B
badnewsbarrett
Guest
Situation one- Within easy driving distance of just about any Catholic in the United States, there is at least one of the following- a Latin Rite parish that has a Novus Ordo mass, a parish that has available masses in Latin, a Syro-Malankara parish where the Indian share of the congregation is about in line with the Indian population in the community overall, a Ukrainian Catholic parish where you can meet a married Catholic priest and hear Vespers regularly, and at least a dozen other Eastern Catholic rites, or Alexandrian, or East Syrian or West Syrian or Armenian. All within reasonable driving distance. Children raised in this situation, as they approach adolescence and then adulthood, are encouraged to explore and experience these different types of rites and masses, perhaps without encouraging them to leave the particular church within which they were raised but also leaving that option open if they have a strong interest.
Situation two- Eastern rites are restricted in immigrant-destination countries, and for the most part, rites that have origins in other parts of the world are basically kept there. As a general rule, most Catholics being raised in the US have the option of the Novus Ordo and TLM, perhaps there is one Eastern Rite parish of some kind within driving distance but that’s about it, you try to keep a reliable ethnic correlation attached to formal membership in these rites, and no effort is made to drastically increase the proportion of Eastern rite parishes to Latin rite parishes in this country. We’ll assume that much is being done to strengthen each rite in whatever part of the world that it is fairly predominant, but there is less of an attempt to make Every rite an option to any one community.
Which of these scenarios seems more catholic, or universal, in the sense that Catholics use the word catholic to mean universal?
I think the crux of this discussion is likely to be the meaning of universal, in a practical sense.
Situation two- Eastern rites are restricted in immigrant-destination countries, and for the most part, rites that have origins in other parts of the world are basically kept there. As a general rule, most Catholics being raised in the US have the option of the Novus Ordo and TLM, perhaps there is one Eastern Rite parish of some kind within driving distance but that’s about it, you try to keep a reliable ethnic correlation attached to formal membership in these rites, and no effort is made to drastically increase the proportion of Eastern rite parishes to Latin rite parishes in this country. We’ll assume that much is being done to strengthen each rite in whatever part of the world that it is fairly predominant, but there is less of an attempt to make Every rite an option to any one community.
Which of these scenarios seems more catholic, or universal, in the sense that Catholics use the word catholic to mean universal?
I think the crux of this discussion is likely to be the meaning of universal, in a practical sense.