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VicFerrari
Guest
The grace effused by any valid Catholic sacrificial liturgy is the same. Everything else is a very distant second in terms of importance.“when bestowing grace onto those participating.” Yes, but I’m quite sure that the EF is better at some things and the OF is better at others. If that wasn’t the case we would only have one form. Think of it in terms of male/female (best analogy I could think of, sorry). Both are equal, but both have some things they are better at than the other. As someone mentioned earlier on this thread (I think) the EF does a “better” job in regards to the use of silence.
Now can individuals personally prefer one liturgy over the other? Absolutely, and there is nothing wrong with stating that. To suggest however that one is superior to another is wrong. I think concern about individuals trying to suggest one Mass is better than the other is why the Church has had a rather spotty reputation with regard to offering the EF Mass.
Another would be the use of language. English is great, but its use does not have the same impact that Latin does. Latin (by it’s lack of modern usage , and long history and linkage with the faith, not just the language itself) has a much stronger impact, at least to me, when it comes to importance and “sanctity” (not saying it is somehow a sanctifying language, but it has a stronger spiritual impact on me) than English does. Does Latin actually make a phrase “better” or more “holy,” no, but it does a great job of making me pay attention and actually focus on the moment and stay in the proper frame of mind.
English (or any vernacular) can have every bit the impact that Latin does. No question about that. For me personally it has a greater impact because no missalette translation is necessary and because I love the English language. I suspect my all-time favorite would be an Anglican Use Mass.
oldcatholicguy;11416357:
Poor analogy. The OF Mass in the vernacular is not “classical music or heavy metal” while the EF is “Gregorian chant.” While I have no doubt the difference in impacts you feel is real, it’s because of your foundation and your preferences that you bring to listening to the music (or attending the Mass.) It’s not because of any intrinsic difference in the music. In other words some interpret those types of music very differently.A personal example of what I’m trying to explain would be music. I listen to my ipod while working outside. If I’m listening to classical music or heavy metal my mind wanders all over the place. Turn on some Gregorian chant and I’ll spend the entire time outside in deep religious thought. Not because the chant is in Latin, but because the chant is in the “language” of my faith. Its usage puts me in the right frame of mind much more readily than English (even chant in English) could.