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In the Gullet of a Wolf
The Remnant ^ | February 28, 2005

Posted on 02/25/2005 4:50:22 PM PST by Land of the Irish

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In the Gullet of a Wolf

 

I know that after my departure fierce wolves will get in among you,

and will not spare the flock.

Acts 20; 29

 

Two Catholics died in January of this year. One I’d been acquainted with for some time; the other I’d never met. Both had three things in common: 1) They kept the Faith and served the Church throughout their lives, 2) They gave to the Church, besides decades’ worth of tithing, a good number of children and 3) On their deathbeds, both were shown less regard by their bishops than death row inmates are shown by their wardens.

Their “crime”? Faithful adherence to the Mass of their childhood. This is their story.

 

Allen Cain, RIP

 

On the 3rd of January, 2005, Allen Francis Cain died at the age of 89. I’d known Mr. Cain (though not well) for many years. He was a kind and gentle soul, well beloved by those who knew him. He’d somehow managed to raise twelve children while working himself to the bone on a 200-acre, 100-year-old family farm in Murdock, Minnesota. He was part of that dying breed of Catholic farmers who proudly work the land and till the soil even as their fathers had done for generations before them.

After the constraints of old age had forced him from his fields, Mr. Cain, by that time a widower after some five decades married to his high school sweetheart, spent his last years making rosaries…lots of them. The local newspaper printed the following lines as part of a glowing obituary: “Allen was a member of Our Lady’s Rosary Makers, long ago passing his goal of making a rosary for every day of his life...Many times every day you could find him quietly reading, reciting his prayers, and making rosaries.”

Get the picture? This was one of those living saint types who comes along only every now and then but who makes the world a better place for having been born. Look up “faithful Catholic” in the dictionary and you might just find a picture of Allen Cain. Trouble is, after 1965 he became increasingly ostracized by this noisy new world of ours, and especially by the “renewed” Catholic Church of Vatican II. Come to think of it, family farms like his were being swallowed up during those years about as exponentially as Catholic high altars were being bulldozed. In any event, Mr. Cain never became a traditional Catholic; he just sort of stayed on that way all the days of his long life.

He lived the Faith as he’d been taught it by the Catholic nuns and priests of his childhood almost a hundred years ago. He wasn’t interested in being “renewed”.

Over the years, small checks from Allen Cain came into The Remnant office on a regular basis. They were always attached to handwritten orders for a new subscription or a reprint article for this family member or that friend or the barber or the butcher or some acquaintance who the old man was gently leading back to Christ. He never made a “big deal” about it; he just quietly went about the Lord’s work as best he knew how. And so in peace his years passed.

After raising twelve children and who knows how many flocks of turkeys, and after threading miles of wire though several hundred thousand beads, he was quite unceremoniously called home to the God he’d well served. He died like he’d lived—without making a fuss. To the very end he asked nothing of anyone, except, that is, for one final request: “Bury me in the old way, with the old Latin Mass that I learned to love when I was a boy.”

Who could refuse such a simple request from one so guileless, and just moments from death? For that matter, who’d even consider refusing it, except, perhaps, a bully with an axe to grind.

Nevertheless, someone did refuse the last request of Allen Cain. Never mind that, even on death row, the final wish of the most hardened criminal is respected; old Mr. Cain’s was not. As if all the sexual abuse cover-ups weren’t enough, yet another scandal involving an American Catholic bishop was brewing.

A day after Mr. Cain had passed, his son, Colin Cain (a trusted board member at a Catholic parish in So. St. Paul) called the Murdock parish priest and informed him of his father’s last request. Because it was the church where Mr. Cain had been baptized, married his bride, been a life-long parishioner, dropped who knows how many thousands of dollars into the collection basket, Sacred Heart Church was the natural choice for his funeral.

The pastor, or “Sacramental Minister” as he’s now called in the Parish Directory, said “no problem,” but permission would have to be obtained from the Most Reverend John C. Nienstedt, Bishop of New Ulm.

This is where the nightmare began.

