I personally hate how some clergy and laity are so open to embrace sudden changes in the Church but are too hesitate and need I say ignorant to study their sacred God given roots. it seems with each passing generation Catholics are becoming more and more passive and indifferent to their faith.
My way=“sacred and God given”
Their way=“indifferent to their faith” and, yes, you did dare to say “ignorant” but you did not “need” to.
This is preaching to the choir, not evangelizing. (There is a lot more to the art of education than being factually correct, friend.)
Once in a while you’ll find “new age” Christians and very modern Catholics that will say that the Church shouldnt “going back” or falling behind the times. Some passively discourage the Latin mass and see people that practice and participate in it as old fashioned clique that cant accept how the church is now. Many claim Latin is “dead” yet it is very much alive in the Church! Another example is I raised a couple eyebrows when I openly called Jesus AND his mother Mary as the New Adam and Eve on my Instagram like it was a very hard Einstein equation that was difficult to interpret.
Well, objectively speaking, Latin is no longer part of the college or college prep curriculum. My dad took four years of Latin. I had access to one. There just weren’t enough students to support more than that.
More to the point, more Catholics want to learn Spanish, because they realize that while almost none of the baptized Catholic world actually studies Latin any more, Spanish-speaking populations still tend to be Roman Catholic populations. While Latin is not “dead” in the Church, it has to be admitted that the language is dying in terms of the representation it had in when it was considered
de rigueur for educated persons, which was less than 100 years ago.
As far as catechesis goes, education in general has gone away from learning facts. It isn’t just catechesis that is weak. It is knowledge of geography that is weak. Too many Americans cannot find the Pacific Ocean on a map primarily because
they don’t know how to read maps at all.
There has been no generation that has gone through as many changes in its lifetime as those born after World War II. If you don’t believe me, look at what this nation was like before World War I: what the opportunities were, what the technology was, what the understanding of the natural world was. Did you know that it was only recognized in 1911 that most of the mass of the atom is concentrated in an extremely small nucleus?
1911!! Honestly, you watch Star Trek and marvel that although our future Captain Kirk has Alexa, he is stuck with a flip phone and it isn’t until the Next Generation when the new Enterprise got iPads with WiFi capability. Is it a wonder that our generation sees change as the norm?