JKirk,
If, and I emphasize IF because I am honestly not sure where you stand on this so correct me if need be, but if you are in favor of the Tridentine Mass in the vernacular only, and not in Latin, I must tell you I think your outlook on this matter is one that if it were widespread could be very destructive to the just and proper preservation of the treasures of the Church’s traditions of sacred liturgy. **No, no, no! And if that’s what worried you, forgive me for not being more clear. That is not what I intended at all nor what I wish for or envision. Let me finish what I was saying: I don’t think that the Holy Father is going to get his wish for peaceful coexistence. I think we’re going to have to go back to one form over time and because of the contention over the Pauline, it’s going to have to be the Tridentine. I think most people can live with that, if the Church considers allowing the Tridentine in the vernacular (and if it comes to it, she will, because the Church/the Magisterium knows it’s wrong to force the flock over something that isn’t essential to salvation and Latin is not essential to our salvation). My stance is oneI came to after long soul-searching. Yes, I like the “noble simplicity” of the Pauline rightly celebrated and I have an affection for it as the Mass I knew coming into the Church, but MOSTLY what I like about it, considering it side by side with the Tridentine, is that the Pauline is in my langauge. In terms of the actual words (and the rites are made up of their words), the Tridentine is without comparison, hands down. What I envision is the the Tridentine as the only form, offered in both Latin and in the vernacular. I do NOT propose that the Latin should be abandoned, simply that the one form exists in Latin and in the vernacular. **
I’m not saying this as an attack on your person or to deride your practice of the Faith, but because if this is in fact your position I have a hard time understanding how someone with such seeming devotion to the Catholic faith could come to the point where they have no tolerance for a liturgical form which has nourished the faith of millions for almost 2000 years (admittedly, with changes along the way but it would seem none so drastic as those which followed the promulgation of the 1970 Roman Missal). **It isn’t a question of tolerance. I’ve never been anything, but respectful toward the Tridentine. Given the choice, however, I would rather attend Mass in my own tongue. I don’t think I’m alone in that and I would rather bet that most of the laity feel the same way. **
Not only has the Traditional Mass been a boon for so many Catholics throughout the ages of history, but the pendulum of faithful devotions is in our day swinging toward the more traditional, and this includes the Mass of the 1962 Missal. The traditionalist orders of priests our having no shortage of applicants and their seminaries are full, at least between the FSSP and the ICRSS. Granted we are not yet seeing a sea change in this regard but in different places throughout the United States (and I imagine in other parts of the world) we are witnessing wellsprings of youthful interest and newfound devotion to the Mass of the Classical Roman Rite. I go to the TLM regularly near my university and I’ve visited St. Francis de Sales Oratory in St. Louis. The pews are full on Sundays, and many of those present are young families or young adults.