With the help and close cooperation of a sympathetic priest in St. Paul, Colin Cain called the Vicar for the Diocese of New Ulm, asking to speak to Bishop Nienstedt. The Vicar stated that the Bishop was on retreat. Could the Vicar himself, then, perhaps expedite the old gentleman’s deathbed request? He was sympathetic but said that the Bishop does not grant permission for those.

“But,” the son pleaded, “the pastor has given his permission and we have two priests who are willing to say the Mass.”

The Vicar thought a moment and then promised that he’d take it under advisement and pass the information along to the bishop.

“The Bishop will let you know.”

The family waited but there was no call-back. Finally, they called the chancery office again. This time the Vicar’s response was: “The Bishop said no.”

“May we have a reason?”

“The Bishop gave no reason; he will not give permission for a Tridentine Requiem Mass to anyone.”

This prompted letters from the family, pleading and begging the bishop to honor their father’s dying wish….Daughter-in-law Jane wrote to the Bishop. Granddaughter Maria wrote to the Bishop. Daughter Catherine wrote to the Bishop. Catherine’s coworker — a non-Catholic, scandalized by the Bishop’s refusal to honor a deathbed request — wrote to the Bishop. Another of Catherine’s shocked coworkers wrote to the Bishop. Daughter Patti wrote to the Bishop. Daughter Ann wrote to the Bishop. Youngest daughter Shannon wrote to the Bishop and even telephoned the Vicar.

Many friends sent letters to the bishop and many more called his office, but all of this was met with a disdainful silence from the “castle on the hill”.

Out of options and running out of time, the “peasants” had to settle for a burial service in Murdock, sans a Requiem. A simple burial service would have to suffice to accommodate the old man’s many friends, neighbors, and family members, including his last surviving sister, who wanted to say goodbye to a pillar of their small community and join together in prayer for his soul.

And so, rather than violate the sacred last wishes of the deceased, a faithful Catholic of 89 years was laid to rest without any Mass at all.

A Requiem was eventually offered in St. Paul, long after Allen had been interred in Murdock. It was the best the family could do. As Jane Cain pointed out in her letter to the Bishop, in the past there were really only two reasons why a body might not be present at a funeral Mass: the person had died on the battlefield or drowned at sea. As Mr. Cain had died in his hospital bed, there now seemed to be a third, more sinister, reason involving the personal power trips of individual bishops who think they know better than the Pope. This apparently rattled His Excellency, for he did finally respond. The pertinent portion of his letter to Jane Cain follows:

 

…because of our close proximity to the Archdiocese of St. Paul Minneapolis, which does offer this possibility [to offer the old Mass] at St. Augustine Church in South St. Paul, there would be no need to add to the parochial responsibilities of our priests in responding to this request [to grant Mr. Cain’s Requiem].

What the Holy Father’s document does not consider, however, is an individual request for the Tridentine Mass in a specific instance such as Allen Cain’s funeral. One has to understand that the Sacred Liturgy is a communal event. Every celebration of the Mass is of and for the whole Church, as clearly enunciated by Pope John Paul in his encyclical, “The Eucharist in Relation to the Church.” What Mr. Cain’s deathbed request would entail, therefore, would be turning the Mass into a private devotion, which would be totally wrong and diametrically opposed to the theology of the Catholic Church.

 

Diametrically opposed”? Allowing a Catholic to have a funeral Mass offered exactly as it had been for well over a thousand years is, according to the Bishop of New Ulm, a “private devotion” that is “diametrically opposed to the theology of the Catholic Church”? Evidently, the Holy Father never anticipated this “diametric opposition”? I realize that post-conciliar seminaries aren’t exactly bastions of vast intellectual acumen, but is this man serious?!

How could a shepherd of souls develop such a transparent loathing for the venerable Catholic liturgical heritage of the Roman Rite and those attached to it? The Archbishop of St. Paul Minneapolis, Harry Flynn, certainly doesn’t share this peculiar phobia of the old Mass. What is Bishop Neinstedt afraid of— a grassroots movement of octogenarians in New Ulm, rising up from their deathbeds and demanding the return of the old Mass?

Yes, crush the rebellion! Down with the insurgents! Call in the AARP!

