I do celebrate Mass sometimes in the extraordinary form. One reason for that was because I was brought up in that tradition. The changes only came in just about the time I was ordained. I think they are an essential and beautiful part of our tradition. I think they have considerable strength, some weaknesses. I think the community dimension is lacking. But I think the old rite brings across the importance of transcendence: that we are really participating in an act of worship.
So I have an enormous respect for the old Mass, for the people who worship in that rite. I don't think it is the key to the future. But it is a beautiful and essential part of our patrimony. And if people want this form of worship I think it's entirely appropriate within our tradition to offer it for them.
Vatican II reminded us that people's internal and external participation in the liturgy was at a low
Why Latin congregational hymns?
JulieColl: I do love grand organ processionals, but encouraging the community aspect of the EF congregation with vernacular entrance and closing hymns is, in my opinion, the greater good.
Chonak: Indeed, Latin is to be retained in the liturgy, but congregational hymns before and after the Mass are not really "the liturgy", so it's not necessary to require that they be in Latin.
"Quotiescumque Episcopus solemniter celebraturus, aut Missae solemni per alium celebrandae in festis solemnioribus interfuturus, Ecclesiam ingreditur; aut, re divina peracta, discedit, convenit pulsari organum."
Good grief! Respond. please, to the issue at hand, and please don't keep dredging up any red herring about singing these hymns in the vernacular.So the folks attending the weekly Sunday Sung Latin High Mass are folks whose mother tongues are French, English, Slovak, and even others. He does not want anyone excluded for the people's singing part in the Mass, so Latin fills that need for the hymns.
"Experience has shown that congregational singing is always a living proof of the Faith".
About those fanfares - I could have crawled under the pavement! I thought at the time (and still do) that only a Catholic would do something so abjectly tasteless and gaudy during sacred proceedings.
In heaven there won't be any bad taste - only impeccably perfect taste.
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