P
patrick457
Guest
Honest question. Why do some people call the Tridentine Mass ‘Mass of the Ages’ or ‘Mass of all time’? What do these terms mean?
While I do identify myself as a traditionalist, I feel that using the term is quite odd since the Mass did not look always as it does now in the Tridentine (which is true especially in the period around 6th-9th Century. The words of the Mass may be the same, but the rubrics are different and many prayers, such as the Credo or the Offertory or the Communion prayers are still nonexistent).
Of course, I know that many of you understand that the Mass did not drop down from Heaven ready-made and resembling the form we have now. I guess the two terms have different meanings, then?
**THIS IS NOT A DEBATE THREAD. NO DEBATING OR ARGUING, IF POSSIBLE.
TO THE MODS: IF ANY HEATED/PROTRACTED DEBATE SPRINGS UP HERE, PLEASE CLOSE THIS THREAD.**
While I do identify myself as a traditionalist, I feel that using the term is quite odd since the Mass did not look always as it does now in the Tridentine (which is true especially in the period around 6th-9th Century. The words of the Mass may be the same, but the rubrics are different and many prayers, such as the Credo or the Offertory or the Communion prayers are still nonexistent).
Of course, I know that many of you understand that the Mass did not drop down from Heaven ready-made and resembling the form we have now. I guess the two terms have different meanings, then?
**THIS IS NOT A DEBATE THREAD. NO DEBATING OR ARGUING, IF POSSIBLE.
TO THE MODS: IF ANY HEATED/PROTRACTED DEBATE SPRINGS UP HERE, PLEASE CLOSE THIS THREAD.**