Truly Lost.......

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To the charge that the New Rite, according to the liturgical decrees of Vatican II and the promulgation of the New Rite itself, is “protestant” my question would be “how?”. There is no doctrine that is denied or avoided to be more ecumenical. If there is then please inform me as I have yet to find it. I will agree that the number of doctrinal references has been reduced and one could make a case that this was not the best thing but that does not make it protestant. And as i said in my first post, there are certainly many Masses that could pass for protestant services but that is the fault of the priests, music ministers, so called liturgical experts and the like, not the fault of the Mass or the Church. I would encourage anyone interested to visit www.cantius.org to see what the New Rite of Mass should look like in every parish. God willing, maybe someday it will, along with the Traditional Rite.
Oh, when my husband gets home tonight I’ll tell him that we must move to Chicago. 🙂 Now that is a very lovely parish. Thank you for sharing.

Edited to add: a big improvement over the “Modernist Horror” church, yes?
 
While the Mass of Paul VI is perfectly Catholic and beautifully expresses the faith when celebrated according to the mind of the Church, I must agree that in many cases, we find more Catholic expressions of worship in Methodist or Anglican churches than in many modern Catholic Churches. But it seems to me the pendulum is swinging. More and more churches are using latin and Gregorian Chant and many of the novelties and abuses of the 60’s and 70’s are becoming more rare. Summorum Pontificum has opened the door to bring back all of our liturgical traditions that should never have been discarded in the first place. But from personal experience I would caution those who find themselves leaning to the more traditional side. It’s wonderful, don’t get me wrong, but if you fall in with the wrong crowd, you’ll end up leaving the Church in the misguided pursuit of being “truely” Catholic. I’ve seen too many people start out just wanting a beautiful, reverent liturgy and in the end, they denied the validity of the New Rite and questioned the validity of all the popes from the time of Blessed John XXIII. Personally, I would go to protestantized Mass before going back to an SSPX chapel. For me, the latter is a greater danger to my faith. By the way I do not mean this towards any approved group within the Church, but even at those chapels you have to watch for the laity. I would LOVE it if latin were a requirement in certain parts of the Mass and i would be ecstatic if they brought the altar rails back and the priest went back to the altar ad orientum, and I do not think it’s wishful thinking to say that it might happen someday soon.
Thank you brother. I really needed to hear those words! 👍
 
The origin of aesthetically beautiful Masses and Liturgies originated with the explosion of Christian culture after St. Constantine the Great. The Church wanted to make her little services tantamount to Imperial pomp and circumstance with the objective that since Christ was King, He should be treated like the Emperor.

No, the earliest liturgies were incredibly simple as the Didache shows. The early Masses in Rome were almost identical to the current Pauline Mass and St. Justin Martyr’s description of the
Mass does not look so much like the Divine Liturgy or the Tridentine Rite…it looks much, much more like the Mass of Paul VI.
I love how one little fragment of a record supposedly historically legitimizes the Mass of Paul VI. I’ve read the original and I don’t find a basis for altar girls, eucharistic ministers, broadway show tunes, etc…

We really, really, really, have to get past this early church mania present in Christian culture nowadays. The medieval developments happened for a reason. As a matter of fact, the Middle Ages were when Christianity had most deeply penetrated thought and society. We either need to come to grips with it, or give up Christianity, because 1,000 years of Christian culture can’t just be excised on a whim, papal or otherwise. It’s not only against theology, due to the fact that the majority of it was formally defined during those centuries, it’s against history in that those centuries provide the historical basis for even secular Western trends. Furthermore, it’s against reason, to somehow discredit the Church of 1,000 years, for some artificial renewal that did not happen. Bugnini was wrong when he believed there would be renewal. He was wrong.

