Why Hostility for the Ordinary Form of the Mass?

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Does the Catholic Church really need a universal language? This seems against the principle that God can reach us through any human language. No, I do not think a universal language is needed but rather a universal doctrine.
Well, it’s good for writing documents as the language doesn’t drift with the passage of time as Latin is a dead language. I do agree with you otherwise.

Out Eastern Catholic churches have always celebrated their liturgies in the vernacular.
 
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I think the OF parishes are closing due to lack of attendance actually.
 
One might say that those who prefer the EF could be reacting to a very real amd very frightening attitude among some of the clergy and laity about them.
 
So the assertion that ‘the Church requires a universal language’ is a rather weak argument for the EF mass because it is certainly not. Good does not necessarily mean it has to be in that language.

Let just say it is just a personal preference. The Catholic Church is so rich in her tradition and worship that we can worship God in a language or a liturgy we prefer. Any other reason, which is not, seems to be a disservice to the Chuch.

That people from every tribes and nations shall be one in worshipping God need not necessarily all be saying them in Latin.
 
I think the OF parishes are closing due to lack of attendance actually.
Yeah–but the per-Mass attendance of the closing parishes is likely higher than that of the EF communities.

The EF survives (economically speaking) because it can be hosted at OF parishes. If they were solely EF parishes, they would be unable to stay afloat (economically speaking).

Edited to add: There are no doubt a handful of exceptions, but I suspect this is the rule in the US.
 
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Have you got that right!!

We have an EF Mass in my diocese every Sunday @ 11:15am. It is in a pretty central location and can be reached by most people in our diocese in less than an hour, for most about 20 minutes, if that. It is not in a bad part of town and there is plenty of free parking

The Church holds about 1000 people, average attendance is about 150.

The OF that is celebrated in the same parish, with chant, incense, some Latin, sometimes celebrated ad orientum gets maybe 300.

A parish 4 miles away, which is OF only, and is run by the Basilian’s seats about 650 and is full for 4 Masses a weekend.

The numbers don’t lie. The OF, at least in my diocese, is far more popular. And we have had the EF Mass for more than 20 years- every Sunday.
 
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Have you got that right!!

We have an EF Mass in my diocese every Sunday @ 11:15am. It is in a pretty central location and can be reached by most people in our diocese in less than an hour, for most about 20 minutes, if that. It is not in a bad part of town and there is plenty of free parking

The Church holds about 1000 people, average attendance is about 150.

The OF that is celebrated in the same parish, with chant, incense, some Latin, sometimes celebrated ad orientum gets maybe 300.

A parish 4 miles away, which is OF only, and is run by the Basilian’s seats about 650 and is full for 4 Masses a weekend.

The numbers don’t lie. The OF, at least in my diocese, is far more popular. And we have had the EF Mass for more than 20 years- every Sunday.
Very similar with our EF.

–lots of free, convenient parking
–OK part of town
–central location
–20 minutes or less drive for 100,000+ people
–strong support from the pastor
–all of the other Sunday Masses at that parish have at least 2X the attendance

The EF community at our parish is very passionate, tight-knit, intellectual and (I have to say) well-dressed–BUT it is small.
 
The EF community at our parish is very passionate, tight-knit, intellectual and (I have to say) well-dressed–BUT it is small.
The fact there is a tight-knit “EF community” is by far the largest thing holding back more people from attending the EF Mass where I live. That “tight-knit” group turns people off here locally. My parish is large and very central. I wonder how an EF would do if it were truly another mass offered BY AN EXISTING PARISH COMMUNITY and not by some small group of fringers? Sad we’ll never know because the local EF Mass draws 80-100 every Sunday in a church that holds 800.
 
Are we to judge the goodness or rightness of a thing by its popularity and high numbers now? Taking a look around society today with it’s normalization of perversion, laws allowing for the killing of the most vulnerable, high rates of annulments (which is simply now Catholic divorce), small families (EF only parish families by my own observation have more children/babies than the OF only parish families…I doubt very much this is coincidence), divorce rates (I’ve read Traditional Catholics have something like a 1% divorce rate compared to Catholics as a whole of 25%+).

I think when Jesus said the gate is narrow and few find it…He meant it.

