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Latin Mass returns Sunday to Sacred Heart
Charlesten (WV) Gazette-Mail ^ | April 22, 2006 | Bob Schwarz

Posted on 04/22/2006 5:05:54 PM PDT by tridentine

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To: Wonder Warthog
I'll let you do your own stipulated research, but below is an excellent sourcebook. I do disagree with you, however, if you truly believe that Catholic Church membership isn't tied to belief in the Real Presence and Mass attendance and vocations. You can't become Roman Catholic without those elements, among others...

From: Mershon article from Renew America

It is not well-publicized, but Kenneth Jones has written a book entitled: Index of Leading Catholic Indicators: The Church since Vatican II. In it, Mr. Jones emotionlessly statistically documents the precipitous decline of numbers of vocations to the priesthood, numbers of priests, numbers of Catholic schools, numbers of conversions, numbers of Catholics attending Catholic schools, numbers of baptisms, numbers of marriages in the Church, numbers of religious vocations in the U.S. prior to, and after, the Second Vatican Council — an objective and sobering, and quite frankly, depressing overview of the "signs of the times" for the U.S. Church. The same decline can be seen across Western Europe as well, but at a more alarming rate.
But one of our leading U.S. Bishops calls these sobering results regarding the legacy of the Second Vatican Council as "mixed." Pardon me for by brashness and boldness, but what would be considered a cataclysmal collapse?

81 posted on 04/27/2006 10:02:08 AM PDT by vox_freedom (Fear no evils)
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To: vox_freedom; Wonder Warthog
Catholic Encyclopedia on the matter:

The language of any Church or rite, as distinct from the vulgar tongue, is that used in the official services and may or may not be the common language. For instance the Rumanian Church uses liturgically the ordinary language of the country, while Latin is used by the Latin Church for her Liturgy without regard to the mother tongue of the clergy or congregation. There are many cases of an intermediate state between these extremes, in which the liturgical language is an older form of the vulgar tongue, sometimes easily, sometimes hardly at all, understood by people who have not studied it specially. Language is not rite. Theoretically any rite may exist in any language. Thus the Armenian, Coptic, and East Syrian Rites are celebrated always in one language, the Byzantine Rite is used in a great number of tongues, and in other rites one language sometimes enormously preponderates but is not used exclusively. This is determined by church discipline. The Roman Liturgy is generally celebrated in Latin. The reason why a liturgical language began to be used and is still retained must be distinguished in liturgical science from certain theological or mystic considerations by which its use may be explained or justified. EACH LITURGICAL LANGUAGE WAS FIRST CHOSEN BECAUSE IT WAS THE NATURAL LANGUAGE OF THE PEOPLE. But languages change and the Faith spreads into countries where other tongues are spoken. Then either the authorities are of a more practical mind and simply translate the prayers into the new language, or the conservative instinct, always strong in religion, retains for the liturgy an older language no longer used in common life. The Jews showed this instinct, when, though Hebrew was a dead language after the Captivity, they continued to use it in the Temple and the synagogues in the time of Christ, and still retain it in their services. The Moslem, also conservative, reads the Koran in classical Arabic, whether he be Turk, Persian, or Afghan. The translation of the church service is complicated by the difficulty of determining when the language in which it is written, as Latin in the West and Hellenistic Greek in the East, has ceased to be the vulgar tongue. Though the Byzantine services were translated into the common language of the Slavonic people that they might be understood, this form of the language (Church-Slavonic) is no longer spoken, but is gradually becoming as unintelligible as the original Greek. Protestants make a great point of using languages "understanded of the people", yet the language of Luther's Bible and the Anglican Prayerbook is already archaic.