If we’re going to go ga ga over the writings of Justin Martyr, and artificially imbue them with more credibility than any other saints’ opinions on liturgy, I’d love to see a return to Early Church penitential practices, just to help complete the set. Then maybe people would come to grips with their archaeologism. Hey. Why not go all the way? Why not forbid women and men to sit together in Church? If it predates Constantine, it must be good! :rotfl: Hey! We could change the Creed itself! Take out all the elements that dealt with the heresies over the years. We want it just like the first Mass ever said ever!
Also aesthetical beauty has limits to its power. The Eastern Orthodox have been doing the same Liturgy since the year 402 A.D. and possibly earlier. Yet despite the incredible power and majesty of the Divine Liturgy, the Eastern Orthodox have become both partial schismatics and in some cases heretical (cf. contraception, divorce). Also we must look at the Tridentine rite in places like Africa and China. No matter how powerful it may have been aesthetically it probably had little effect on newly converted peoples from heathenism.
The Old Mass was formed with truth foremost in the minds of reformers. There was no attempt to cloud any “hard” teachings, no attempt to whitewash anything. The reason that the Modernists’ Masses are so banal and ugly is that they have a warped view of human nature, which is the core of Modernist philosophy. They believe that humanity underwent a qualitative change with the advent of “modernity,” that man had become “adult,” and that all these ritual symbolic actions, all the art styles, the music, etc., were no longer necessary because of humanity’s advanced state. Of course, we know now that they were wrong. It was evident they were wrong at the time. Hell, even know in the field of history, we know full well that modernist philosophical constructs about the nature of man were a load. Don’t buy into the idea that aesthetics don’t matter. They matter as much as anything else, because anthropologically speaking, they have a psychological impact on worshippers that aids us in conforming ourselves to dogma, instead of attempting to conform dogma to ourselves, which is the perspective that the symbolism of the New Mass has produced in the West (in other regions it has been the exact opposite). It would have been one thing if they had stuck to the texts, kept it in Latin, ad orientem, etc, but they didn’t. They believed we no longer needed all that “outdated stuff,” when humanity needs it in every age.
 
Also, despite my love of the old ways…I am NOT a judge of what is Holy Tradition. The Fathers of the Council and current Magisterium, including Arinze, have the authority to judge what is timeless and changeable in the realm of liturgy. I do not have this right, nor should I, as I know very little compared to them.
If Catholics always stuck to the party line, then our Church would have stopped developing after the end of the Gospels. Ultramontanism means a mind that has been shut off. It’s a reaction to the fact that the intellectual momentum of the last 300 years has largely been with enemies of the Catholic faith. This sort of Ultramontanism wasn’t present in Thomas Aquinas’ day. With the rise of traditionalism, and the degeneration of liberal “Catholicism” into a Southpark-esque parody, I don’t think the fervor of past ultramontanists is necessary. If St. Ignatius had followed that path, we would have never had the Jesuits
Lifteteen and the Charismatic renewal have had powerful effects on Catholics of all ages.
They have had powerful effects. They have severed the Christian life from the cognitive aspects of the Christian religion. They are emotional shows, that captivate simple minds, and not much else. It’s just false religious therapy. Those elements are fads that will die out like all fads, ending in disillusionment .
I see this in the teens who I worship with on the Lord’s Day. My Father has decided that Lifeteen and the Charismatic Renewal is not just acceptable, but also beneficial to the members of His family. And we say: “Yes, Abba.”
No! This stuff is a scourge. It separates faith from reason, emotion from cognition. I went to this same kind of thing as a teen, and trust me, it was all about scoring girls. That’s it. Humanly speaking, sooner or later, the adults are just going to have to realize that teens are going to be teens, just like they were, and that minimizing religion into a few little sentimental ballads isn’t going to effect the kind of social change that is needed for the survival of Christianity as a viable alternative to secularism.
What is the heart of Orthodox Catholic Christianity. When I ask this question, it is clear that things like Liturgy, ritual pomp, aesthetical beauty, and ossified views of Tradition are NOT the heart(s).

The heart is Jesus Christ.

I do not go to Mass to see pretty liturgies, or get the undeniable “high” of aesthetics…and if I do then I should be ashamed of myself…and looking back at recent days, I am a little ashamed.
The heart of Christianity is Christ, as you said, but it’s lifeblood is dogma, which was codified and best presented in the aspects of the faith you listed above. The contemporary (and Vat II era) drives to change dogma are directly related to the desire to change the liturgy. Some of the theologians at the council even wanted to do away with Papal Infallibility! Don’t be ashamed. Your initial post was due to a real problem, which is the banalization and decline of Christianity in our society.
To be a disciple of the Lord Jesus Christ means a total giving of my whole life. He is in charge, and He is TRUSTWORTHY. Everything that has happened legitamately since Vatican II, even the approvals that I disagree with, have been HIS DOING.

