- Latin and Gregorian chant were never meant to be discarded. They continue to be part of the patrimony and identity of the Church’s worship. All Vatican II did was open the door to allow the Church to build on these traditions.
Vatican II opened the door, but after the Council, no one stood guard at that door. The majority of Latin and Gregorian chant, as Pope Paul VI laments here, are being “lost”. Latin and Gregorian chant are on
life support; these traditions weren’t “built upon” so much as they were “swept under the rug” and hidden from view so that new things could have prominence not due them.
- Like all Councils in the church, Vatican II has taken time to understand and implement. … But the truth is that others before us felt the same way after each Council. Each Council required understanding and implementation. The draw back in our age is the speed of communication.
Along with the increase in speed of communication comes the increase in speed of
miscommunication. How many Catholics have been told blatant lies about the documents (and spirit) of Vatican II? How many Catholics have been told that Trent doesn’t matter anymore? People – and sadly, some ordained men –
lied about this stuff.
- That’s why Vatican II did not deal with Christology or dogmas. … This included looking at her liturgy and making sure that it reflected her identity.
Some people involved in the liturgical reform that resulted in Mass of Paul VI
do think doctrine was involved. (See the attached images, which are two consecutive pages from
A Challenging Reform by Piero Marini.)
I think the identity of the Church, within the Roman Rite, has suffered because of the growing independence of bishops and conferences of bishops. At a Mass I attended a few weeks ago, the priest, making up his own Eucharistic Prayer,
did not say “with Benedict, our Pope”, but “with Benedict, Bishop of Rome”.
That is not legitimate. That is an affront to the papacy. That is pride. That is a mistaken identity.
Given all the above in parr 3, this is not easy stuff to implement and clarify in just a few years, especially when the media does not give you a chance to step back and reflect on what you have said.
And yet Annibale Bugnini is reported to have said that all the Consilium needed was five years. And in 1969, six years after the Constitution was promulgated, poof, new order of the Mass.
That’s where we’re at today. We’re trying to catch up with the Documents of Vatican II.
The best place to start is the documents themselves, then. In their original Latin and with an honest, unbiased translation into whatever vernacular you prefer.
The key is not to lose one’s inner peace or silence.
I do indeed pray for patience and peace and inner calm and silence.
St. Francis said that your call to holiness is a call to do penance. Penance requires that at times we accept that we are not in control and that things are not predictable. We have to wait for God to act.
I will do penance and I will act, and I will pray God is with me in my actions, because otherwise, whatever I do is in vain.
The Church may be led by sinful men, but it is a holy body. We can obey her and trust that God will reward our obedience, even when we obey foolishness. Francis always said, if you are ordered to obey that which is dangerous for your soul, you need not obey, in all other things you must be willing to be a fool for Christ as he was a fool for us.
Surely God will not reward those who kept silent, at the urging of bishops, about the sexual misconduct of priests! That was danger to their souls! I would guess that some Catholics feel likewise – that their souls are in danger – about attending the Ordinary Form of the Mass, because of abuses and irregularities, and also because of the content often preached at it.