L
livingoutloud
Guest
I’ve often wondered about this.
WRONG!Because at no time did very much of the Christian world speak Aramaic.
No need to shout.WRONG!
What percentage of the entire Christian world was “very much”?Aramaic was very much spoken by Christians throughout the Middle East and into India.
When St. Peter was in Rome the Christian Romans were speaking Greek, which they would do exclusively until Pope Victor, who introduced Latin. Pope Damasus would promulgate the Latin mass centuries after St. Peter. We have no proof St. Peter spoke Latin. We know he spoke Aramaic and Greek.Perhaps because St. Peter was in Rome where the Latin language was used? When in Rome, do as the Romans do.![]()
In those days, no doubt many people were speaking many languages. And we have today many Latin works in classic literature. How can one claim Christ or any of His apostes knew absolutely nothing in Latin? Were they all ignorant? Did they all not know anyone who spoke Latin? Are we absolutely sure Christ didn’t speak to Pontius Pilate in Latin? Or to the Roman soldiers?When St. Peter was in Rome the Christian Romans were speaking Greek, which they would do exclusively until Pope Victor, who introduced Latin. Pope Damasus would promulgate the Latin mass centuries after St. Peter. We have no proof St. Peter spoke Latin. We know he spoke Aramaic and Greek.
snickers Oh, how I love Orthodox revisionism! The only Romans that even read Greek were wealthy patricians, as Greek was the language of the philosophers in an around the Aegean peninsula. The common Roman, to which no doubt St. Peter would’ve had greater access, spoke the more culturally diffuse and dynamic Vulgar Latin. This is reflected in the less rigid style of ecclesiastical Latin when viewed in relation to the more artificial Classical.When St. Peter was in Rome the Christian Romans were speaking Greek, which they would do exclusively until Pope Victor, who introduced Latin. Pope Damasus would promulgate the Latin mass centuries after St. Peter. We have no proof St. Peter spoke Latin. We know he spoke Aramaic and Greek.
Does the story of Pentecost sound familiar to you?We have no proof St. Peter spoke Latin.
well…it would be more accurate to say that St. Mark translated Peter’s works into Greek. Peter probably knew enough Greek to get by (anybody doing business during that era used Greek) but he did not write it, and that’s why Mark translated for him.When St. Peter was in Rome the Christian Romans were speaking Greek, which they would do exclusively until Pope Victor, who introduced Latin. Pope Damasus would promulgate the Latin mass centuries after St. Peter. We have no proof St. Peter spoke Latin. We know he spoke Aramaic and Greek.
Um, there are 14 Byzantine Churches and Slavonic was used in the Ruthenian, Ukrainian, Byelorussian and Russian Churches. The Melkites used Arabic while the other churches used their own vernacular (Croatian, Georgian, Greek, Hungarian, Albanian and Romanian). Greek was the common language of all Byzantine Churches and still retains a presence regardless of the “base” language.<<or a Byzantine Catholic Church, you would find… Greek take the precedent, respectivly.>>
The classical language of most Byzantine Catholic Churches is Slavonic, not Greek.
OTOH, the Chaldean, Assyrian, and Syriac Catholicn and Orthodox Churches use Aramaic.
I think you might mean that the Liturgy was in Greek, with the possible exception of diaspora Jews, the daily language of the people would have been LatinWhen St. Peter was in Rome the Christian Romans were speaking Greek, which they would do exclusively until Pope Victor, who introduced Latin. Pope Damasus would promulgate the Latin mass centuries after St. Peter.
Actually, we most certainly do have proofWe have no proof St. Peter spoke Latin. We know he spoke Aramaic and Greek.
Now there were staying in Jerusalem God-fearing Jews from every nation under heaven. When they heard this sound, a crowd came together in bewilderment, because each one heard them speaking in his own language. Utterly amazed, they asked: “Are not all these men who are speaking Galileans? Then how is it that each of us hears them in his own native language? Parthians, Medes and Elamites; residents of Mesopotamia, Judea and Cappadocia, Pontus and Asia, Phrygia and Pamphylia, Egypt and the parts of Libya near Cyrene; visitors from Rome (both Jews and converts to Judaism); Cretans and Arabs-we hear them declaring the wonders of God in our own tongues!”
Wrong. The first Christians spoke Aramaic. Mike you know this.Because at no time did very much of the Christian world speak Aramaic.
He and Paul spoke Aramaic and Greek.When St. Peter was in Rome the Christian Romans were speaking Greek, which they would do exclusively until Pope Victor, who introduced Latin. Pope Damasus would promulgate the Latin mass centuries after St. Peter. We have no proof St. Peter spoke Latin. We know he spoke Aramaic and Greek.
that didnt answer the question.Its the language of the Roman Church. If you were a member of an Armenian Rite Church, or a Byzantine Catholic Church, you would find Armenian or Greek take the precedent, respectivly.
Most religions have a language reserved for worship- Muslims have Arabic, Hindus have Sanskrit, Jews have Hebrew, etc.