S
Samuel_Mary
Guest
The re-elevation of Latin in the Mass Ordinary of the Ordinary Form, is in fact essential for the Church’s catholicity. Despite the gifts of the Ordinary Form, one thing that has been lost during the transition to it is the fullness of the universal nature of the liturgy of the Roman Rite. One used to be able to go to Mass in Lagos or in Hong Kong and feel more or less as oriented as they would at home. That would be the case again if we would do the Mass Ordinary in Latin, at least on Sundays. Perhaps also for the dialogue/ responses on solemnities.I would disagree about Latin in the Mass. There is no reason not to have Latin Mass, especially since the Latin Mass is still the normative Mass. All one needs is a Latin/English Missal.
I do not know Latin and I get along fine in a Latin Mass.
The common Latin language encourages a bond of brotherhood between Catholics of all countries, rich and poor, far and wide.
The problem is that perhaps memory of the pre-reform period has to pass before we can change attitudes to Latin. People will then come to see it not as a mysterious and alien language that shuts them out of the litugy, but as their liturgical language in which is expressed their universality of rite, their brotherhood with their fellows Catholics and not least, their intimacy with Almighty God, for whose worship this language is set aside in their lives.
The argument that people won’t understand the words of the Sanctus and Gloria in Latin when they say them every single week, and read from a Missal with both languages side by side, is just nonsensical.
We have failed Vatican II when it comes to Latin. It should play a greater role in the reformed liturgy, where it can do all kinds of good without impeding active and conscious participation, if it is employed proportionally and only to the unchanging parts of the Mass.
‘‘Nevertheless steps should be taken so that the faithful may also be able to say or to sing together in Latin those parts of the Ordinary of the Mass which pertain to them.’’
Completion the liturgical reform of Vatican II as referred to by the Holy Father this week, must involve this. Otherwise we have only a ‘partial revelation’