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Saturday, October 24, 2009

Bishops to vote on proposed changes to Mass wording in November

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The U.S. Bishops will be meeting next month in Baltimore (Nov 16-19) to discuss (among other things) the new translation of the words of the Mass that is recommended for approval. Stella Borealis had a post on the proposed changes and a link to the bishops' website in August.

Some bishops are opposed to the proposed changes:

Money Quote: “The vast majority of God’s people in the assembly are not familiar with words of the new missal like ‘ineffable,’ ‘consubstantial,’ ‘incarnate,’ ‘inviolate,’ ‘oblation,’ ‘ignominy,’ ‘precursor,’ ‘suffused’ and ‘unvanquished.’ The vocabulary is not readily understandable by the average Catholic,” Bishop Trautman said.
I would imagine that the average Catholic can't understand "ambo, narthex, homily, gathering place, irenic, hermeneutic, continuity, discontinuity" and all those other words foisted on us by Vatican II, either. Maybe it is time that bishops break with their recent practice and instruct Catholics in their faith and teach them the meaning of words that really mean something rather than words that are used to form consciences that permit just about anything that are bound to carry their users to Hell.

The policy of the Church of using "simple words" these past 40 years has lead to the destruction of religious orders, the reductions of seminaries, seminarians and diocesan priests, the loss of millions of Catholics to secularism and evangelistic sects, the wreckovation of church structures and the transformation of the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass into Sunday morning entertainment.

I'm all in favor of putting accuracy and rigor back into Jesus Christ's religion. The Mass is for worship, thanksgiving and petition; not for gathering together of the community for a chat and a psychological boost.


Bishop Donald W. Trautman of Erie, Pa., former chairman of the U.S. bishops’ liturgy committee, sharply criticized what he called the “slavishly literal” translation into English of the new Roman Missal from the original Latin.

He said the “sacred language” used by translators “tends to be elitist and remote from everyday speech and frequently not understandable” and could lead to a “pastoral disaster.”

“The vast majority of God’s people in the assembly are not familiar with words of the new missal like ‘ineffable,’ ‘consubstantial,’ ‘incarnate,’ ‘inviolate,’ ‘oblation,’ ‘ignominy,’ ‘precursor,’ ‘suffused’ and ‘unvanquished.’ The vocabulary is not readily understandable by the average Catholic,” Bishop Trautman said.

“The (Second Vatican Council’s) Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy stipulated vernacular language, not sacred language,” he added. “Did Jesus ever speak to the people of his day in words beyond their comprehension? Did Jesus ever use terms or expressions beyond his hearer’s understanding?”

Bishop Trautman made his remarks in an Oct. 22 lecture at The Catholic University of America in Washington, as part of the Monsignor Frederick R. McManus Lecture Series. Monsignor McManus, a liturgist, served as a peritus, or expert, during Vatican II.

The Roman Missal has not yet been given final approval for use in the United States. The U.S. bishops were scheduled to vote on four items pertaining to the missal at their November general meeting in Baltimore. It is expected that the Vatican Congregation for Divine Worship and the Sacraments would give its “recognitio,” or approval, at some point following the U.S. bishops’ vote.

Bishop Trautman took note of sentences in the new missal that he said run 66, 70 and 83 words, declaring that they were “unproclaimable” by the speaker and “incomprehensible” to the hearer.

“American Catholics have every right to expect the translation of the new missal to follow the rules for English grammar. The prefaces of the new missal, however, violate English syntax in a most egregious way,” Bishop Trautman said, citing some examples in his remarks.

“The translators have slavishly transposed a Lain ‘qui’ clause into English without respecting English sentence word order,” he added. The bishop also pointed out subordinate clauses from the missal that are “represented as a sentence,” and sentences lacking a subject and predicate.

Bishop Trautman also questioned the use of “I believe” in the retranslated version of the Nicene Creed, “even though the original and official Nicene Creed promulgated by the first Ecumenical Council of Nicaea in 325 said ‘we believe’ in both the Greek and Latin versions.

“Since this is a creedal prayer recited by the entire assembly in unison, the use of ‘we’ emphasized the unity of the assembly in praying this together as one body. Changing the plural form of ‘we’ to ‘I’ in the Nicene Creed goes against all ecumenical agreements regarding common prayer texts,” he said.

The bishop complained about the lack of “pastoral style” in the new translation. The current wording in Eucharistic Prayer 3 asks God to “welcome into your kingdom our departed brothers and sisters,” which he considered “inspiring, hope-filled, consoling, memorable.”

The new translation asks God to “give kind admittance to your kingdom,” which Bishop Trautman called “a dull lackluster expression which reminds one of a ticket-taker at the door. ... The first text reflects a pleading, passionate heart and the latter text a formality – cold and insipid.”

Bishop Trautman quoted the Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy, which said rites and texts “should radiate a noble simplicity. They should be short, clear, free from useless repetition. They should be within the people’s powers of comprehension, and normally should not require much explanation.”

“Why are these conciliar directives not implemented in the new missal?” he asked. They are “especially” relevant, Bishop Trautman added, to “the people of the third millennium: children, teenagers, adults, those with varying degrees of education, and those with English as a second language.”

He acknowledged that “there are those who disagree with the way the liturgical reform of Vatican II was interpreted and implemented” and who maintained that “a reform of the reform” was necessary to stem what they saw as “diminishing religiosity (and) declining Mass attendance” tied to the Mass texts.

