it’s been fruitful for any groups, it’s been fruitful for those non-Catholic religions who’ve been absorbing those individuals leaving the Church in the Council’s wake.
I have no way of knowing how prevalent this movement is, but I do know from first hand experience in our diocese that it is there and that the “clique” that doesn’t talk about what they’re up to is very active.
Beware the undergound Catholic Church.
By the way, I too never saw a high Mass that looked anything like that EWTN Mass though I attended one of the biggest parishes in Milwaukee for many years pre-Vatican II. Even Christmas and Easter didn’t look like that.
I see one just like it every Sunday, but can’t speak to your experience in the 50s. Perhaps folks took it for granted and didn’t appreciate it for what it was. Absense makes the heart grow fonder. Perhaps that is why the Lord allowed it to be “taken away” for the last few decades…so we could truly come to appreciate what we had.
Further, most traditional folks I talke to don’t think Vatican II “invented” all the problems of the Church in the last 40 years, it just sort of “uncorked” alot of percolating problems that had been simmering for quite sometime within - and let in (through the new openess) alot of problems that had been hammering the Church from the outside.
Though it may just be me, I found it very hard to keep focused on the liturgical purpose rather than the “performance” aspect of it.
There is a law in theology that says that we only receive the graces we are predisposed to receive. Perhaps you are bringing to much protestant influenced “Spirit of Vatican II” baggage to the mass, and what the traditional-minded see as awe-inspiring beauty in the worship directed to God, you see as distractive…feeling left out or something since it’s God-directed and not man-directed. Too vertical and not horizontal enough for your new tastes.
Peace in Christ,
DustinsDad