Such an attitude against something so sacred—a foundational stone of Christendom and the touchstone of the Faith itself—savors of the demonic, whether the Bishop of New Ulm realizes it or not. This is the Mass of St. Thomas Aquinas, Pope Pius X, St. Maximilian Kolbe, Pope Pius XII! Granting permission for that Mass—the only

Mass the saints ever knew—constitutes something that is “opposed to the theology of the Catholic Church”? One is reminded of the vampires of folklore cringing in horror at the sight of a crucifix or holy water…or the Mass. After all, what difference does it make to the Bishop if one old man in Murdock wants a Latin Mass at his funeral? What could possibly explain such intolerance?

And it gets worse: it turns out that there were Protestant observers taking all of this in, having become privy to this apparent contempt for the Roman Catholic liturgical heritage and for a dying man’s last request. Sensing that the Cains were getting nowhere, one Protestant friend of the family tried to intervene, in fact. When her efforts also failed, one can only imagine the distain for all things Catholic that she must have felt in her heart. After all the sex and sewage and ecclesiastical scandals of the past decade, imagine how this Protestant lady’s worst anti-Catholic suspicions were beautifully confirmed by the bull-in-a-china-shop antics of the Bishop of New Ulm:

 

Dear Vicar

My name is Denise Stipes and I am a dear friend of Catherine Cain (and her family) whose father, Mr. Allen Cain of Murdock, MN, recently passed away. He was 89 years old. I was informed today that he has been denied a Tridentine Funeral Mass. I would like to ask for your reason for denying Mr. Cain the dignity of this service.

It is my understanding that one of the great strengths of the Tridentine Mass is its uniformity. Wherever Catholics go in the world, the Tridentine Mass is exactly the same. The movements and gestures of the Mass are clearly prescribed, so there’s no room for “personalization” of the liturgy. The time-honored Latin of the Mass reverently reflects the sacrificial nature of the celebration.

The Pope approves the Tridentine Funeral Mass. In his 1980 letter to the Bishops on the Holy Eucharist, Pope John Paul II said: “There are also those people who, having been educated on the basis of the old liturgy in Latin, experience the lack of this ‘one language’, which in all the world was an expression of the unity of the Church and which, through its dignified character, elicited a profound sense of the Eucharistic mystery. It is therefore necessary to show, not only understanding, but also full respect towards these sentiments and desires. As far as possible, these sentiments and desires are to be accommodated.”

From what I understand, the parish priest has no objections to this request. I respectfully ask that you reconsider your decision and allow Mr. Cain his last dying wish to have a Latin Mass at his funeral. I fully support the Cain family and the rights of Mr. Cain. I look forward to a positive response.

Respectfully,

Denise Stipes, Chicago, IL

 

In the dismal “ecclesial reality” of Vatican II, one is no longer surprised by anything, even such previously unthinkable realities as Protestants who are more sensitive to the will of the Pope, exemplify more compassion, and practice greater charity than a Catholic bishop. But, there it is.

One wonders what the Bishop’s reaction might have been had the Cain Family requested that a Buddhist monk be allowed to perform a smoking bowls ritual at the funeral Mass in Murdock…. “Certainly! The Church understands the great value of other faith expressions. And this would promote greater ecumenical awareness. So long as the Buddhist reveres Vatican II, we have no objections and we welcome him to our worship space.”

Virginia Teehan, RIP

 

I did not know Mrs. Virginia Teehan (who died in Maryland six days after Allen Cain), and so her story will here be told by a compelling letter written by her daughter and addressed to the attention of the Most Rev. Sean Patrick O’Malley, Archbishop of Boston, successor of Cardinal Bernard Law of most unhappy memory. Though the Teehan Family had found two priests willing to offer the Tridentine Requiem at Mrs. Teehan’s parish church, St. Pius X Church in Milton, MA, the Archdiocese flatly refused to grant permission for it, even though traditional Requiems are allowed in Boston’s Holy

Trinity Church (Indult). With considerable finagling and at the very last moment, the family did manage to have a hastily thrown-together Requiem for Mrs. Teehan all the way down in Boston. But the Archdiocese in no way suggested this as a possible recourse; permission for the Requiem in Milton was simply denied with no reason given. Despite their grief at a very difficult time, the family members were left to fend for themselves.

