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Why did Pope Francis restrict the ancient Latin Mass?

fide

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The Novus Ordo is also just as mystical and essential to the Spirit of Truth. Latin was not revealed by God. It was the language of oppression. If anything made it sacred over the centuries it was its use in liturgy. But then any language can and should be used in liturgy. I think we need to be clear that this concern for "Tradition" related to Latin is Eurocentric tradition. It is not scriptural and it is missing the point of the Gospel. So focus on Latin makes it all about us, not God.

That being said, I do think there is still value in Eurocentric tradition for people of Eurocentric roots. Latin, the language of brutal imperialists slowly evolved to become ecclesial Latin. The "c" shifted from a harsh "k" sound to softer "Ch". "AE" shifted from "eye" to "aye", etc. What became sacred for us was the meaning of the words like "Agnus Dei", "Gloria Patri.." Latin or vernacular only convey the meaning. But for me, ecclesial Latin connects us to centuries of saints, history and teaching. I am just saying, let us be careful that we do not become superstitious about Latin. And certainly we cannot let it divide us.
The great advantage of ecclesial Latin over a "living" language is that the later is subject to the whims and fads and styles of never- ending generations, each separating itself from its parents with its own subcultural dialect. Examples: queer, straight, liberal, radical, man, woman, racist, phobic, .... Humanity simply cannot or will not leave language and words alone. And satan loves, and works well, in confusion.
 
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Akita Suggagaki

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A few other thoughts:

Hosea 6:6 For I desire goodness, not sacrifice,
Devotion to God, rather than burnt offerings.

Isaiah 1:11, 13: “To what purpose is the multitude of your sacrifices to me? I am fed up with the burnt offerings of rams and the fat of fat cattle; I have no delight in the blood of bullocks or lambs or goats… Bring me no more vain offerings…”).

As Isaiah added: “...when you make many prayers, I will not hear, [because] your hands are full of blood…” (1:16).

Micah 6:6-8“With what shall I come before the Lord? ...with burnt offerings or with calves of a year old? ...will the Lord be pleased with thousands of rams… rivers of oil (libations)? ...shall I give my first born for my transgression? ...God, has told you, man, what is good and what does God [really] ask of you? Only to do justly, offer covenantal love, and walk humbly with your God”.

Proverb 21:3To do righteousness and justice is more desirable to the LORD than sacrifice.

Psalm 50:23 The one who offers thanksgiving as his sacrifice glorifies me; to one who orders his way rightly I will show the salvation of God!”
 
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JimR-OCDS

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As I understand the controversy, it is most fundamentally the Tradition that is crucial. The language is important to the preservation of the (capital T) Sacred Tradition, thus it is not negligible. The Mass was primarily a Sacrifice - The Sacrifice made Present here, now, everywhere. The NO made the liturgy more about "us" - a change favorable, sadly, to many of us.
Sacred Tradition has to do with the meaning of words that are said, not the language used. Sacred Tradition (capital T) is
the real presence of Christ in the bread and wine used at Mass, not the language. The Mass can be celebrated in Chinese
as long as the words used are of the same meaning as the words Christ used.
Christ did not speak Latin, but Aramaic, so demanding that only Latin can be used would not keep Sacred Tradition in place
unless the words used mean the same as Christ did when he instituted the sacrament.
 
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fide

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A few other thoughts:

Hosea 6:6 For I desire goodness, not sacrifice,
Devotion to God, rather than burnt offerings.

Isaiah 1:11, 13: “To what purpose is the multitude of your sacrifices to me? I am fed up with the burnt offerings of rams and the fat of fat cattle; I have no delight in the blood of bullocks or lambs or goats… Bring me no more vain offerings…”).

As Isaiah added: “...when you make many prayers, I will not hear, [because] your hands are full of blood…” (1:16).

Micah 6:6-8“With what shall I come before the Lord? ...with burnt offerings or with calves of a year old? ...will the Lord be pleased with thousands of rams… rivers of oil (libations)? ...shall I give my first born for my transgression? ...God, has told you, man, what is good and what does God [really] ask of you? Only to do justly, offer covenantal love, and walk humbly with your God”.

Proverb 21:3To do righteousness and justice is more desirable to the LORD than sacrifice.

Psalm 50:23 The one who offers thanksgiving as his sacrifice glorifies me; to one who orders his way rightly I will show the salvation of God!”
Old Testament sacrifice pointed to the once-for-all perfect sacrifice of the Christ who is God the Son. It was God's will that this perfect sacrifice - which was and is also the perfection of love and truth - was to be commemorated and re-presented in a liturgy instituted by Christ before the actual inactment. This liturgy was to be continued in the Church in the Holy Eucharist, the Mass. This liturgy developed in the Church, in time, with the aim and intention to be faithful to the perfection of worship - or adoration - fitting for God, "in spirit and truth."
 
