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sw85
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The study I mentioned previously is here: www.u.arizona.edu/~aversa/modernism/Novus_ordo_record.pdf
All I’m saying is that the imposition of a new form of the Mass with little transition and generally poor oversight was one of them, which is why the collapse began in 1970 and not literally any other point. (FYI, even then-Joseph Ratzinger complained about this, arguing the transition should’ve been 10 years, not 6 months).
We’re all just speculating. Counterfactuals are speculative by nature. For that matter, social science in general is speculative. If you want to ask whether a large-scale policy decision was good or bad, you’re sort of in the position of having to speculate.But you have no real evidence linking attrition from Catholic churches to changes within the Church Herself. You’re just speculating.
Yes, no doubt a lot of bad factors converged at once. The trend was generally negative before Vatican II, anyway. The point is that the slope turned even more sharply negative right around 1970, the same year the new form of the Mass took effect. I tend to think this might not have happened if the transition had been better coordinated, since we had been trending toward a more vernacular-heavy Mass even before the Council opened, anyway.The cause of the attrition might have been due to many things; .e.g, more women working outside the home and putting their children in daycare centers. Or perhaps the rise of no-fault divorce. Or the perhaps the widespread availability of the birth control pill. Or the end of the Viet Nam war and the return of the soldiers to a nation that despised them rather than honoring them. Or the disillusionment in the U.S. after two assassinations of popular public figures in 1968. Or the increasing popularity of rock music. Or the rise of “free love”. Or perhaps the increasing devotion to the television.
All I’m saying is that the imposition of a new form of the Mass with little transition and generally poor oversight was one of them, which is why the collapse began in 1970 and not literally any other point. (FYI, even then-Joseph Ratzinger complained about this, arguing the transition should’ve been 10 years, not 6 months).
Yes, mainline Protestant churches have been collapsing for some time. And evangelical Protestant churches I believe have been surging. The effect is overall generally neutral.And I disagree with you about Protestant attrition. I just did some research last week and found plenty of studies demonstrating that the mainline Protestant churches have seen steady declines in attendance for the last several decades.
I didn’t say “the NO is a mess.” Go back and read what I said. I said we got a mess, hence the abuses which prevailed in the 70s especially. If we had gotten what the Council actually envisioned, things might’ve turned out differently, because the changes the Council recommended were within reason. I don’t blame the new order of Mass itself, I blame its implementation: too quick of a transition, too shoddy of a translation (in English, at least), too little oversight by bishops, too much abuse by priests, etc.The NO is not a mess.
I get that this is the narrative that prevails today, yes.The situation of an entire Church having their primary ritual in a language none of them could understand, a ritual which they spent muttering rosaries to themselves while the priest performed a ritual that had almost nothing to do with them was the mess. Such a model would not have survived the massive increase in education that happened throughout the first half of the 20th Century. People who who have something more than a 6th grade education are going to want to know what the priest is saying.