S
superblue
Guest
it would be another schism and nothing more and the Catholic Church would keep going. Like it always has, and I say it, because the Church isn’t a physical or spiritual woman, nor a metaphorical one.
I would agree with that and it includes the Catholic Christians. Those that consider themselves so adherent and pious are often some of the ringleaders too.No, there is an anti religious authority movement in the land. The division has taken on momentum of its own, with little to do with wanting a place to worship the old Mass. Now, the SSPX Resistance holds periodic Masses to try to pull local people from the SSPX chapel. So in 2017 it is less and less about liturgical rites.
This is the number one reason why I like the Latin mass. I feel like I can actually connect with God. In a world filled with noise, it is definitely a relief to get an hour of silence with God every Sunday.People who prefer contemplative prayer vs charismatic prayer. Due to the fact that the people who attend the Latin mass today are mostly contemplative prayer people, who like silence and chant to assist with their prayer contemplative prayer, the Latin mass is conducive to that.
I agree with you on that. My sister is not really a practicing Catholic, but she has the same sentiments of the Catholic faith. It might be because she’s American. We Americans tend to dislike any type of authority, thinking everything is corrupt.No, there is an anti religious authority movement in the land.
In the Archdiocese of Philadelphia, we have a three parishes in the archdiocese that have a regularly scheduled Mass in a healthy parish - which are parish scheduled (not diocesan or religious order) .I wonder how many Latin Rite parishes with multiple Masses each Sunday have a well-attended EF Mass on their schedule that is celebrated by one of the resident clergy? I’m not talking about EF Masses that are celebrated in small hospital or mausoleum chapels. I’m asking about EF Masses in existing, healthy parishes?
Parishes that offer both where there is no stigma attached to attending either form of the Mass?
That sounds like an interesting book. From one of the Amazon reviews I saw this quote from Evelyn Waugh, written shortly before he died, in a letter to Cardinal Heenan in 1966:Also, I suggest the book A Bitter Trial from Ignatius Press. It does a pretty good job of illustrating the frustration some people had at the end of Vatican II, with the new Liturgy, and how it was rolled out.
NOTE: In that quote “Easter used to mean so much to me. Before Pope John and his Council – they destroyed the beauty of the liturgy. I have not yet soaked myself in petrol and gone up in flames, but I now cling to the Faith doggedly without joy. Church-going is a pure duty parade. I shall not live to see it restored. It is worse in many countries.” Evelyn Waugh is actually referring to the the changes to Holy Week under Pope Pius XII, but is so hurt by the removal of the Latin Mass.phil19034:![]()
That sounds like an interesting book. From one of the Amazon reviews I saw this quote from Evelyn Waugh, written shortly before he died, in a letter to Cardinal Heenan in 1966:Also, I suggest the book A Bitter Trial from Ignatius Press. It does a pretty good job of illustrating the frustration some people had at the end of Vatican II, with the new Liturgy, and how it was rolled out.
“Easter used to mean so much to me. Before Pope John and his Council – they destroyed the beauty of the liturgy. I have not yet soaked myself in petrol and gone up in flames, but I now cling to the Faith doggedly without joy. Church-going is a pure duty parade. I shall not live to see it restored. It is worse in many countries.”
That captures the sentiment of many Catholics in 1966. I don’t know that Evelyn Waugh would have felt the same if he were alive today. The OF today is not the same as in 1966. Most parishes today follow the rubrics and no longer use “Kumbaya” as a communion song or “Bridge Over Troubled Water” as an entrance hymn.
I wonder in how many of those parishes the EF Mass is truly an integral part? If there was an annual parish picnic for instance, would staunch EFers attend at the same rate as those that attended the OF Mass at that parish on average?***NOTE: I’m only including parishes that have the Latin Mass every Sunday, not parishes that have it on weekdays, a few Sundays a month, or by Religious Orders
I’m sure there are MANY other dioceses with a number of parishes that have the Latin Mass.
Actually it’s not. For years now, both in the real world and online, I have heard people refer to themselves as “traditional Catholics” and attempt to treat the Extraordinary Form as if it were a separate rite or even a sui juris church and obviously it’s not. I’m curious what said really people want? Do they want to control the Church to meet their own personal preferences?The title of this thread is so lacking in anything factual. Where are these Traditionalists? How many are there? Are they forcing others to do something? I was there before and after Vatican II. I saw the new altar one day and the priest facing the people. I had no desire to disobey the Church. I had no reason to believe the Mass in English was anything more or less than the Mass in Latin. The Mass I grew up with and which some falsely claim, could not be understood. Missals were available with the Latin and English right next to each other. And the priest spoke to the people in the pews and we responded, in Latin. The organist played and we sang.
I think such a construct already exists, to a certain extent, in the form of the Ecclesia Dei societies like the Priestly Fraternity of Saint Peter and the Institute of Christ the King Sovereign Priest. But it isn’t division such Catholics crave, its access to the Traditional Mass and Traditional Sacraments and the experience of a close-knit parish full of like-minded people, while remaining faithful to the Holy See. Your loaded words significantly cheapen the thread and call into question your motives. Traditional Catholics faithful to the Pope “crave division”? Come on.What if the Catholic Church actually supported the division so badly craved by many if not most “traditional Catholics” (tC)? What if the Catholic Church either created a suri juris Tridentine Catholic church (TCc) or a separate Tridentine ordinariate within the Latin Rite of the Church? Would this, coupled with an end to Summorum Pontificum satisfy what the tC’s so terribly crave?
My regrets, but that division is very real. Even the label “traditional Catholic” is divisive.Your loaded words significantly cheapen the thread and call into question your motives. Traditional Catholics faithful to the Pope “crave division”? Come on.
“Traditional”, aye? Odd how some equate “traditionalism” with a dearth of liturgical deformations.That was my parish. Close-knit, like-minded and Traditional. Division is not a goal. But arbitrary deformations of the Liturgy began to creep in and people want to recover the Mass that was/is dear to them.
I am guessing there are not enough priests and too few who want such a thing.What is the problem with wanting a “Latin mass only” parish?
There is no problem with having a desire to attend the EF Mass. That’s very clear. There’s also not a problem with choosing one’s parish – we are no longer corralled by our local parishes. But to actively seek division and EF Mass-only parishes is quite wrong.Your response in not clear to me. Pope Benedict wrote:
“Many people who clearly accepted the binding character of the Second Vatican Council, and were faithful to the Pope and the Bishops, nonetheless also desired to recover the form of the sacred liturgy that was dear to them. This occurred above all because in many places celebrations were not faithful to the prescriptions of the new Missal, but the latter actually was understood as authorizing or even requiring creativity, which frequently led to deformations of the liturgy which were hard to bear. I am speaking from experience, since I too lived through that period with all its hopes and its confusion. And I have seen how arbitrary deformations of the liturgy caused deep pain to individuals totally rooted in the faith of the Church.”
He uses the words “many places” and “frequently.” Those who want those arbitrary deformations removed or to go to a Church without them, are following the observations of the Pope. No more “arbitrary deformations.” Period.