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dallas_r
Guest
Apologies for not explaining deeper what I meant. I believe that we should keep the English mass but have more parishes do the Latin mass. Like a 50/50 ratio of English masses and Latin masses.
That’s the sort of iconoclastic attitude the brought about the post Vatican 2 wreckovation. Beautiful, timeless high altars smashed to pieces and replaced with tables. Side altars got rid of all together. Communion rails, which clearly differentiate the sanctuary as a holy place, a place of sacrifice, removed for being too ‘uninviting’.Like TLM, nothing wrong with it as long as it is not a distraction viewed as more important than the real meaning of the Mass
I can definitely agree that the way the mass of Paul VI is celebrated in practice definitely leaves much to be desired. I think its notable that the OF had been charictarised with disobedience. For example, Musicam Sacram required that for the ordinaries to be sung at mass, almost everything else in the mass had to be chanted. If we look at the way mass is celebrated in your average OF parish, that is definitely not the case. If we look at the way most of the more contraversal changes came about, we once again see this continued trend in disobedience. For example, the indult that some countries such as the US have for recieving the Eucharist on the hand, came about because of disobedience on the part of the “faithful.” The same is true of abstinance on Fridays. You might ask why the Holy Spirit would allow such comprimises to happen, but it is important to note that the infallibilty of the papacy only garuntees freedom from doctrinal errors, and not disciplinary ones.the more I research groups like the SSPX, the more I find myself identifying with them.
Because we ought not to be traditionalist simply for the sake of tradition itself; tradition is a means to an end, namely that of union with God, and not a mere end in itself.If one wants to be more traditional why only go back 1570? I’d like to see some Gallican Rite masses.
Except that mainstream Protestant denominations also suffered a significant loss of members as well during the same period.They have had the opposite effect, unless the intent was more protestant converts and more fallen away Catholics.