But while “the Latin text is the official, authoritative text,” Bishop Trautman said, “the Latin text is not inspired. It is a human text, reflecting a certain mindset, theology and world view.”

As a consequence, “a major and radical change” and “a major pastoral, catechetical problem erupts” in the new missal during the words of consecration, which say that the blood of Christ “will be poured out for you and for many,” instead of “for all,” as is currently the practice.

“For whom did Jesus not die?” Bishop Trautman asked. “In 1974 the Holy See itself had approved our present words of institution (consecration) as an accurate, orthodox translation of the Latin phrase ‘pro multis,’“ he added. “It is a doctrine of our Catholic faith that Jesus died on the cross for all people.”

Bishop Trautman took issue with a 2006 letter to bishops by Nigerian Cardinal Francis Arinze, then head of the Vatican Congregation for Divine Worship and the Sacraments, which said that “salvation is not brought about in some mechanistic way, without one’s own willing or participation.”

“I respond that Jesus died even for those who reject his grace. He died for all,” Bishop Trautman said.

“Why do we now have a reversal? The Aramaic and Latin texts have not changed. The scriptural arguments have not changed, but the insistence on literal translation has changed.”

Bishop Trautman hearkened back to Monsignor McManus, whom he called “an apostle of the liturgical renewal.”

“If Monsignor McManus were with us today, he would call us to fidelity to the Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy and encourage us to produce a translation of the missal that is accurate, inspiring, referent, proclaimable, understandable, pastoral in every sense – a text that raises our minds and hearts to God.”
Catholic Review (Baltimore)


Father Z analyzes Bishop Trautman's speech at Catholic University:

Wherein Bp. Trautman runs down new translation and Fr. Z responds

9 comments:

einkleinerknabe said...

Wake me up in two years.

Vianney33 said...

But while “the Latin text is the official, authoritative text,” Bishop Trautman said, “the Latin text is not inspired. It is a human text, reflecting a certain mindset, theology and world view.”

This is the key text of the whole article. It tells us what this bishop's real worry is, the reform of the reform. It was the worldview of bishops like him plus priests, nuns, theologians and laity that caused the discontinuity of the past 40 years. I am happy about the new translations. It is not a bad thing to learn something new while at Mass. Especially if it makes the Truth more explicit.

Unknown said...

V33-

It is horrifying to see people in responsible positions say that the average person is not smart enough to learn anything new after sixth grade or whatever level they prefer to write at.

One wonders how many Catholics in the Diocese of Erie have studied the Catechism of the Catholic Church. Bishop Trautman has been there for over 19 years. Surely high school graduates under his leadership must have learned something.

He also has forbidden Father John Trigilio, who appears on EWTN's Web of Faith, a native of Erie, from ever saying Mass in that diocese. Fr. Trigilio is now a priest of the diocese of Harrisburg.

Rather than proposing dumbing down the language of the Church, he has written quite a few books explaining it, including the extremely popular "Catholicism for Dummies."

Vincenzo said...

"He also has forbidden Father John Trigilio, who appears on EWTN's Web of Faith, a native of Erie, from ever saying Mass in that diocese. Fr. Trigilio is now a priest of the diocese of Harrisburg."

Wow I didn't know that. I just looked it up and it appears that the restrictions were lifted in 2004.

Unknown said...

Thanks, Vincenzo. I hadn't heard about the restriction being lifted. I'll fix that.

Anonymous said...

"Catholicism for Dummies" is awesome!! It should be mandatory reading for all Catholics, especially for those going through RCIA. (RCIA is deficient in many ways.)

--William

Cathy_of_Alex said...

If the average Catholic is unable to grasp the meaning of "consubstantial", "ieffable" and the other words listed than we have more problems than just mere grammatical understanding. Those words are key to our theological and christological knowledge. Period.

I like these: “Did Jesus ever speak to the people of his day in words beyond their comprehension? (UH, YEAH) Did Jesus ever use terms or expressions beyond his hearer’s understanding?” (UH, YEAH)
I seem to recall the disciples, the apostles and the crowds frequently completely misunderstanding what Jesus was really saying. I like to think history has given us some greater clarity into what Jesus really meant. But, sometimes, I realize that many of us, including some who I think should know better, are as confused as ever.

However, rather than striving for greater understanding; the status quo of ignorance is, apparently, acceptable.

Unknown said...

Excellent point, Cathy.

Just recently the Bread of Life discourse was read in the Gospels at Mass over several Sundays, when Jesus told the vast crowds that "unless you munch on my flesh and drink my blood" [a paraphrase of the vernacular in the Aramaic language] you shall not have eternal life."

Very simple and understandable words. And Jews understood exactly what he meant [they thought] because drinking blood was specifically forbidden by the Torah, the Law. And many left Jesus, never to return, because of that misunderstanding.

Jesus did not call them back, saying "Let me explain."

The Bible is not always clear. That is why the Magisterium, the teaching ministry of the Church is as important as Scripture and Tradition in our Faith.

Our Bishops are to make it clear to us. Not simplify it and remove all meaning from the Faith.

Cathy_of_Alex said...

Ray: I agree. The Magisterium is very critical. It's too bad that its role and its importance are frequently misunderstood and maligned.

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