No. If I’m looking for the truth of what the CC teaches, I’m going to a parish that would never use a rainbow flag, banner or picture in their bulletin and preaches on more than just God’s Love and Mercy.
 
Are we to judge the goodness or rightness of a thing by its popularity and high numbers now?
No, but it’s a good metric of the EF Mass not catching on. That should be studied and remedied. But it won’t be, because it would impact a lot of the existing people who attend the EF Mass.

FYI, the Church does not recognize “Traditional Catholics.”
 
Are you serious? Really? The number of “traditional” Catholic that are attracted to the Church due to the EF Mass is minuscule in the greater scheme of things.
There’s a reason why this is true. It’s because the EF Mass was illegally suppressed until 2007 when Benedict XVI admitted that it had never been abrogated. The Traditional Mass was sidelined, refused, and restricted by scores of Bishops for decades. Add the fact that Catholic children had no access to it at school or anywhere else - many didn’t know it existed. Even today, the EF Mass is hardly taught to seminarians and isn’t widely available. It isn’t given equality with the Mass of Paul VI. The best evidence for this is the fact that the Pope won’t celebrate it - not even rarely.
 
The best evidence for this is the fact that the Pope won’t celebrate it - not even rarely.
I often wonder what the effect would have been if Pope Benedict had even once offered a Solemn Pontifical High Mass in St. Peter’s.
 
It’s because the EF Mass was illegally suppressed until 2007
It was still available in many locales…

I remember how so many people felt that if only an EF Mass would be offered, that there would be a HUGE number of attendees. When SP came a long we got our EF Masse – and few attendees. It’s been that way for what, a decade now?
 
I remember how so many people felt that if only an EF Mass would be offered, that there would be a HUGE number of attendees. When SP came a long we got our EF Masse – and few attendees. It’s been that way for what, a decade now?
The fact remains that the EF Mass is not given equal treatment. It isn’t celebrated as often or in as many places as the OF Mass. It isn’t celebrated in many schools. I’ve personally tried to organise celebrations of the Mass in two cathedrals and in one school but my requests were denied without explanation.

Is it any wonder that the EF Mass hasn’t been able to draw ‘HUGE numbers of attendees’ when HUGE numbers of Catholics have no idea it exists! Is it any wonder it hasn’t been able to draw 'HUGE numbers of attendees when celebrations are often sporadic and in remote locations.

I’d like to reverse the question in this thread and ask why the hostility for the Traditional Mass? After all, its the only Mass that is being sidelined. The Pope still hasn’t celebrated the Traditional Mass and has made many criticisms of those who attend it.
 
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The fact remains that the EF Mass is not given equal treatment.
Not true. That’s just another false excuse. It’s the people who surround the EF – who give the EF a face, that keep more people from attending.

It’s also a matter of resources. Like it or not, the local parish that offers the EF (by a retired prison chaplain) is tapped-out when it comes to priestly resources – as are MANY parishes these days. The pastor and the PV already celebrate two Masses/each on Sundays. They’re not about to cancel a well-attended OF Mass in order to make room for another poorly-attended EF Mass.
 
Not true. That’s just another false excuse. It’s the people who surround the EF – who give the EF a face, that keep more people from attending.

It’s also a matter of resources.
You’ve just contradicted yourself. I said ‘the fact remains that the EF is not given treatment.’ You said ‘Not true’ and then explain why the EF isn’t given equal treatment! You say it’s ‘also a matter of resources.’
 
Don’t look that way to me.

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So what is the correct interpretation? From Session 7
CANON XIII.-If any one saith, that the received and approved rites of the Catholic Church, wont to be used in the solemn administration of the sacraments, may be contemned, or without sin be omitted at pleasure by the ministers, or be changed, by every pastor of the churches, into other new ones; let him be anathema.
BTW, the word “whomsoever” was left out of the translation.
Canon XIII.—Si quis dixerit, receptos et approbates Ecclesiæ Catholicæ ritus, in solemni sacramentorum administratione adhiberi consuetos, aut contemni, aut sine peccato a ministris pro libito omitti, aut in novos alios per quemcumque ecclesiarum pastorem mutari posse: anathema sit.
 
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