M
Magnum_V8
Guest
I had my first dose of a face-to-face confrontation over the Latin Mass yesterday at my parish’s final RCIA meeting. I joined their RCIA team this year…and what a disappointment it was. But I’ll save that for another time.
I mentioned to our pastor that I started serving the Latin Mass at another parish. When I told him I served High Mass on Easter, his eyes got big, he raised his brows and said, “Wow, a High Mass!” So, I take it that he’s not so dead set against the Latin Mass.
At one point during the get-together, the RCIA lay-leader asked if I would be available to serve funerals that come up on Saturdays. I said that I was. Meanwhile, her husband said, “yeah, he probably could since he’s started serving here [at our Novus Ordo].” The husband wasn’t there when I had mentioned about serving the Latin Mass.
Our priest jumped in immediately and said, “sure he can…he serves the Latin High Mass.” Thanks, Padre.
The husband responded, “didn’t learn Latin as a kid, and have no interest in it now.” BTW, he’s a convert from Lutheranism about 7 years ago. And he’s told me that he has problems with a lot of the “Catholic” things.
He went on, quite aggressively, I might add: “I think its a mistake to go backwards. Everything is fine the way it is. No one can understand the Latin. It should be in the vernacular.”
It was silent for a minute, and I could feel my temperature rise…its the Irish in me. I broke the silence with a nice, calm response: “Well, they have missals with the Latin on one side and the English on the other.” Another RCIA team member --an older lady-- agreed with me. All in all, besides me, 3 of the 4 other RCIA lay members said they loved the “old Latin Mass.”
The husband responded: “But you don’t know where in the missal the priest is.”
I said: “They have these red booklet type missals that show pictures of the priest, where he is and his posture. My little son follows along with that book.”
Well, that killed the conversation…except for his wife asking our pastor if we were going to have the Latin Mass…so innocently she asked. But our pastor kind of chuckled and just said, “no, I don’t think so.”
I think our pastor is capable of celebrating the TLM. At one point in the conversation, he remarked about his childhood and getting kicked by the lead server because he didn’t bow toward the priest at “…et tibi, pater…” during the Confiteor.
Sorry for the long post. I thought it was funny, though. Maybe there is some hope for the TLM at my parish.
I mentioned to our pastor that I started serving the Latin Mass at another parish. When I told him I served High Mass on Easter, his eyes got big, he raised his brows and said, “Wow, a High Mass!” So, I take it that he’s not so dead set against the Latin Mass.
At one point during the get-together, the RCIA lay-leader asked if I would be available to serve funerals that come up on Saturdays. I said that I was. Meanwhile, her husband said, “yeah, he probably could since he’s started serving here [at our Novus Ordo].” The husband wasn’t there when I had mentioned about serving the Latin Mass.
Our priest jumped in immediately and said, “sure he can…he serves the Latin High Mass.” Thanks, Padre.
The husband responded, “didn’t learn Latin as a kid, and have no interest in it now.” BTW, he’s a convert from Lutheranism about 7 years ago. And he’s told me that he has problems with a lot of the “Catholic” things.
He went on, quite aggressively, I might add: “I think its a mistake to go backwards. Everything is fine the way it is. No one can understand the Latin. It should be in the vernacular.”
It was silent for a minute, and I could feel my temperature rise…its the Irish in me. I broke the silence with a nice, calm response: “Well, they have missals with the Latin on one side and the English on the other.” Another RCIA team member --an older lady-- agreed with me. All in all, besides me, 3 of the 4 other RCIA lay members said they loved the “old Latin Mass.”
The husband responded: “But you don’t know where in the missal the priest is.”
I said: “They have these red booklet type missals that show pictures of the priest, where he is and his posture. My little son follows along with that book.”
Well, that killed the conversation…except for his wife asking our pastor if we were going to have the Latin Mass…so innocently she asked. But our pastor kind of chuckled and just said, “no, I don’t think so.”
I think our pastor is capable of celebrating the TLM. At one point in the conversation, he remarked about his childhood and getting kicked by the lead server because he didn’t bow toward the priest at “…et tibi, pater…” during the Confiteor.
Sorry for the long post. I thought it was funny, though. Maybe there is some hope for the TLM at my parish.