Isn't it possible, counter-intuitive though it may be, that use of the vernacular thwarts understanding?
ThisI would say that the introduction of the vernacular into regular usage in the liturgy is precisely what can support the use of Latin in the people's parts of the Ordo.
Are you familiar with the lawyer's definition of "extraordinary"?
I blush to admit that I am not, though I am sure I ought to be. (I just couldn't resist such a bad joke in the context of a discussion about Latin in the Mass.) Do enlighten me, please.
All other languages are considered vulgar.
We have hundreds of years of our heritage in music (which is in Latin). What is wrong with that music?
Vulgar Latin is a generic term for the nonstandard (as opposed to classical) sociolects of Latin from which the Romance languages developed. The word vulgar in this case refers to its original meaning of common or vernacular, and not the more pejorative usage, tasteless or indecent. WIKI
Vernacular language liturgies lead to national churches. What were the first steps of Luther and Henry VIII?
Only in the west have we elevated a language, fourth century Latin, to iconic, uniquely sacral status.
It has been part and parcel of the extreme clericalism whereby the mass became almost the sole act of a clerical caste which the people just observed and were duly in awe of whilst doing private 'devotions'. (The utter absence of liturgia.)
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