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Guest
I am not exactly sure what you mean by this. I seriously doubt that Latin was used in Jerusalem, which is the founding seat of the Church. The New Testament was written in Greek, not Latin, and was later translated into Latin.That Catholic Church used Latin since the very beginning.
St Peter was a fisherman, which pretty much leaves him lacking any formal schooling, and it has often been said that St Mark may have well had Peter as his primary source when writing the Gospel if Mark. In Greek, as best we have it.
And Greek was largely the language of commerce throughout much, if not all of the Mediterranean; and as there are no reports as to what St. Peter knew other than Aramaic, it is seriously debatable as to what language, other than Aramaic he might have celebrated the Eucharist, Given that St Peter was Jewish, and for some time what we know of as the Mass appears to have ben bifurcated, with people meeting in synagogue on Saturday for scripture, and Sunday for Eucharist, any guess is pure speculation.
The use of Latin has innumerable benefits to using the vernacular at Mass:
*]Protection from mistranslation & heresy
Not sure what you mean by this, but any official approval of a translation of the Mass resolves that matter.
I would willingly grant that, as it is primary proof as to why around the world, the vast majority of people hear the Mass said in their vernacular.*]A unified language in the Liturgy across the Church
*]The expression of the mystery & sacred nature of the Mass since most do not understand it nor use it in daily conversation
True*]Latin is a dead language, so the meaning of words do not change over time
Please cite your source, or this is pure speculation.*]St. Peter himself said Mass in Latin, as did our ancestors of the Faith
None of that is heresy. none. Not one iota. It does not deny any doctrine of the Church. And please, if you are going to make allegations that “someone” said that the vernacular would lead to heresy, please cite your source.This is just a few reasons, there are more. It was predicted, before the Second Vatican Council, that if vernacular were introduced into the Mass, heresy would creep in. This was proven true by the fact that the Novus Ordo was translated in such a way as to promote specific heretical agendas (in languages besides English as well). A new translation had to be prepared for the English Catholic Church since the old translation had heresies & did not reflect the true meaning of the Latin that the Novus Ordo was originally written in (for example, et cum spíritu tuo was translated as “and also with you” when it really means “and with thy spirit”).
You seem to have a rather narrow view of the Church. For starters, Latin does not unify the Church; it unifies the Roman rite.The use of Latin also unifies the Church across the world. No matter what country you hear Mass in, the language is the same because the Church is the same. It expresses our unity in the Catholic Faith & the Mystical Body of Christ. Also, the meaning of words do not change in Latin since it is a dead language. With Mass being said in the vernacular, new translations have to be written as the meaning of words change over time. With Mass said in Latin, it makes someone realize that something beyond what he normally experiences is taking place at the altar, something beyond his comprehension since most do not understand Latin. If someone wants to know what is said, it’s as simple as reading the missal.
The Maronite rite, for example, has said the Divine Liturgy in Aramaic and Arabic since the first apostle brought the Good News to the area. They continue to this day, and they consider themselves to be part of the Western Church, not the Eastern.
And then we have the Eastern rites which are also in union with Rome, and have used their own languages (e.g. Slavic) since an Apostle brought, and etc.
I have no doubts that Latin will continue to be the official language of the Roman rite, and that Rome will continue to produce documents in Latin until the mind of man comprehendeth the amount of time not. And every one of those documents will be translated, forthwith, into the languages of those receiving them. If for no other reason than that there are so extremely few people competent in Latin.
You are very enthusiastic about Latin, and that is fine with me, having studied it both in high school and college. However, you might wish to do a bit more fact checking before making allegations.
Keep in mind that the words “unity” and “uniformity” do not have the same meaning.
The Church, although of a number of rites, have unity.
They most definitely do not have uniformity, and never have, once St Paul brought in all those unwashed Gentiles.