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fide

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Sacred Tradition has to do with the meaning of words that are said, not the language used. Sacred Tradition (capital T) is
the real presence of Christ in the bread and wine used at Mass, not the language. The Mass can be celebrated in Chinese
as long as the words used are of the same meaning as the words Christ used.
Christ did not speak Latin, but Aramaic, so demanding that only Latin can be used would not keep Sacred Tradition in place
unless the words used mean the same as Christ did when he instituted the sacrament.
Hello Jim - it's been a while ... I hope you are remaining firm in trust in our Lord, in these trying times. He is ever Lord of it all.

The Catechism speaks much of Tradition, in various ways. One brief statement says much:
CCC 83 The Tradition here in question comes from the apostles and hands on what they received from Jesus’ teaching and example and what they learned from the Holy Spirit.
If I may expound a bit: The apostolic Tradition, passed on first by the apostles, and over the ages, includes
  1. the teaching of Jesus: His words, spoken often in Aramaic as you said.
  2. the example of Jesus: what He did and how He did it. This was communicated in the Spirit to listeners, in many languages, and
  3. what they learned, and came to understand under the teaching and guidance of the Holy Spirit. This full and sacred "Word" of God was passed on in languages which soon became standardized - and retained for centuries - in Latin. The reasons for this decision were many.
Clearly without one standard "official" language, reason predicts we will fall into countless local languages around the world, resulting in the loss of unity so precious to Christ and His Apostles, in all the four pillars of the Faith.

Paul wrote:
Eph 4:1 I therefore, a prisoner for the Lord, beg you to lead a life worthy of the calling to which you have been called,
Eph 4:2 with all lowliness and meekness, with patience, forbearing one another in love,
Eph 4:3 eager to maintain the unity of the Spirit in the bond of peace.
Eph 4:4 There is one body and one Spirit, just as you were called to the one hope that belongs to your call,
Eph 4:5 one Lord, one faith, one baptism,
Eph 4:6 one God and Father of us all, who is above all and through all and in all.
 
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JimR-OCDS

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Hello Jim - it's been a while ... I hope you are remaining firm in trust in our Lord, in these trying times. He is ever Lord of it all.

The Catechism speaks much of Tradition, in various ways. One brief statement says much:

If I may expound a bit: The apostolic Tradition, passed on first by the apostles, and over the ages, includes
  1. the teaching of Jesus: His words, spoken often in Aramaic as you said.
  2. the example of Jesus: what He did and how He did it. This was communicated in the Spirit to listeners, in many languages, and
  3. what they learned, and came to understand under the teaching and guidance of the Holy Spirit. This full and sacred "Word" of God was passed on in languages which soon became standardized - and retained for centuries - in Latin. The reasons for this decision were many.
Clearly without one standard "official" language, reason predicts we will fall into countless local languages around the world, resulting in the loss of unity so precious to Christ and His Apostles, in all the four pillars of the Faith.

Paul wrote:
Hello and of course, I'm closer to the Lord than ever before.

Latin wasn't used until the 4th Centuries, and it had to do with the fact that Latin was the common language of Europe.
For a long time after until the 8th century (I believe) the liturgy in Latin was referred to as the European Liturgy.

The Latin Mass had its beauty, but left many Catholics outside active participation in the Mass.

During St Teresa of Avila's time in the 1500's in Spain, the Church forbade Scripture from being printed in
anything by Latin. This meant that even St Teresa and her nuns could not read Sacred Scripture. St John of the
Cross and other priest could because they were trained to be fluent in Latin.

Keeping Scripture and the Mass in Latin, only helps to provide ignorance to the average Catholic.
This is what is done in Islam as the Koran in anything, but Arabic is prohibited.

The Mass did evolve, and few know the history of how it evolved. The former spiritual assistant
to the OCDS community I belong to, gave a series of talks on the history of the Mass. He has
a PHD in Liturgy and Spirituality which he got in Rome.

The bottom line here is that Pope Francis did not prohibit the TLM, but put restrictions in that the authority
was given back to the bishops on deciding when and where the TLM could be celebrated. My dioceses as
well as many others in the US, still have the TLM, as the bishops in those dioceses approve and have submitted
to Rome for approval which I haven't seen denied yet.
 
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Cosmic Charlie

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The Bishops had difficulty in implementing the TLM because there aren't enough priest trained and willing to celebrate
the TLM in the dioceses.
Not surprising.
Also, having one TLM in a parish upsets the entire parish, as I witnessed it on my old parish. Few people from the
parish attended the TLM. Mostly, people from outside the parish and even the dioceses attended and the parking
was a mess and of course the people who traveled far for the TLM, wanted refreshments after the Mass.
I've seen this as well. TLM'ers, God love them, tend to be a little entitled. Also, they think they should have some influence over the parish, which only annoys the locals.
So, the pastor tried to schedule the TLM for 1 PM on Sundays, but again that interfered other parish activities.
Not to mention football.
Theproblem was solved when the priest who celebrated the TLM was defrocked and put in prison for embezzlement.
There is no longer a TLM at that parish.
THAT took an unexpected turn there, Jim.
 
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