Roman_Army said:
Apparently, the mass needs a bit of improvement and the Church needs to crack down on liturgical abuses. As former Cardinal Ratzinger (now Pope Benedict XVI) put it, the Latin rite has to rediscover its traditions, such as the Priest and people facing East together, crucifix in front of the altar, tabernacle visible, and good liturgical music, etc. I recently read “Spirit of the Liturgy,” it’s a good book. In there he also says that the sign of the peace would be better done before the consecration of the Eucharist.
What do you guys think should be done with the liturgy?
(other than reintroduce the pre-Vatican 2, please no bashing against the current liturgy)
(above emphasis mine)
God bless you for what you wrote in the parentheses! As someone devoted to the Mass of Paul VI (in the vernacular), I’m grateful for your charity.
I think we should have the Indult generously applied, as the old Holy Father asked. If the bishops go all mulish

, then there should be erected a “Tridentine Rite”, though I’m sure that’s not the correct term, in much the same way that the Eastern Churches within the Catholic Church function.
I think we should scrap modern architecture and recapture the traditional view of what a church should look like. I don’t mind austerity (sometimes it’s soothing), but you can have an austere cross-shaped church. I like the huge marble/granite altars rather than the old wall mounted ones (like I imagine the altars of the Old
Testament or the Temple to be), but I don’t think we should have wooden “tables.”
I don’t care if the Sacrifice of the Mass is offered by the priest ad orientum or ad populam. I’ve experienced both (oddly enough, the ad orientum was in the Episcopal church) and neither has a monopoly on holiness or sanctity. If the Holy Father thinks it is important, then I bend to his wishes, as well as on the Sign of Peace.
The tabernacle should most definitely be visible. If the Blessed Sacrament is to have it’s own chapel or niche not in the center front, then at least at the front.
Always a Crucifix.
The parts of the Mass that are conventionally sung (Kyrie, Gloria, Sanctus, etc.) can be in Latin, well, the Kyrie in Greek and people should be taught the Latin for these. I think vernacular for the rest, with the canon audible and the responses made by the congregation.
Chant or plain-song should be encouraged. People should come together early or on another day to practice and learn to chant/sing.