I think he could use his time much better by reading the deliberations of the various coetus who did the behind-the-scenes work on the various reformed liturgical books. Then he himself would be in a better position to understand why the changes that were made were made.
I'm not hankering for the "good 'ol days" (whenever that was), but for the day when the liturgical directives of Vatican II will actually be fully implemented.
In my humble opinion, the more the EF is used, the more it will naturally call the NO laity to reflection and pondering and the liturgy will be restored organically.
"The Council did not want to break with the liturgical forms inherited from Tradition, rather it wanted to deepen them. The Constitution establishes that “any new forms adopted should in some way grow organically from forms already existing.” (n.23).
In this sense, it is necessary that those celebrating according to the “usus antiquior” do so without any spirit of opposition, and hence in the spirit of “Sacrosanctum concilium”.
"An average Christian without specialist liturgical formation would find it difficult to distinguish between a Mass sung in Latin according to the old Missal and a sung Latin Mass according to the new Missal. However, the difference between a liturgy celebrated faithfully according to the Missal of Paul VI and the reality of a vernacular liturgy celebrated with all the freedom and creativity that are possible — that difference can be enormous!"
---Cardinal Ratzinger, Tenth Anniversary of the Motu Proprio "Ecclesia Dei" (Oct. 24, 1998)
So, as Cdl. Sarah says, SC truly is the touchstone.
I'm not sure how what you remember can be squared with Pope Benedict himself urged: that the two forms of the rite would be mutually enriching.
Knowingly violating the rubrics in the EF was a mortal sin
knowingly following the rubrics of the OF is considered by many to be a mortal sin.
I wasn't talking about an appendix, and don't know of one if it exists. If you are aware of one please let me know. I was talking about someone liking the EF offertory prayers and deciding to put them in an OF mass. I doubt he would be authorized to do that. I noted that such could work in reverse and could create a slippery slope.
I agree with both Ben and Jackson. The difference between the two forms is the clarity of theology and doctrine which the EF does better. Any discussion, at least locally, of the EF gets bogged down in Latin. I find that Latin - bad church Latin at its finest - is irrelevant.
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