Posted on 06/21/2005 8:32:21 AM PDT by el_chupacabra
Bishop restores Latin Mass | |
By Lawn Griffiths, Tribune |
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June 21, 2005 | |
The Old Mass has regained critical mass in the Roman Catholic Diocese of Phoenix. The one-year experiment to determine whether enough Valley Catholics wanted Masses in Latin the mother tongue of the church has ended. | |
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And Bishop Thomas Olmsted has declared Latin a winner. The response to a first year of "Tridentine liturgy" or Latin Masses at St. Thomas the Apostle Catholic Church in east Phoenix has been so strong that Olmsted is making them permanent, and extending the special Masses to more parishes. After July 1, a Tridentine Mass will be offered Sundays at St. Augustine in Phoenix, which has a largely Hispanic congregation. For Catholics in the northern parts of the diocese, a Latin Mass will be on Sundays at St. Cecilias Catholic Church in Clarkdale.
It carries the tradition of receiving the Holy Eucharist on the tongue instead in the hand. Women commonly wear veils or mantillas.
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Contact Lawn Griffiths by email, or phone (480) 898-6522 | |
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Purchase this article for reprint. Click here for options. Copyright 2005 East Valley & Scottsdale Tribune Freedom Communications, Inc. |
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Your turn.
Even better stuff! Are you saying the Council was in error? Or perhaps you are saying we Catholics should get all our direction "sola scriptura"?
Actually, I am very glad to see you here. We Catholics need another dyed in the wool NOer hanging around the religion forum since we just recently lost one.
If you want to limit us only to the original practice, we'll have to toss out a lot of things that developed later, like the printed bible, the Creed, church buildings, etc.
Or we can recognize that the Holy Spirit inspired what we have now and what we had in 1960.
I'd like to have a choice. Right now, I don't.
I can't remember the name either, but it is error.
It's called archeologism and it was condemned.
The TLM was the culmination of additions and development over centuries with its core; the Canon, as said by St. Peter and the consecration (including mysterium Fidei)as Our Lord himself stated it according to the Tradition of the Church.
Gotta love FR. There's a lot of knowledge out there.
Thank you.
Wouldn't it have been something if it had been done on Ash Wednesday?
I think you are confusing traditionalism with primitivism.
Thanks. That's the word I was actually searching for when I typed "primitivism."
To clarify: Mr. Malone called it "the mass of ages," not the "mass for all time." The difference is huge, as it shows that this was the mass that has the longest standing in the Catholic Church, not the only standing. Also, the origins of a thing do not necessarily reflect its tradition. I started out life by being breast fed, but I would consider myself, traditionally, an eater of solid foods.
To clarify: Mr. Malone called it "the mass of ages," not the "mass for all time." The difference is huge, as it shows that this was the mass that has the longest standing in the Catholic Church, not the only standing. Also, the origins of a thing do not necessarily reflect its tradition. I started out life by being breast fed, but I would consider myself, traditionally, an eater of solid foods.
Hey, no matter what you think of the variations of the Latin Rite (Novus Ordo in the vernacular or the 1962 Missalae Romanum in Latin) you have to confess that this was certainly a very Pastoral move on the part of Bishop Olmstead.
I wonder if we could trade Bishops with Phoenix, we can also throw in our Moderator of the Curia, the two luxery sedans they tool around in and a player to be named later.
It is not so clear that the original practice was worship in the language of the people. According to some scholars, worship in Jerusalem in Jesus's time was in Hebrew, even though the language of the people was by then Aramaic. So it is not clear that even Jesus Himself worshipped exclusively in the vernacular. The Church in Rome used Greek in its liturgy for the first three centuries, well past the time that most Christians there spoke Latin as their mother tongue. The use of special languages in worship is a very widespread phenomenon. Today, Jews use much Hebrew and Aramaic in worship even in places where those are not the vernacular. (I went to an Orthodox Jewish wedding, and the ritual was largely in Aramaic). In some eastern Churches, Coptic, Church Slavonic, and other "dead" languages are used in worship. One sees the same thing even in Protestantism, where the archaic version of English of the King James Bible with its Thees and Thous has become for many a "hieratic" language.
It is not so clear that the original practice was worship in the language of the people. According to some scholars, worship in Jerusalem in Jesus's time was in Hebrew, even though the language of the people was by then Aramaic. So it is not clear that even Jesus Himself worshipped exclusively in the vernacular. The Church in Rome used Greek in its liturgy for the first three centuries, well past the time that most Christians there spoke Latin as their mother tongue. The use of special languages in worship is a very widespread phenomenon. Today, Jews use much Hebrew and Aramaic in worship even in places where those are not the vernacular. (I went to an Orthodox Jewish wedding, and the ritual was largely in Aramaic). In some eastern Churches, Coptic, Church Slavonic, and other "dead" languages are used in worship. One sees the same thing even in Protestantism, where the archaic version of English of the King James Bible with its Thees and Thous has become for many a "hieratic" language.
El Chupacabra. Tee-heee. I just saw them do El Chupacabra on the X-Files.
You're missing two of three genitives: In nomine Patris et Filii et Spiritus Sancti
Zing!
I am referring to the apostles and pentacost during which I believe God's intent was clear.
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