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Edited on Sat Dec-18-04 12:46 PM by Stunster
When I started as an altar boy, the Mass was the Tridentine one:
Priest: Introibo ad altare Dei Server: Ad Deum qui laetificat juventutem meam
That brings back memories!
I do think there is a whole different spirituality associated with that rite compared to the post-Vatican II rite. In the old rite, many people did not bother to follow the Mass as such, but simply went to pray and say their devotions (rosaries, novenas to saints, etc) while Mass was being celebrated. So Mass tended to be a private, individualistic experience----you went to personally adore and pray to God---rather than a communal worship one. Also in those days, it was not common for everyone to receive Communion. My dad went to Mass every Sunday for decades, but took Communion only once a year. Among men especially, that was not uncommon. One had to be in a state of grace, and there was a strong link between confession and Communion. One also had to fast beforehand, and so there was a lot more reverence, and maybe even fear, associated with reception of the Eucharist.
Of course, the Eucharist grows out of the disciples' last meal with Jesus, and so one can ask, what kind of Eucharist is it where most people don't receive Christ under the appearances of bread and wine? He said, "Do this in memory of me"--and for centuries the Mass was celebrated very frequently without the reception of the sacrament by the people attending it. That doesn't seem to model that last meal in such a case. Also, how does private individual devotion during Mass model us collectively as Body of Christ?
Though I personally like the Tridentine Mass, I like it not for spiritual or theological reasons, but for aesthetic ones, and I recognize that the former sorts of reason ought to take priority over my personal aesthetics. That's no reason why one should not try to celebrate the new rite as beautifully as possible.
A couple of other brief observations: the new rite is actually much closer to the way the Mass was celebrated in the early Church. And Latin, at one time (in what is now a large portion of Italy) *was* the vernacular.
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