Just exactly how many people would be interested in attending any Mass that:
A. Was usually only celebrated once a month, often on a Sunday afternoon.
B. Had not been seen or heard of by people in nearly 50 years.
C. Is loudly and negatively commented on by most of the friends and family.
D. Is held in places that are far away from the person’s home.
I think it’s amazing that so many people do attend, that many of them are young and on fire (isn’t that something that we should encourage), and have not been turned back by the difficulties.
People talk about the ‘toxic trads’ who are so holier than thou, but there’s a large group of “corrosive contemporaries” who water down the faith and badmouth anything that doesn’t fit their definition of ‘right’.
I have absolutely no hostility for the OF (nor any kind of absurd ‘reverence’ for the EF, come to that). I have what I think is a clear-eyed understanding that hostility is in the bias of the beholder, not in the rites themselves, nor even in the people actually doing the worshipping at either rite. Rather, it’s in those who presume to ‘judge’ the rites and worshippers based on their own arrogant (works both ways, people) views that whatever they feel or believe is ‘right’ and anything that deviates in the slightest is wrong.
The average OF goer is a perfectly fine and nonjudgmental person worshipping as he or she sees fit.
The average EF goer is a perfectly fine and nonjudgmental person worshipping as he or she sees fit.
But the average OF HATER (one who hates the OF)is something different.
And so is the average EF HATER (one who hates the EF).
Since they don’t attend the rite they hate, it’s all about trying to present what they like as ‘right’ and the other as hateful.
If they can’t attack the language or the actions, they’ll attack the priest and people and their ‘ideologies.’
That being said, we have how many people who actually attend each rite?
We have how many OF haters as opposed to EF haters?
(Remember, just going to a rite doesn’t make the person a hater. But a person who does hate will hate the rite he does not attend).
Logically, anybody who is a ‘hater’ is going to hate what he doesn’t do.
Far more people don’t attend the EF( as many of those who attend the OF have been at great pains to ‘prove’), so there are more EF haters, meaning people who hate the EF.
Right?