The letter speaks for itself.

Read it and weep:

 

Your Eminence:

Our family recently requested the Tridentine Latin Mass for our beloved mother’s funeral. We had no problem finding a priest willing to say it but the Archdiocese denied our request.

Virginia Teehan passed away on Sunday, January 9, at 12 noon, as her family finished saying the rosary. She was a devout Catholic who loved the Tridentine Latin Mass and made the trip to the South End with her missal in hand whenever she could. When she become ill a year ago, she attended Mass at a local church. She asked the priest if he would say the Tridentine Latin Mass once. Again he was willing but the Archdiocese said, “No.”

Our mother prayed hard for our Holy Father, bishops and priests her whole life; but while she was in Brigham and Women’s Hospital at various times throughout the year, she requested Communion from a priest. They kept sending a layperson, and she kept requesting a priest. After many, many requests the priest came—without Holy Communion. He told her he couldn’t promise to bring it to her; so, basically, if she didn’t accept Communion from a layperson that was her tough luck. He never did come back. Oh, but before he left, he asked our father and me to put our hands on her and gave her a blessing?!

On January 9th at about 4 a.m., my mother was about to be put on a ventilator and was told she may never be able to communicate again. She requested a priest. Eight hours later she passed away. A priest never came.

Unfortunately, this was not an isolated incident. We were calling priests all over Boston throughout the year to bring her Communion, and the majority of them were just too busy.

We find it extremely tragic that the leaders of the Church that she devoted her life to and prayed so hard for could deny her her right to the Tridentine Latin Mass, Communion from a priest and a priest by her side on her deathbed. The latter two we need for you to be aware of, but please tell us why you denied our request for the Tridentine Latin Mass for our mother’s funeral. What could you possibly have against that Mass? We found a priest, actually a couple of them, willing to say it; my mother loved that Mass, and the Archdiocese said, “No.” Why? Our mother found parts of the “new” Mass offensive because of irreverence and many things that were done and said. Whether you agree with this sentiment or not, our Holy Father said you could allow us to have the Tridentine Latin Mass.

So why did you deny our request and make an extremely stressful time for us even more stressful? We don’t understand and nobody else does, either…

There are problems within the Church, in case you haven’t noticed, and we’re begging you and praying that you will do something about them. We don’t have our mother here anymore to set us straight according to the old Catholic teachings, so we can only depend on you. The salvation of our souls and others depends on you.

Enclosed are some poems by our mother that we never really appreciated before, but they’re helping us get through this difficult time. We’d like to share them with you and hope that you will cherish them as much as we do.

Sincerely,

Mary Bennett (John, Michael, Ann, Paul and Matthew Teehan).

 

It is said that a society can be judged by the way in which it treats its young and its elderly. If this is so, and it certainly is, then what can be said of the “renewed” Church which has failed to teach the Faith to its children (most Catholic grade-schoolers have trouble with the Hail Mary, let alone an entire rosary), which has victimized its young men (or covered for priests who did so), and which is now in the business of denying the sick and dying their deathbed requests? What are they so afraid of? That their habit-less nuns, altar-less sanctuaries, congregation-less churches, priest-less parishes, and vocation-less seminaries are signs that the end is near for them? Is this why they resent tradition-minded Catholics enough to lord it over them whenever possible, even those lying on their deathbeds? It would seem so.

It’s no wonder there’s standing room only at chapels operated by the Society of St. Pius X!

I’d like to close with one of those little poems written by the late Mrs. Teehan. To think that it was penned by a beautiful Catholic soul whose Bishop denied her simple request to have a Requiem Mass just as all Catholics for centuries had been given. Shame on him and God help us all!

 

The Catholic Church

Where Jesus does dwell

In Rome, the Pope

To guard it well

 

Divine as her founder

Holy and One

The Bride of Christ

May His Kingdome come

 

To every nation

As He did command

The apostles who preached

In every land.

