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otjm
Guest
and I disagree with your contention (obviouslyCorrect. He is a good diplomat. My contention is one is more reverent than the other and less prone to abuse.
As a pope I would expect diplomacy, but as a scholar and professor, one would expect more candor. If he said it in one of his works, I would like to see it quoted appropriately. And if he hasn’t, then perhaps - just perhaps - it is because he does not take that position.
I can certainly see him saying the EF privately - he had said it for years before the OF was promulgated.
well, there is de facto schism (which I would hold is what some alleged theologians and others - pew sitters and professed - are, and then there is a declared schism. I kind of doubt that anyone would go declared; as to the rest, effectively they are there already.Not sure. Perhaps because many liturgical liberals would go into schism.
I think it tends toward (but is not identical to) the reasoning behind why he does not give CITH; he sticks with the norm, and he has publicly declared the OF is the norm.
Only to the extent that he does the norm. However, people are rpesuming that means a value judgement on the indult and it doesn’t. He is not the Pope of the Church of the United States, or the Pope of the Church of the Archdiocese of Chicago. He is the Pope of the Catholic Church and happens to be of the Roman rite (and we can let another thread go on about whether or not a pope could be elected from one of the Eastern rites). As such he will follow the norm, not the indult. Following the indult would simply make no sense, just as repeatedly saying the Divine Mysteries would make no sense.He is leading by example.
The essence of what you are trying to do is say that in it essence, the EF is more reverent than the OF. And other than your personal opinion (and that of those who share your opinion), there is no factual evidence adduced. It is akin to arguing that the Maronite rite is more reverent than the EF, or that the Byzantine rite is more reverent than the Maronite rite. They are all the Mass.
It may well be, and most likely is, that some people will feel that one form is more reverent than another, or that they will find more spiritual edification in one than another. That does not establish any essential objective difference in reverence; it is rather a subjective difference, and subjective differences are not wrong; they are simply sui generis. And they are a very valid reason for having both forms available.