And as one who claims Christ as Savior and Lord, I must follow where He leads.
It sounds as though he’s been leading you to tradition, which I believe he is currently raising up to save the dogmas and liturgy of the Church from those that would destroy them.
So, the next time I feel myself “suffering” through Mass, then I need to humble my arrogant heart and recognize that the feeling I experience means that my focus is NOT on Christ, but on wordly things.
You just need to find a Tridentine Mass or Divine Liturgy near you. Once you do, all of these problems seem like a bad dream. The mainstream just starts to appear almost “goofy” by comparison.

I wrote all of this not to bust you out, but to show you that you haven’t said anything that you need to regret. Your original post was genuine and praiseworthy. There is nothing you need to recant.

Stand fast!
 
hi PrayforMallory2:Standfast to what? i ask.>>>is not the main reason we go to mass is the Eucharist?when i quiered certain well known TLM supporters,they responded that the Eucharist is valid in the" Pauline " mass.therefore the "Pauline"mass is proper.in my old ways.i could have easily attended a latin mass and a “Pauline” mass with the same self important ,arrogant ,sinning attitude i had and niether would have made any difference…by the grace of God i now give my whole to whorship and adoration at mass even if it is a “pauline” mass.
 
Here’s what I got after mulling over it for a while:

I did not embrace my Catholic Christian identity because it was easy. No, I became Catholic because I wanted the Truth, and I found it only in the Catholic Church. I still remember when I went to my first real Mass. It was a Saturday morning in July, 2006. My spiritual father was serving as deacon and my pastor (who administered to me Confirmation and First Holy Communion) was the celebrant. In that liturgy my heart found Christ, yes even in that liturgy. For a whole year I loved Mass, without qualm. Why? Because I had found the true faith. I had found Christ in a way I never had before, and so nothing else mattered. Since that time I am ashamed to say that I think I am losing sight of this.

There are two key points that I cannot ever let go of. Should ever let go of either one of these truths, then there is nothing to live for. And each of these shed light on the situation.
  1. No matter what happens, Christ is in charge of His Church.
  2. No matter what happened, the Holy Spirit was at work in the Second Vatican Council.
Now with regard to the Liturgy, there comes a question that is inescapable: what are pretty liturgies to Christ?

“What did you go out into the wilderness to look at? A reed shaken by the wind? What then did you go out to see? Someone dressed in soft robes? Look, those who wear soft robes are in royal palaces. What then did you go out to see? A prophet? Yes, I tell you, and more than a prophet.” (Matthew 11:7-9)

The origin of aesthetically beautiful Masses and Liturgies originated with the explosion of Christian culture after St. Constantine the Great. The Church wanted to make her little services tantamount to Imperial pomp and circumstance with the objective that since Christ was King, He should be treated like the Emperor.

No, the earliest liturgies were incredibly simple as the Didache shows. The early Masses in Rome were almost identical to the current Pauline Mass and St. Justin Martyr’s description of the Mass does not look so much like the Divine Liturgy or the Tridentine Rite…it looks much, much more like the Mass of Paul VI.

So, I had to ask myself: what is the heart of Catholic Christianity. It simply could not have been the power of majestic liturgies…else we wouldn’t even have majestic liturgies. No, the heart was the Eucharistic Christ who empowered the Early Church to be a Church of mighty saints.

Also aesthetical beauty has limits to its power. The Eastern Orthodox have been doing the same Liturgy since the year 402 A.D. and possibly earlier. Yet despite the incredible power and majesty of the Divine Liturgy, the Eastern Orthodox have become both partial schismatics and in some cases heretical (cf. contraception, divorce). Also we must look at the Tridentine rite in places like Africa and China. No matter how powerful it may have been aesthetically it probably had little effect on newly converted peoples from heathenism.

Also, despite my love of the old ways…I am NOT a judge of what is Holy Tradition. The Fathers of the Council and current Magisterium, including Arinze, have the authority to judge what is timeless and changeable in the realm of liturgy. I do not have this right, nor should I, as I know very little compared to them.