 

His Cross and His rock

Are the visible signs

For salvation and life

For all of mankind

 

Christ is the Good Shepherd

He has one flock

And none will be lost

Who cling to the Rock

…Virginia Teehan (RIP)

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TOPICS: Apologetics; Catholic
KEYWORDS: bishops; boston; catholic; johncnienstedt; newulm; requiem; seanpatrickomalley; traditional
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To: sinkspur
The SSPX has less than a million members, worldwide, out of ONE BILLION Catholics.

You appear to be an adherent to safety in numbers. When Muslims outnumber Christians, will you convert?

41 posted on 02/27/2005 11:13:46 AM PST by Land of the Irish (Tradidi quod et accepi)
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To: sinkspur
"It ain't happenin'."

Just got from the indult TLM.

They're pouring out the doors like never before.

42 posted on 02/27/2005 11:18:56 AM PST by pascendi (Quicumque vult salvus esse, ante omnia opus est, ut teneat catholicam fidem)
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To: Land of the Irish
Catholics, Irish. We're talking Catholics. One billion Catholics versus one million (tops) SSPXers.
43 posted on 02/27/2005 11:22:50 AM PST by sinkspur ("Preach the gospel. If necessary, use words.")
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To: pascendi

Good. But they wouldn't be "pouring out the doors" at five TLMs at the same parish, every Sunday.


44 posted on 02/27/2005 11:23:49 AM PST by sinkspur ("Preach the gospel. If necessary, use words.")
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To: sinkspur

http://www.religioustolerance.org/worldrel.htm

Christianity 2,015 million 33% (dropping)
Islam 1,215 million 20% (growing)


45 posted on 02/27/2005 11:24:48 AM PST by Land of the Irish (Tradidi quod et accepi)
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To: sinkspur
One billion Catholics versus one million (tops) SSPXers.

The SSPX clergy and the laity they adminster to are Catholics.

46 posted on 02/27/2005 11:30:56 AM PST by Land of the Irish (Tradidi quod et accepi)
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To: Land of the Irish; sinkspur; pascendi

Just a little aside to your numbers discussion. Just from my observations, Traditional Catholics don't abort and contracept at the same rate as the secular population like other "Catholics" do. Given this fact, they don't need to "recruit" new people for their numbers to grow geometrically.


47 posted on 02/27/2005 12:02:46 PM PST by murphE (Each of the SSPX priests seems like a single facet on the gem that is the alter Christus. -Gerard. P)
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To: sinkspur
"But they wouldn't be "pouring out the doors" at five TLMs at the same parish, every Sunday."

I don't see why not.

After all, it's happened before.

48 posted on 02/27/2005 1:49:10 PM PST by pascendi (Quicumque vult salvus esse, ante omnia opus est, ut teneat catholicam fidem)
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To: CouncilofTrent
"His plan is to offer it till all the old people die off and to phase it out completely"

The Cardinal may be in for a surprise. The indult at Old St. Mary's has been full whenever I have been there and the majority of those who attend are young people.
49 posted on 02/27/2005 2:05:47 PM PST by k omalley (Caro Enim Mea, Vere est Cibus, et Sanguis Meus, Vere est Potus)
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To: pascendi
I don't see why not.

95% of American Catholics prefer the Novus Ordo and the vernacular.

50 posted on 02/27/2005 2:13:30 PM PST by sinkspur ("Preach the gospel. If necessary, use words.")
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To: k omalley

Well here is a statement made by a New York priest on the matter:

Maida's decision to allow it at St. Josaphat seems in keeping with the spirit of Vatican rules, Reese said. But, "It would be counterproductive if too many people turn this into a marketing strategy to fill churches. The idea behind allowing this mass was that it could help older people in the later stages of their lives. The hope is that this mass eventually will fade away."

-Detroit Free Press (Aug. 3 2004).

So it wasnt the Cardinal speaking this, but the priest implies such.


51 posted on 02/27/2005 2:21:59 PM PST by CouncilofTrent (Quo Primum...)
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To: sinkspur

Preach the Novus Ordo. If necessary, use statistics.


52 posted on 02/27/2005 3:43:08 PM PST by pascendi (Quicumque vult salvus esse, ante omnia opus est, ut teneat catholicam fidem)
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To: CouncilofTrent
"The hope is that this mass eventually will fade away."

