T
thecoach
Guest
geez if you use that as a basis for the use of latin, the RCC should be speaking numerous languages as the official one.Does the story of Pentecost sound familiar to you?
geez if you use that as a basis for the use of latin, the RCC should be speaking numerous languages as the official one.Does the story of Pentecost sound familiar to you?
Because we are Roman Rite. Our mother church is in Rome.I’ve often wondered about this.
You’re right about one thing. One person doesn’t and can’t decide what language should be used within a culture or community or the Catholic Church.That’s proof that Peter spoke Latin, not that we should be using Latin.
Maybe but look to whom St. Paul’s epistles were directed.Wrong. The first Christians spoke Aramaic. Mike you know this.
Even the Latin words in the local languages (Aramaic, Coptic, etc) show they came via Greek.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?
Evidence where and when.And how is it that archaelogists have now found evidence that some of the early Masses were indeed (at least partially) in Latin?
North Africa was at the time THE area of Latin: the Latin Fathers (Tertullian, Cyprian, Augustine, etc.) all hailed from there, and it was a North African, Victor who introduced Latin into the Roman mass.But whether true or not, Latin eventually caught on and became popular enough to help flourish the Mass in Africa and other places. Whether it was mandated or not probably didn’t have much to do with it. Language is usually developed over a long period so it probably isn’t an overnight thing where one Pope simply says “Forget what you have learned. Speak only in Latin from now on” and make it stick universally.
Snickers yourself.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.
Yes it does. So can we say St. Peter spoke Elamite (Acts 2:9) too?Does the story of Pentecost sound familiar to you?
His Epistles are in Greek.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.
Deacon Ed
Nope. Says the Apostles. For all we know Thomas could have been the Apostle speaking Latin.That’s proof that Peter spoke Latin, not that we should be using Latin.
When I was there they spoke Italian. And a lot of English.Because we are Roman Rite. Our mother church is in Rome.
In Rome they speak latin.
And ultimately because the Roman Church just said so.
(and they said it in Latin)