Lifteteen and the Charismatic renewal have had powerful effects on Catholics of all ages. I see this in the teens who I worship with on the Lord’s Day. Who am I to say that this is wrong? I am a son, and an unprofitable one at that. Sons must obey what their Father says and does, trusting that their Father knows what is best for His family. My Father has decided that Lifeteen and the Charismatic Renewal is not just acceptable, but also beneficial to the members of His family. And we say: “Yes, Abba.”

Now comes the big question: Why do I go to Mass? This question will lead to a deeper question:

What is the heart of Orthodox Catholic Christianity. When I ask this question, it is clear that things like Liturgy, ritual pomp, aesthetical beauty, and ossified views of Tradition are NOT the heart(s).

The heart is Jesus Christ.

I do not go to Mass to see pretty liturgies, or get the undeniable “high” of aesthetics…and if I do then I should be ashamed of myself…and looking back at recent days, I am a little ashamed.

To be a disciple of the Lord Jesus Christ means a total giving of my whole life. This love of Liturgical pomp and this insensitivity to anything not like it, is something that must be handed over. He is in charge, and He is TRUSTWORTHY. Everything that has happened legitamately since Vatican II, even the approvals that I disagree with, have been HIS DOING.

And as one who claims Christ as Savior and Lord, I must follow where He leads.

So, the next time I feel myself “suffering” through Mass, then I need to humble my arrogant heart and recognize that the feeling I experience means that my focus is NOT on Christ, but on wordly things. The feeling means that I am getting wrapped up in externals. I need to learn to let go of these inhibitions and SURRENDER them to Christ. I need to embrace the things that may “hurt” and focus on the same Jesus who spurred the backwater churches of Early Christianity into being a church of saints: the Eucharistic Christ and Him alone.

As Christ would no doubt say to me:

“Antonius, Antonius…You are thinking not as God does, but as human beings do.”

-Antonius Ioannes
Thank you for this post. I wish the moderators would copy this, word for word, on the other forums - especially on “Modernist Horror” and the other one on Vatican II.

You have the questions and the answers as well.

God bless you:yup: :love: :gopray2:
 
hi PrayforMallory2:Standfast to what? i ask.>>>is not the main reason we go to mass is the Eucharist?when i quiered certain well known TLM supporters,they responded that the Eucharist is valid in the" Pauline " mass.therefore the "Pauline"mass is proper.in my old ways.i could have easily attended a latin mass and a “Pauline” mass with the same self important ,arrogant ,sinning attitude i had and niether would have made any difference…by the grace of God i now give my whole to whorship and adoration at mass even if it is a “pauline” mass.
Of course the main purpose of the Mass is the Eucharist. And of course the Eucharist is valid at a Pauline Mass.

When I said, “Stand Fast,” I meant stand fast to the traditional doctrine, to the ritual forms that defend and proclaim that doctrine, and the general subculture surrounding the Tridentine Mass, in which no punches are pulled and doctrine is proclaimed from the pulpit with confidence and vigor.
 
Of course the main purpose of the Mass is the Eucharist. And of course the Eucharist is valid at a Pauline Mass.

When I said, “Stand Fast,” I meant stand fast to the traditional doctrine, to the ritual forms that defend and proclaim that doctrine, and the general subculture surrounding the Tridentine Mass, in which no punches are pulled and doctrine is proclaimed from the pulpit with confidence and vigor.
I love the Mass - pronto!

Whether it is the traditionalist Mass or the post Vatican II Mass. Everything , all the liturgy is bible based and beautiful.

I go to daily Mass at a Convent Chapel - some of the people who attend also work and it would be impossible to have a Mass with all the bells and whistles. What is important is the state of our hearts:)
 
“You know whats wrong with the Mass it’s the____________.”


  1. *]music is too loud
    *]music too old
    *]music is too new
    *]cantor is off key
    *]Extra Ordinary Ministers aren’t dressed right
    *]lector can’t pronounce the words
    *] people holding hands
    *]people who don’t hold hands
    *]people don’t say hello
    *]people talk too much
    *]priest should be turned away
    *] bells
    *]bells are missing
    ect.