Boy, it's really hard to read that in print. There is something so simultaneously aggressive and enfeebling about it.

On a positive note though, in the Parish where I grew up, where the Latin Mass hasn't been said since probably '62, a funeral Mass was said in Latin on Saturday.

Don't know for sure, but I think the gentleman who passed away requested it. He entered the Seminary way back when, and called it quits just before he was to be ordained. This was back somewhere around '51-52. He ended up marrying and having kids, the youngest of which was my classmate. He taught Latin, English, was very artistic and had a powerful intellect.

May he Rest in Peace.

Man, I love my Latin Mass, I'm really starting to get into the rhythmn (sp?) of it. And in our bulletin today, listed on the back page are a bunch of quotes from various Saints, all part of a Year of the Eucharist series.

Here's one to think over...

"Often, actually very often, God allows His greatest servants to make the most humiliating mistakes. This humbles them in their own eyes and in the eyes of their fellow men. It prevents them from seeing and taking pride in the graces God bestows on them." (St. Louis Marie de Montfort)

About 4 different Priests say the Latin Mass on a rotational basis. One of the Priests has parkinson's just like the Holy Father, and it's really difficult for him to speak. But there he is nonetheless, a definite profile in courage, and a very good Confessor too.

53 posted on 02/27/2005 4:15:23 PM PST by AlbionGirl
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To: AlbionGirl

thats a very good quote!


54 posted on 02/27/2005 5:00:13 PM PST by CouncilofTrent (Quo Primum...)
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To: sinkspur; pascendi
95% of American Catholics prefer the Novus Ordo and the vernacular.

Most children would choose junk food over healthy fruits and vegetables, soda over milk and juice, TV over reading a book, etc. without proper guidance from their parents.

55 posted on 02/27/2005 5:47:01 PM PST by murphE (Each of the SSPX priests seems like a single facet on the gem that is the alter Christus. -Gerard. P)
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Comment #56 Removed by Moderator

To: murphE
Most children would choose junk food over healthy fruits and vegetables, soda over milk and juice, TV over reading a book, etc. without proper guidance from their parents.

More trashing of the Novus Ordo.

Same old, same old out of you trads.

57 posted on 02/27/2005 5:55:10 PM PST by sinkspur ("Preach the gospel. If necessary, use words.")
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To: sinkspur

"95% of American Catholics prefer the Novus Ordo and the vernacular."

Where do you get this 95%?
The TLM is not realistically available to 95% of us.
Probably more than half of us are too young to have seen the TLM.
Many, if not most, of us old fogeys were told by their lying pastors that Vatican II outlawed Latin Masses.
Saying that:
"95% of American Catholics prefer the Novus Ordo and the vernacular."
is a totally meaningless statement.


58 posted on 02/27/2005 6:00:14 PM PST by rogator
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To: rogator
Many more Catholics than you think are aware of the Indult Masses, and prefer to attend the Novus Ordo Mass.

It is simply not the case that American Catholics are chomping at the bit to attend Latin Masses, no matter how much those who prefer the Latin Mass say so.

59 posted on 02/27/2005 6:05:14 PM PST by sinkspur ("Preach the gospel. If necessary, use words.")
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To: sinkspur
"Trashing" is a subjective word. There is NOTHING wrong with criticizing the drastic changes in the new liturgy and discussing how the current conditions in the Church may be related to them. Do I need to pull out the quote from Fr. Echert on the EWTN EXPERT forum?

My point was, that is not about "preferences" or choice. In the case of food it is about what builds strong healthy bodies, in the case of type of mass it is about what builds faithful holy souls, saints. Our fallen natures will always tend to choose what is easy, what is entertaining and pleasurable even if it is not what is best for us. That is, UNLESS, those that love us, (those that want to see us grow up healthy and strong, and those that want to see that we go to heaven), teach us and guide us to choose what is best.

If the Novus Ordo is so good for souls, surely it will stand up to a little criticism. Why don't you defend it by listing some of it fruits, like the fruits of Vatican II you were asked to list?

60 posted on 02/27/2005 6:14:35 PM PST by murphE (Each of the SSPX priests seems like a single facet on the gem that is the alter Christus. -Gerard. P)
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