History

When Christianity appeared Hellenistic Greek was the common language spoken around the Mediterranean. St. Paul writes to people in Greece, Asia Minor, and Italy in Greek. When the parent rites were finally written down in the fourth and fifth centuries Eastern liturgical language had slightly changed. The Greek of these liturgies (Apost. Const. VIII, St. James, St. Mark, the Byzantine Liturgy) was that of the Fathers of the time, strongly coloured by the Septuagint and the New Testament. These liturgies remained in this form and have never been recast in any modern Greek dialect. Like the text of the Bible, that of a liturgy once fixed becomes sacred. The formulæ used Sunday after Sunday are hallowed by too sacred associations to be changed as long as more or less the same language is used. The common tongue drifts and develops, but the liturgical forms are stereotyped. In the East and West, however, there existed different principles in this matter. Whereas in the West there was no literary language but Latin till far into the Middle Ages, in the East there were such languages, totally unlike Greek, that had a position, a literature, a dignity of their own hardly inferior to that of Greek itself. In the West every educated man spoke and wrote Latin almost to the Renaissance. To translate the Liturgy into a Celtic or Teutonic language would have seemed as absurd as to write a prayerbook now in some vulgar slang. The East was never hellenized as the West was latinized. Great nations, primarily Egypt and Syria, kept their own languages and literatures as part of their national inheritance. The people, owing no allegiance to the Greek language, had no reason to say their prayers in it, and the Liturgy was translated into Coptic in Egypt, into Syriac in Syria and Palestine. So the principle of a uniform liturgical language was broken in the East and people were accustomed to hear the church service in different languages in different places. This uniformity once broken never became an ideal to Eastern Christians and the way was opened for an indefinite multiplication of liturgical tongues. [2]

The principle of using Latin in church is in no way fundamental. It is a question of discipline that evolved differently in East and West, and may not be defended as either primitive or universal. The authority of the Church could change the liturgical language at any time without sacrificing any important principle. The idea of a universal tongue may seem attractive, but is contradicted by the fact that the Catholic Church uses eight or nine different liturgical languages. Latin preponderates as a result of the greater influence of the Roman patriarchate and its rite, caused by the spread of Western Europeans into new lands and the unhappy schism of so many Easterns (see Fortescue, "Orthodox Eastern Church", 431). Uniformity of rite or liturgical language has never been a Catholic ideal, nor was Latin chosen deliberately as a sacred language. Had there been any such idea the language would have been Hebrew or Greek

*That encyclopedia entry was writen by Fr Asrian Fortescue, normally, a hero of those opposing Rome

82 posted on 04/27/2006 10:27:20 AM PDT by bornacatholic
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To: bornacatholic
Appreciate the quote, although I don't quite understand your observation about Fortesque "as a hero to those opposing Rome." He should be a hero to the many for his unyeilding defense of our Faith during a time when took true heroism to do so.
To follow along on your own source ( Catholic Encyclopedia -- in the very next paragraph -- which makes my point precisely. Thanks!:

The Church has never set up a mysterious unintelligible language as an ideal. There is no principle of sacerdotal mysteries from which the layman is shut out. In spite of the use of Latin the people have means of understanding the service. That they might do so still better if everything were in the vulgar tongue may be admitted, but in making this change the loss would probably be greater than the gain.

By changing the language of the Liturgy we should lose the principle of uniformity in the Roman patriarchate. According to the ancient principle that rite follows patriarchate, the Western rite should be that of the Western patriarch, the Roman Bishop, who uses the local rite of the city of Rome. There is a further advantage in using it in his language, so the use of Latin in the West came about naturally and is retained through conservative instinct. It is not so in the East. There is a great practical advantage to travellers, whether priests or laymen, in finding their rite exactly the same everywhere. An English priest in Poland or Portugal could not say his Mass unless he and the server had a common language. The use of Latin all over the Roman patriarchate is a very obvious and splendid witness of unity. Every Catholic traveller in a country of which he does not know the language has felt the comfort of finding that in church at least everything is familiar and knows that in a Catholic church of his own rite he is at home anywhere. Moreover, the change of liturgical language would be a break with the past. It is a witness of antiquity of which a Catholic may well be proud that in Mass to-day we are still used to the very words that Anselm, Gregory, Leo sang in their cathedrals. A change of language would also abolish Latin chant. Plainsong, as venerable a relic of antiquity as any part of the ritual, is composed for the Latin text only, supposes always the Latin syllables and the Latin accent, and becomes a caricature when it is forced into another language with different rules of accent.

83 posted on 04/27/2006 11:42:36 AM PDT by vox_freedom (Fear no evils)
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To: vox_freedom
"I do disagree with you, however, if you truly believe that Catholic Church membership isn't tied to belief in the Real Presence and Mass attendance and vocations. You can't become Roman Catholic without those elements, among others..."

Still begging the question. What I disagree with is that any of those things are in any fashion tied to the language used in the Mass. Re-institute the Tridentine mass throughout the world tomorrow, and NONE of the problems will go away.

84 posted on 04/27/2006 12:33:57 PM PDT by Wonder Warthog (The Hog of Steel-NRA)
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To: vox_freedom
"That they might do so still better if everything were in the vulgar tongue may be admitted, but in making this change the loss would probably be greater than the gain."

Not.

"It is a witness of antiquity of which a Catholic may well be proud that in Mass to-day we are still used to the very words that Anselm, Gregory, Leo sang in their cathedrals.

Why in the world should anybody care??? If you want to focus in on "the very words", then say the mass in Aramaic, which were "the very words" (or at least the same language) Christ used. But, we don't KNOW exactly what words Christ used, so spending a lot of time emoting about the "antiquity" of the langauge is a frivolous vanity.

85 posted on 04/27/2006 12:39:58 PM PDT by Wonder Warthog (The Hog of Steel-NRA)
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To: vox_freedom
Pope Pius XII, Mediator Dei

60. The use of the Latin language, customary in a considerable portion of the Church, is a manifest and beautiful sign of unity, as well as an effective antidote for any corruption of doctrinal truth. In spite of this, the use of the mother tongue in connection with several of the rites may be of much advantage to the people. But the Apostolic See alone is empowered to grant this permission. It is forbidden, therefore, to take any action whatever of this nature without having requested and obtained such consent, since the sacred liturgy, as we have said, is entirely subject to the discretion and approval of the Holy See

*Fr. Fortescue was a fine priest. However, he wasn't Pope

86 posted on 04/27/2006 12:49:20 PM PDT by bornacatholic
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To: Wonder Warthog
"It is a witness of antiquity of which a Catholic may well be proud that in Mass to-day we are still used to the very words that Anselm, Gregory, Leo sang in their cathedrals."

Why in the world should anybody care???

Vatican II cared enough to call for "a pride of place" in the retention of Gregorian chant in the "new" liturgy...And my point was not about antiquity - that was just the end of the long quote from another poster's source (that I felt emboldened my earlier perspective) - it is about the tradition of the liturgy. There is a difference in appreciation from where we came rather than appreciation for the sake of being old.
But we probably disagree on that, too.

87 posted on 04/27/2006 4:56:21 PM PDT by vox_freedom (Fear no evils)
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To: vox_freedom
"...it is about the tradition of the liturgy. There is a difference in appreciation from where we came rather than appreciation for the sake of being old."

Uh, I restate my point about Aramaic and Greek, which is "where we came from" even more so than Latin. The fixation on Latin is not supported by either the history of the Church, nor by Church doctrine. Use of the vernacular IS supported by the history of the Church.

88 posted on 04/28/2006 5:09:59 AM PDT by Wonder Warthog (The Hog of Steel-NRA)
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To: Wonder Warthog
Uh, I restate my point about Aramaic and Greek, which is "where we came from" even more so than Latin. The fixation on Latin is not supported by either the history of the Church, nor by Church doctrine. Use of the vernacular IS supported by the history of the Church.

I give up. 1,500 years of continuous Latin liturgical use and traditions must be meaningless in the "history" of our Church. Oh, and that "official language" of the Church stuff is also irrelevant. The two Vatican councils (including Vatican II, as earlier pointed out) which gave primacy to Latin and its use in the Mass and in sacred music also don't matter. I give up.

89 posted on 04/28/2006 7:46:04 AM PDT by vox_freedom (Fear no evils)
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To: vox_freedom
"I give up. 1,500 years of continuous Latin liturgical use and traditions must be meaningless in the "history" of our Church."

"Mere longevity" doesn't confer legitimacy. Remember this is "t"radition and not "T"radition. Little "t" tradition can be changed at any time.

"Oh, and that "official language" of the Church stuff is also irrelevant."

Of relevance only to the church bureaucracy--not the laity.

"The two Vatican councils (including Vatican II, as earlier pointed out) which gave primacy to Latin and its use in the Mass and in sacred music also don't matter."

Not matters of "faith and morals", therefore not infallible teachings.

WHY should Latin have primacy in the Mass?? It is NOT the language of the laity participating in the ritual, nor, as I've pointed out before, is it the "historical" language of the Mass.

As I've said multiple times on this thread, the obvious answer is to allow parishes who so desire to celebrate the Latin mass as ONE of the masses given weekly (if only one Mass is celebrated, then the vernacular Mass should have preference). Then you "Latin purists" can be happy, and those of us who prefer to actually understand what is said can be happy also.

I didn't convert to Catholicism because of Latin, but because of the truth of the Church's teachings. I find Latin to be an intrusion into attaining a proper "sense of reverence" during the Mass.

90 posted on 04/29/2006 5:46:41 AM PDT by Wonder Warthog (The Hog of Steel-NRA)
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