    Does anybody else see what the real problem is?

    The problem with the Mass is us.

    How can we concentrate and meditate on the Mass,on the life of Christ, when we are taking inventory on what we think is wrong or with how we think things should be?

    That would be like making a grocery list in your head while making love?!?
    Stop making the grocery lists and show Jesus the love.

    This reminds me of a story of a bishop not liking the new pope because the new pope was changing the the language of the Mass from Greek to Latin. Imagine that, upset because it was changing in to Latin and now we have people who are upset because It is not done in Latin.🤷
 
“You know whats wrong with the Mass it’s the____________.”


  1. *]music is too loud
    *]music too old
    *]music is too new
    *]cantor is off key
    *]Extra Ordinary Ministers aren’t dressed right
    *]lector can’t pronounce the words
    *] people holding hands
    *]people who don’t hold hands
    *]people don’t say hello
    *]people talk too much
    *]priest should be turned away
    *] bells
    *]bells are missing
    ect.

    Does anybody else see what the real problem is?

    The problem with the Mass is us.

    How can we concentrate and meditate on the Mass,on the life of Christ, when we are taking inventory on what we think is wrong or with how we think things should be?

    That would be like making a grocery list in your head while making love?!?
    Stop making the grocery lists and show Jesus the love.

    This reminds me of a story of a bishop not liking the new pope because the new pope was changing the the language of the Mass from Greek to Latin. Imagine that, upset because it was changing in to Latin and now we have people who are upset because It is not done in Latin.🤷

  1. Great post. You are absolutely right.

    The focus must be on the Lord above everything:love: :clapping: :signofcross:
 
To my brethren who share my love of the “old ways.”

I am now lost. I am revert to the Catholic faith, coming from an evangelical background. I am currently going through a big struggle with the Pauline Mass. I can’t stand what I see as clear Protestant-like services. We have hymns I sung as a Baptist.

I came into the Church expecting to see the reverence of Holy Mass…what I see is something sickeningly similar to a Methodist service.

I have longed defended Mother Church’s changes of Vatican II. I have long defended the Pauline Mass as a restoration of the pre-medieval heritage of the Roman Rite. I have held out hope that Rome would oneday step in to make the Mass what it was meant to be…namely a traditionally performed Roman Rite. But after realizing that Rome seems to have approved of things like the Charismatic Catholic renewal and Lifteen, I am truly afraid.

It is not as if in my parish the Mass is abused either. The rubrics in the GIRM are followed to the letter. But even then the Ordinary form lacks the reverence that I had hoped to see. There is no way for me to attend a Tridentine rite regularly…but I have decided to regularly attend Divine Liturgy with the Melkite Byzantine Catholics (many of whom aided me in coming home to the Catholic Church).

I have discussed this perpetually with my spiritual father who aided me in coming home to Rome. However at this point he says that he doesn’t know what to say to me, simply telling me to trust in the collective wisdom of the Church. I fear though that the Roman rite is dying…so much diversification. I still believe that the Ordinary Form can be something beautiful and reverent, but I am losing faith that Rome will ever return to the “old ways.”

Suffice it to say that I am now experiencing the cross of sacrifice that is obedience to Mother Church’s judgement on what is timeless and what is changeable in the last bastion of liturgy still extant in Occidental Christianity. As I began my search for vocations information, I was told that the call to obediance is far more difficult to follow than that of chastity. While I accepted this intellectually, I now experience it. And it is a sickening feeling.

A traditionalists in a book I read warned that the ultramontanist position would one day dissapoint people like me on the personal level. He seemed to suggest that Rome is going somewhere where we who love the old ways, when push came to shove, couldn’t go. But if the judgement of Rome was good enough for St. John Chrysostom, St. Basil, and St. Maximos, then Her judgement MUST be good enough for me (I hope). I do not like the fact that Rome allows some Catholic liturgies to be done where the laity appear to be imitating evangelical worship styles: Clapping, hand raising, etc. But I suppose if I were to speak with St. John Chysostom, he would fiercely command me to follow where Rome leads. Heck! It was his words (and the rest of the Eastern Fathers) that smacked me into steering clear of becoming Orthodox (which I seriously considered).

