Friday, December 15, 2006
Why the Tridentine Mass?
via A Catholic Life
From Fish Eaters Discussion Forum:
Introibo ad altare Dei — “I will go unto the altar of God.” So begins the holy
sacrifice of the Mass, as it has been celebrated in the Roman rite of the Church
for well over a millennium. Contrary to the sincere wishes of the liturgical
apparatus that has visited havoc upon orthodox Catholics for the past forty
years, the traditional Latin liturgy still survives. Indeed, not only does it
survive, but it is attracting new followers and exciting a profound piety in
Catholics of all ages — many of whom, like myself, were born over a decade after
the imposition of the new liturgy. With the recognition by many concerned
Catholics that the lex orandi of the modern liturgy is not an adequate
expression of the Church’s lex credendi, there has been concerted effort in
recent years to address the poverty of Catholic liturgical life today. (The
“reform of the reform” solution proposed by Joseph Cardinal Ratzinger and Fr.
Joseph Fessio immediately comes to mind.) While many orthodox Catholics are
directing their attention to salvaging the Novus Ordo Missae introduced by Pope
Paul VI in 1969, many others are directing their energies toward the restoration
— or at least the revival — of the traditional Latin Mass.
Labels: Traditionalism
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