K
katherine2
Guest
Oh, you little child!!!I’m sorry, I was distracted by all the mermaid saints, now what were we discussing? I grew up with the Latin Mass, leanred all prayers in Latin for 1st communion, used a missal since 4th grade, remember the kefoffle when missalettes were introduced (my dad nearly had a stroke), and the pain of rapid, unexplained, random changes in the liturgy in the 60s, where every week you dreaded coming to Church for fear of what else would disappear or change.
Come here and talk to a real old lady. The bilingual Missal, my dear, is a dissenting liberal innovation. It was banned until the 20th century though around 1880 a lot of liberal Germans started putting them out in disobedience to the Church. In the early 20th century the Church accomodated the dissenters and reluctantly permitted them. However, I still remember as a girl that carrying a missal (rather than a prayer book with one’s private devotions) to Mass marked you as one of those “progressive” Catholics.