This, I believe, remains the the key ingredient in the Orthodox schismatic appeal that so often grips me. Orthodox Christianity’s worship is truly timeless, there is something there that is beyond words. . . . but, I suppose in the end all that beauty and majesty did not save them from themselves. Just the other day I listened to an Orthodox Christian openly say that contraception is acceptable in some cases.

The Holy Spirit is maddening! For whatever He is doing, He is calling me to a level of obedience that I cannot imagine. If He is truly at work in what I see in the Roman Rite (as I believe He is), then He must truly be a Comforter for me.

I don’t know what to do anymore. My faith in Rome has been shaken after seeing the Pauline Mass in the shape it is in…and since I have no alternative except the Byzantine Liturgy (not to mention my own love of Eastern Christianity and their theological perspective) I am now considering abandoning the rite of my Western heritage and embracing the Byzantine Catholic Church.

I still love the Roman Church, but my faith in the Church to truly restore the Roman Mass according to the Council is wavering…and with that wavering comes a shaking faith in the Second Vatican Council itself.

LORD HAVE MERCY!

I am hoping since my spiritual father cannot aid me, someone here can.

-Antonius Ioannes +
I think a more ecumenical approach is appropriate. The strict traditionalism you seek should be available, which I think it is, but for the rest of us, a more open outlook is best, IMHO. The problem with ecumenism is that so much of the Christian world community still harbors and expresses hateful prejudices toward Catholicism. Just when I’m prepared to ‘go’, ecumenical, if you will, some Fundie will say something that offends me and changes my mind.
 
I think a more ecumenical approach is appropriate. The strict traditionalism you seek should be available, which I think it is, but for the rest of us, a more open outlook is best, IMHO. The problem with ecumenism is that so much of the Christian world community still harbors and expresses hateful prejudices toward Catholicism. Just when I’m prepared to ‘go’, ecumenical, if you will, some Fundie will say something that offends me and changes my mind.
True.

I don’t know, it just seems like:

Unless I try to follow Rome and trust that She is doing what’s right, then I am in opposition to Rome.

I don’t ever want to go back to where I used to be when anything in accordance with Rome was evil (hence my Ultramontanist leanings).
 
True.

I don’t know, it just seems like:

Unless I try to follow Rome and trust that She is doing what’s right, then I am in opposition to Rome.

I don’t ever want to go back to where I used to be when anything in accordance with Rome was evil (hence my Ultramontanist leanings).
Yes and the opposite stance would be that everything that comes from Rome is good. Yes, the Extraordinary Magisterium is protected by the Holy Spirit. Yes, the Holy Spirit is the soul of the Church. But the Church can, in ordinary matters, make imprudent decisions. Not every ordinary decision is protected from error. The Concilium certainly wasn’t protected, that’s evident. In those cases we aren’t called to simply go along with it as if it were God’s will. As Dr. von Hildebrand says, we are to speak out even while maintaining our allegiance to the Pope. I’d highly suggest you read The Charitable Anathema by Dr. Von Hildebrand. I think in it one of his essays addresses this idea that we must say that everything Rome says and does is right and good. Not so (in ordinary matters of course).

