J
JackMcCoy
Guest
I don’t have to “square” anything. I just want to be able to understand the Mass without having to learn Latin.
Because of the constant divisive posts on the topic.Why can’t people just appreciate that many many people love and are nourished by the OF, and ALSO appreciate that many people are loving and being nourished by the EF?
Well said! I can enjoy both forms. I unfortunately can say I’ve been to EF masses that were disappointing as well. Clear creek is EF though! And an awesome one at that!I shall reiterate what I say every time I comment on an OF vs. EF thread.
I go to an EF Mass because most of the OF Masses around me can’t compete with the EF in terms of reverence and beauty.
Now, is that intrinsic to the OF Mass? I would say “No.” There are beautiful OF Masses in many places. Clear Creek Monastery in Oklahoma. Many liberal arts Catholics colleges.
But most of the OF Masses surrounding me at least can’t really compare to the EF. Such a sad state indeed.
Not the fault of the OF intrinsically. I blame lackluster seminaries and bad formation.
I don’t know where you got this information, but it just isn’t correct.I don’t mean this to be rude or condescending in any way, but do you believe that it was wrong for the Church to say Mass exclusively in Latin for at least a millenium and a half
That is incorrect.I believe that the Vatican City is the only place in world where Latin is spoken
I really doubt there is one place on this earth where Latin is spoken conversationally. I can’t say in all the places I’ve ever been I’ve walked around hearing people conversing solely in Latin. You wouldn’t need a degree in it to realize that was being spoken, either. It’s pretty distinctive.YourNameHere:![]()
That is incorrect.I believe that the Vatican City is the only place in world where Latin is spoken
Before recent decades, Latin was widely used outside of the Catholic Church as well as the Vatican.
Most of our states have Latin slogans, the language is used extensively in medicine, and law , commerce and other fields of endeavor. Many of your top cigarette brands adopted Latin slogans to add class , e.g. “In Hoc Signo Vinces”
Wyoming Catholic CollegeI really doubt there is one place on this earth where Latin is spoken conversationally.
We haven 't used it after, either . . .In fact, even in the Catholic Church, before Vatican II, the Eastern Catholic Churches did not use Latin in their Liturgy.
We also starting moving to the vernacular in the US in the early 50s–and handled it much better than the RCC.They used Greek or Church Slavonic or another form.