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Keep in mind – people who left the Church prior to the OF – received communion on the tongue.
As far as the Church goes, Italian is the most widely used language at the Vatican.A random thought…While Latin was chosen as the universal language, would it be true that English is the modern equivalent?
One of the most beautiful “modern” hymns, Silent Night, was first performed in 1818 in Austria, accompanied by guitar, at midnight Mass. Most certainly not the Mass of Paul VI.I have. One difference is that in the Novus Ordo Missae, the use of a guitar does not necessarily constitute an abuse. Whereas in the Traditional Mass, it does.
I’m not bothered by not understanding the priest. We have a fair number of foreign priests locally and they can be difficult to understand. Also, I’ve been to bilingual Masses. I can’t understand all of those. One thing that encouraged my conversion was the universality of the Church. A liturgical language makes this more clear.Most people don’t speak Latin but would still like a mass where we can actually understand what the Priest is saying.
You could argue that. I don’t know that Latin is especially holy. I’ve seen the claim made. But it does benefit from being a fixed language. It doesn’t change like English does over time and in different regions. So it may not be so much that Latin was a common language but that it no longer is a common language.A random thought…While Latin was chosen as the universal language, would it be true that English is the modern equivalent?
As a chorister the main advantage I see to Latin is the vast patrimony of Gregorian chant that was built around it. The melodies are not easily transposed to other languages, if they can be transposed at all, other than the very simplest ones, as the melodies make use of Latin accentuation and cadences. So if we got rid of Latin altogether, we could kiss Gregorian chant goodbye. I for one, though I prefer the OF Mass by a long shot, am not willing to take it that far.You could argue that. I don’t know that Latin is especially holy. I’ve seen the claim made. But it does benefit from being a fixed language. It doesn’t change like English does over time and in different regions. So it may not be so much that Latin was a common language but that it no longer is a common language.
I’ve often asked myself the same question. When Jesus was alive, being fully human as well as fully divine, He would have shed skin particles and hair, etc., like everyone else. I wonder if He had disciples running behind him to collect every fleck of dandruff or hair He left behind…Do think the Apostles and the Early Church were as scrupulous about particles? The whole reason the hosts are very rigid and pretty hard is for this reason.