May I ask a personal question?
Are you a person afraid of Changes? Or do you think that evolution in the Church stopped there and nothing can be changed? Or do you think that new experiments should be prfect right at the beginning?
Afraid of changes? In this day and age? It’s nothing but change, morning, noon and night.
Take but one example from today’s headlines. Germany is going to agree to greater central control of the banks to rescue the Euro. Yesterday, Germany refused the same thing she agrees with today. Tomorrow, who knows what Germany will do.
Yesterday, Greece would not agree to control of her government by European bankers. Today, she’ll do anything they want. Tomorrow, who knows what Greece will do.
Take another example. Yesterday, we were told our population was critically high, that we would run out of food, housing and fuel. Today, we are told that since our population is too low, we must accept the influx of millions of foreigners among us to support our pensions, our medical insurance, our economy. Tomorrow, what will be told? Perhaps that we need to commit collective suicide for the comfort of the immigrants.
It’s not a question of being afraid of changes, its a question of being sick to death of changes.
The Church is my refuge from the pointless “evolution” that surrounds me, from the perpetutal “experimentations” at my expense by people who treat me like less thana pawn, on the sole basis that they have the power to do so.
The rites and rituals of the Church were kept by the holy men and women who lived before me, not only for their benefit, but also for my benefit, and for the benefit of those who are to come after me. That’s Catholic tradition. To take those traditions from me is a kind of theft. Asking if I think an experiment should be perfect from the beginning is like asking if I think a thief should take everything away in one robbery or hit me repeatedly. My preference, since you asked, is not to be robbed at all.
I resent the suggestion that if I prefer the tridentine mass, there is something defective about my personality or my spirituality. Though I am a sinner, I know what I need for salvation, and where the grace to obtain salvation may be found. To my thinking, this is far more realistic than imagining the truths of God can be altered to suit the whims of the moment, or fashion, or the preferences of people outside of the holy Church.
Catholics don’t need to ask if they fear changes. Catholics should be asking are we a people who are afraid of truth?