The periodic appearance of this rite in the mainstream of Catholic life is to be valued. But its continued life in our culture is ironically dependent on the the ordinary form as a means of bringing the liturgy to the people in the most direct way, as a teacher and guide. The ordinary form is and will remain the liturgy that Catholic culture knows best, and through it Catholics can grow to develop a special appreciation for the magnificence of what came before.
Pope Benedict XVI was extremely wise in institutionalizing these names: ordinary and extraordinary form. We can take these terms literally and use them in the modern sense to understand what the future holds as regards the two forms of the Roman Rite.
Catholics don't need more scripture in the Mass, they need more scripture outside of the Mass. There's no substitute for independent scripture study.
The term I don't like is "Traditional Latin Mass". That is an immediately slight which makes the OF look "untraditional". The EF Mass is not that old, in terms of the age of the Church. It is certainly not exactly the Mass of St. Peter. Conversely, the OF Mass contains elements which go right back to the Apostles. The OF Mass is much closer to the Antiochene rites, which are the oldest rites of the Church. And the OF Mass can certainly be chanted in Latin just as well as the EF Mass can.
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