We seem to be forgetting that the Liturgy of the Hours was created for the priests and religious, not the people in the pews.
A friend of mine said, “Catholicism lost so much when the Mass was changed.”
Scripture is not better understood by reading it or hearing it, even in the vernacular (it helps), but by studying it. Hearing it proclaimed at Mass does not aid in understanding (it aids in spiritual growth, etc.). Only study, and that with the aid of sound commentaries, can deepen understanding.
Do Catholics truly have a better understanding (comprehension, not simply acknowledgement of a flow of vernacular words of which one knows the meaning) of Scripture now? I allow that vernacular readings are better for comprehension, though hearing Scripture read in Latin gave a better connection to the music in Latin (and vernacular Scripture can be read before or after Mass, or in the homily).
Today, our biggest problem is the loss of souls to secularism. This is something Latin can not resolve.
All of these comments about the 'superiority' of the EF over the OF, or of Latin over English just sound like so much sour grapes to me. After Vatican II, the Mass was changed. Deal with it.
About one a year.
Hearing it proclaimed at Mass does not aid in understanding
There are people not discussed here, of course, who promote the OF.
I did cover that situation, Charles. I'm not being "holier than thou", or any such nonsensical thing.
What I claimed to be nonsensical was your implication that I (or other people you call old ritualists) am taking an attitude of "holier than thou".
What you call carping is carping in some people, true, but not in everyone who finds fault with the rite, even if the finding of fault is frequent.
I'm not exactly sure how those critical of the OF would go about "fix[ing] the problems," other than help to ensure that celebrations of both the EF and OF are as reverent as possible - which is what most are already doing.
... there's the saying "by their fruits you shall know them."
Around here, we get rotten fruit from the OF.
the problems are much deeper than whether a parish uses Palestrina or Haugen
...and no amount of Gregorian Chant can fix that.
The Missal of Pius V was very near to the Missal of the Roman Curia of 1474. The drastic changes were only for those who adopted it.
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