J
jesusalright4me
Guest
I know this may be controversial. Please keep things charitable
It seems that, at least within the world of orthodox (meaning faithful to the teaching of the Church) Catholicism, there is a skepticism growing towards the some of the reforms that took place after Vatican II. I have heard this apparent sentiment expressed on Catholic Answers Live, speakers like Matt Fradd, podcasts like “The Liturgy Guys”, opinion articles on NCR, and Facebook pages like Catholic Memes, to name a few. Another prime example is Ascension Presents. Many of the images the pick for their articles about the mass show ad orientem worship, and often an image of a Latin mass (or potentially an ordinariate mass). Father Mike Schmidtz recently endorsed ad orientem worship in front of many young adult Catholics at a SEEK conference, where he was met with a great applause. Now, this isn’t to say that everyone wants a complete return to the Tridentine mass, but rather that I am observing this growing sentiment that we “threw the baby out with the bath water” with many of the changes to the mass. It is where I personally stand on the whole question of liturgy.
Just thought I would ask, has anyone else noticed this trend? Or does anyone have any counterexamples? I am more than open to being wrong.
It seems that, at least within the world of orthodox (meaning faithful to the teaching of the Church) Catholicism, there is a skepticism growing towards the some of the reforms that took place after Vatican II. I have heard this apparent sentiment expressed on Catholic Answers Live, speakers like Matt Fradd, podcasts like “The Liturgy Guys”, opinion articles on NCR, and Facebook pages like Catholic Memes, to name a few. Another prime example is Ascension Presents. Many of the images the pick for their articles about the mass show ad orientem worship, and often an image of a Latin mass (or potentially an ordinariate mass). Father Mike Schmidtz recently endorsed ad orientem worship in front of many young adult Catholics at a SEEK conference, where he was met with a great applause. Now, this isn’t to say that everyone wants a complete return to the Tridentine mass, but rather that I am observing this growing sentiment that we “threw the baby out with the bath water” with many of the changes to the mass. It is where I personally stand on the whole question of liturgy.
Just thought I would ask, has anyone else noticed this trend? Or does anyone have any counterexamples? I am more than open to being wrong.
Last edited: