Starting today August 7th, 2024, in order to post in the Married Couples, Courting Couples, or Singles forums, you will not be allowed to post if you have your Marital status designated as private. Announcements will be made in the respective forums as well but please note that if yours is currently listed as Private, you will need to submit a ticket in the Support Area to have yours changed.
Christian Forums is looking to bring on new moderators to the CF Staff Team! If you have been an active member of CF for at least three months with 200 posts during that time, you're eligible to apply! This is a great way to give back to CF and keep the forums running smoothly! If you're interested, you can submit your application here!
That would be such a mistake.honestly? yeah, that's probably exactly what that means.
Very good question!!!Does this mean I won't be able to watch the Latin Mass on EWTN?
Yes, it is a hand grenade.I didn't think you were personally, it's just a very real problem that I've noticed coming from a specific subset of millennials that are very vocal and prominent on social media & their specific reasoning behind why they like the extraordinary form of the mass comes from an ugly place. It's not motivated so much by a love of the church as it is that they see the church as a means to further their ultimately secular political projects. There are a few YouTubers in general that I am thinking about and they all seem to share the same general traits. I got into it with one of them on Reddit a while back when he tried to argue that none of the sacraments that I received as a child have been valid because they weren't received in TLM. I would not dare to tell anyone who received the sacraments in TLM to not be valid because they were not N O, so it legitimately hurt me that these people said this.
Like I said, I would love to be able to go to attend a Latin mass because I never have, but my diocese does not offer them. The only problem I would have would be trying to follow along because I: don't understand Latin and have never been to one before. The thing that people have to remember is that for some of us, the N O is the only thing we know, so it effectively has become "tradition" in our families and it hurts when people who haven't been there from birth come along telling us that we've "never been to a valid mass in our lives" and then proceed to say that Pope St. John Paul II was not a "legitimate pope" because he was the pope who many of us lived our entire childhoods under and it really affected us when he finally passed away (I remember going to the memorial mass for him in 2005 and spending the entire mass in tears). When Pope Benedict XVI changed some of the responsorials during the mass (from "and also with you" to "and with your spirit") it felt weird for a while and I still don't understand why the change was made, but I deal with it because I accept that he was guided by the Holy Spirit.
I don't think that the Latin mass should even be stopped, but I understand what the Holy Father is trying to do here because I think he notices the same ugly current of people latching onto TLM in an attempt to breed secular political projects that I have noticed among my fellow millennials on Reddit and FB who I've had it out with in the past.
So again, if I've offended anyone I am truly sorry, because I did not mean to throw a hand grenade into the forum.
But I will give you credit that you probably were not aware of what you held, (or of it's destructive powers,) because you were most likely unaware of the damage such hand grenades have done in these forums before.
Please, for the sake of those previously wounded who remain behind, and in memory of those friends who were casualties, those great friends whom we have lost here, tread lightly and with charity.
I was late in getting the news, having been busy at my work all day and then a bit wiped.I imagine SSPX vocations directors are going to be very busy now.
EDIT: Sorry I'm livid right now and feeling really snarky.
I was late in getting the news, having been busy at my work all day and then a bit wiped.
This is a very unhappy moto proprio. A mistake by a man who has made many mistakes. He has the authority to make those mistakes. Still, he flubbed this one badly. It's going to do real harm.
I remember an incident from the coup I lived through where a young revolutionary who had never held a rifle before shot his foot off. This seems similar. Pope Francis doesn't know what's up and how much damage he can do but he's shooting anyway, at his feet and at ours. This is right up there with Amoris Laetitia and is now the 'capstone' of his achievements. Maybe he needs to name a few more cardinals. I think I'll let it rest with that and maybe have a nightmare. That would be better than this. And I'm not even a big Latin Mass guy, having been to only one in the past year.Seems like the magnum opus of his pontificate though, doesn't it? He's been laying the groundwork for this one for years. Why now? Some suspect that his health is declining and he could pass soon, based on his recent hospital stay and how Vatican media relations was spinning it.
Judging by how this seems to have united a lot of Catholics (against him) in a single day though, this might end up being a giant own-goal for him.
Frankly, I think that you are making the wrong comparison here.In English layman's terms, this means what exactly? That nobody is allowed to say the "Latin Mass" anymore?
If that is the case, why is that so horrible exactly? Like I said about the Latin Mass: It's not that I'm against it, I've never been to one but I'm skeptical about how "great" it supposedly is, because it's held up by the "tradcath" scene of 30-something converts who only became Catholic because they believe that the Catholic church fits well with their quasi-White nationalist political beliefs and they use it as a means to virtue signal to the rest of us who have gone to mass in English (or our native language) since birth. Seriously. The Novus Ordo was good enough for St. John Paul II and Mother Theresa, so it's good enough for me. There's absolutely nothing wrong with the Novus Ordo and I'm going to take the unpopular opinion of siding with Pope Francis on this one: rigidity for rigidity's sake is bad, especially when we're supposed to be bringing people into the church rather than making it an exclusive place that only the most dedicated people can belong to and I feel that the constant promotion of the Latin mass as being superior to the Novus Ordo (and the believers that have experienced Novus Ordo since birth) does that. It's not right and it is uppity and pharisaic.