Many orthodox Catholics are highly critical of the New Mass. I’m thinking of Alcuin Reid (who at least sees that a lot that occurred in regard to the New Mass violated the principles of organic growth of liturgy) among others. Tolkien, I was just reading today, was upset at the New Mass. Here’s a couple quotes from Tolkien that I think are right on:
I vividly remember going to church with him in Bournemouth. He was a devout Roman Catholic and it was soon after the Church had changed the liturgy from Latin to English. My grandfather obviously didn’t agree with this and made all the responses very loudly in Latin while the rest of the congregation answered in English. I found the whole experience quite excruciating, but my grandfather was oblivious. He simply had to do what he believed to be right.
The ‘protestant’ search backwards for ‘simplicity’ and directness - which, of course, though it contains some good or at least intelligible motives, is mistaken and indeed vain. Because ‘primitive Christianity’ is now and in spite of all ‘research’ will ever remain largely unknown; because ‘primitiveness’ is no guarantee of value, and is, and was in great a reflection of ignorance. Grave abuses were as much an element in Christian liturgical behaviour from the beginning as now. (St Paul’s strictures on Eucharistic behaviour are sufficient to show this!) Still more because ‘my church’ was not intended by Our Lord to be static or remain in perpetual childhood; but to be a living organism (likened to a plant), which develops and changes in externals by the interaction of its bequeathed divine life and history - the particular circumstances of the world into which it is set. There is no resemblance between the ‘mustard-seed’ and the full-grown tree. For those living in the days of its branching growth, the Tree is the thing, for the history of a living thing is part of its life, and the history of a divine thing is sacred. The wise may know that it began with a seed, but it is vain to try and dig it up, for it no longer exists, and the virtue and powers that it had now reside in the Tree. Very good: but in husbandry the authorities, the keepers of the Tree, must look after it, according to such wisdom as they possess, prune it, remove cankers, rid it of parasites and so forth. (With trepidation, knowing how little their knowledge of growth is!) But they will certainly do harm if they are obsessed with the desire of going back to the seed or even to the first youth when it was (as they imagine) pretty and unafflicted by evils. The other motive (now so confused with the primitivist one, even in the mind with any one of the reformers): aggiornamento: bringing up to date: that has its own grave dangers, as has been apparent throughout history. With this, ‘ecumenicalness’ has also become confused. (The Letters of J.R.R Tolkien, no. 306.)
Pax Christi tecum.
 
thank you for your gracious reply prayforMallory2:i feel i do owe you an apology for i was not being kind to you in my post for that i am sorry…fellowchristian: with Cinette’s praise of your post is mine too…you nailed it on the head,“the problem with the mass is us”…there has been times when my priest has said things during the homily that seemed not right and i let these thoughts of mine run amuck,when i should have been focussing on why i was at mass in the first place…me will try to stop making that gorcery list.good anology lol…
 
I hope some of you out there realize that there are some, if not most, traditional-leaning(I hesitate to use the term ‘traditionalist’) Catholics who see tradition in the way the Holy Father(from what I father) does. We don’t see things as inherently good simply because they are in Latin, or good simply because the priest faces a different way or wears fancy brocade vestments or rings bells. We see these things as good not of themselves(after all, does God care what style vestment the priest wears when offering His Son to Him?), but good of what they sow in the believers; in their fruit. These things, though not valuable in and of themselves, promote reverence and the true spirit of the liturgy as was intended by the Second Vatican Council, the Council of Trent, etc.

You are correct that many times people whine about things that are unimportant; but in your reaction to that ridiculousness, you seem to be taking the attitude that these things are not tremendously important. If there was ever any doubt, the 70s proved that it is often the most minute details of language and posture that affect what people believe in their worship- one should always, always avoid nitpicking or unChristian spirit when dealing with the liturgy, or legalism i suppose you might call it, but you must never, ever pretend that the divine liturgy is not, in fact, a real, substantial, physical, spiritual, and sacramental encounter with God Himself- and that the rubrics are there for a reason, and being precise, dignified, solemn and respectful in worship is a good thing.
 
I hope some of you out there realize that there are some, if not most, traditional-leaning(I hesitate to use the term ‘traditionalist’) Catholics who see tradition in the way the Holy Father(from what I father) does. We don’t see things as inherently good simply because they are in Latin, or good simply because the priest faces a different way or wears fancy brocade vestments or rings bells. We see these things as good not of themselves(after all, does God care what style vestment the priest wears when offering His Son to Him?), but good of what they sow in the believers; in their fruit. These things, though not valuable in and of themselves, promote reverence and the true spirit of the liturgy as was intended by the Second Vatican Council, the Council of Trent, etc.

You are correct that many times people whine about things that are unimportant; but in your reaction to that ridiculousness, you seem to be taking the attitude that these things are not tremendously important. If there was ever any doubt, the 70s proved that it is often the most minute details of language and posture that affect what people believe in their worship- one should always, always avoid nitpicking or unChristian spirit when dealing with the liturgy, or legalism i suppose you might call it, but you must never, ever pretend that the divine liturgy is not, in fact, a real, substantial, physical, spiritual, and sacramental encounter with God Himself- and that the rubrics are there for a reason, and being precise, dignified, solemn and respectful in worship is a good thing.
Exactly!!! And lex orandi lex credendi, the rule of prayer is the rule of belief. Our faith is largely enshrined in the liturgy so to make sweeping changes is to alter how the Faithful view and understand that Faith. Those who attend a TLM and those who attend the New Mass get a different impression of the Faith, the former strongly reinforces the idea of a sacrifice being offered to the Faith to save us from our sins whereas the latter, while touching on that aspect maybe once or twice, focuses on a communal meal at a “table.” These are important differences that affect the spiritual lives of the Faithful.

The problem is us? Maybe at times it is but there are inherent issues with the formulation of the new liturgy. This principle - “the problem is us” - portends to say that if we’d only accommodate ourselves then we could basically worship God just as well with much of any liturgy. No, liturgy itself has objective standards and one thing can be more reverent or more fitting than another - and in that case of one being better, we are obliged to want the better one to better please and worship Our Lord! The problem is not always us.

The concilium of Paul VI made many wrong decisions - like it or not that is the case. They introduced some novelties. They made vast changes to the essential core of the liturgy. That is against the traditional way liturgy grows and matures. Liturgy is not something for a man, or a group of men, to design on their own. It grows organically in the bosom of the Church, which means that it doesn’t change radically into something new. That is the problem of the New Mass. The liturgical movement started out right but then got out of control.

Pax Christi tecum.
 
No Mass is nirvana. Total rapture will only occur with the Beatific Vision. Keep that in mind when you attend Mass, or else you may never be happy.

That having been said, also realize that we are corporate beings. We are embodied souls. We are supposed to have bodies, and in our worship we cannot expect to be body-less. We are not seeking a purely spiritual experience at Mass. No, we accept the nature of our being and use matter to worship God. We use our bodies in the gestures and postures of reverence. We use incense to symbolize our prayers ascending to God. This touches our senses of sight and smell. We use bread and wine, which becomes Christ himself. These affect our sense of taste. Vestments, liturgical furnishings, chanting prayers, etc… In other words, we cannot minimize the effect that mediocre, exterior worship has on our interior worship. If you are going through the motions half-heartedly, your heart will not be in it. **But conversely, if the liturgical ambiance is mediocre it has the same effect. **

I’ve said this time and time again, but I’ll repeat myself:

No matter which form of Mass you attend, if you have to mentally convince yourself that, despite what’s going on in the sanctuary, you really are at a solemn sacrifice, then something is very, very wrong. The visible reality must mirror the invisible reality that is unfolding before you, or else it doesn’t jive with your intellect. If you experience a goofy Mass week after week, then you slowly start to come to one of two conclusions: Either 1) These people don’t believe that this is a solemn Sacrifice, or 2) They don’t care. Either conclusion leads to apathy.
 
No Mass is nirvana. Total rapture will only occur with the Beatific Vision. Keep that in mind when you attend Mass, or else you may never be happy…
I know we use “rapturous” to speak of something not quite the Rapture and “nirvana” to speak of things not even remotely Buddhist, but I’m still not so sure that “nirvana” is the word you want. Is using a Buddhist term so difficult to even explain in the terminologies open to Western language the best way to describe the Mass? It might obscure a lot more than it clears up.
If you experience a goofy Mass week after week, then you slowly start to come to one of two conclusions: Either 1) These people don’t believe that this is a solemn Sacrifice, or 2) They don’t care. Either conclusion leads to apathy.
Yes. As much as we must try not to judge, it is a lot to ask of ourselves to regularly attend a Mass that does not seem fully reverent to us. Goofy Masses exist, but I would go so far as to say the Mass doesn’t even need to be actually goofy. You only need to interpret or experience it that way.

If you are coming to the conclusion that your standards of reverence are inherently different and fundamentally more appropriate than those you worship with at Mass, you either need an attitude adjustment, remedial education, or a change of venue.

There are people who think the EF is boring, for instance, or that people who aren’t saying anything aren’t really praying. If such people can’t manage an attitude adjustment and find no relief in further education, they need to go elsewhere, for everyone’s sake.
 
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