Now sometimes I want to see a different form of mass, but not because I want to be able to signal to my secular political tribe how "pious" and "holy" I am that I go to a mass that I cannot understand in a dead language that nobody uses, but because there are different traditions that are just as valid as the Latin mass and Novus Ordo. If you want to see a different form of the mass, just go to an Eastern Catholic church! Ukr. Greek Catholic, Byzantine Catholic, Maronite, Armenian Catholic... these all exist in communion with Rome and shouldn't be viewed as inferior just because they don't use the Latin mass.
Again, I'm not down on the Latin mass. I've never been to one, but the notion that the Novus Ordo is somehow invalid or inferior to the Latin mass is ludicrous on it's face and ludicrous in it's spirit because of the kind of people that promote that ideology and their motives for doing so.
Unless you move in the future.It will continue where there is already significant demand for it, but dioceses like mine aren't going to be offering it, so the chances of my ever getting to go to one are slim to none now.
Basically what pope francis has done here is to pull another brick out of the wall, aka playing a game with gravity to see how many bricks he can pull out of a wall before it falls down.This is one of those rare occasions where I think Francis has the theological edge over Benedict. I will explain why here, where I am anonymous and can't get my feet shot off.(I gave a taste of my view in this post)
Note that this is a purely theological analysis. I haven't seen any pundits look at it from a theological vantage point. Everyone is talking about anecdotes, practical matters, the politics of the move, the timing, how the transition might work, etc. That's all important, but at the end of the day theology should carry the day.
First, the four relevant documents:
- Summorum Pontificum
- Letter Accompanying Summorum Pontificum
- Traditionis Custodes
- Letter Accompanying Traditionis Custodes
Now, both Benedict and Francis give a twofold justification for their Motu Proprio. The practical justification for both is the same: unity and concord. Let's just say that both Motu Propria did achieve unity and concord to some extent. The practical rationale in both cases is obvious. I am more interested in the theological rationale.
For Benedict the theological rationale for Summorum Pontificum was the antiquity of the Missale Romanum, which could not be abrogated even in principle. For Francis the theological rationale for Traditionis Custodes is the Second Vatican Council. Francis is also holding to the commonsensical position--which even hardened traditionalists accept and which Benedict must implicitly accept--that a single liturgical Rite cannot have two significantly different forms of worship.
The theological principles are both extremely well-established. The problem is that they contradict in this case. The Second Vatican Council disregarded the antiquity of the Missale Romanum, plain and simple. This was a tragic mistake, but we can't turn back history. This, then, is the central question: Did the Council have the authority to disregard the Rite's antiquity and to displace it with a new Rite? I think the answer is, "Yes, the Council had the authority to do this stupid thing." Especially on a Catholic ecclesiology, the Pope and the bishops, gathered together in a universal council, had the authority to make such a change, and that change must now be respected.
Note that if we read Francis in good faith, he is not innovating. Like Benedict he is a "Custodian of the Tradition." Francis is guarding the work of the Council and of Pope Paul VI. Benedict was guarding the principle of liturgical antiquity and the theological patrimony of the Rite. I don't see how we could reject the Council without reverting to a kind of hyper-Conciliarism where even the most fundamental acts of an Ecumenical Council could be rejected on the basis of a significant lack of 'reception' (and lack of reception is not currently in evidence, by the way). I can, on the other hand, see how we could overlook the theological patrimony in this case. I mean, we have essentially overlooked it for over 55 years now. There is no real justification for such a thing, but it did happen and now we must accept the Council rather than try to turn back history. There is no real option that I can see. Rejecting the Council is only possible for sedevacantists.
At this point I don't think Traditionis Custodes will ever be reversed. The best thing would be for traditionalists to carve out a place for themselves in the Novus Ordo, and to enrich that Rite with their sensibilities. Of course they can continue attending the TLM for a long time, but if they wait too long they will have no efficacy in the new Rite and will therefore have no ability to enrich it.
(To be honest, I'm not sure what the endgame was for Summorum Pontificum. I'm not sure Benedict knew either. Maybe traditionalists thought that the 1962 Missal would eventually become the ordinary form and Paul VI's Missal would be abrogated? In reality that was never going to happen, as even Benedict says in his letter.)
"It was good enough for Pope St. John Paul II and Mother Theresa,