The author is a 'former' Catholic retired magazine editor.
...I write this partly to rescue the old traditions from conservatives who
use them as a symbol in their resistance to any reform. And also for
those liberals who are just as adamant that concern about aesthetics is
somehow suspect. Yes, I know the liturgy is not fundamentally a drama or
theater but a ritual, a rite—it is worship, not spectacle. And I know
that the council’s reforms were an effort to engage Catholics as
participants in the Mass rather than as spectators closed off from each
other in private devotion. And I know that my youthful liturgical
experience at St. Mary’s was perhaps exceptional. The old rite was not
always beautifully or even reverently done. But I still find it tragic
that the unplowed and fallow fields of today’s Catholic youth no longer
soak up the nutrients of two thousand years, composted from the dead
language of the Romans and the poetic drama of the Greeks, with a heavy
leavening of Gothic romanticism. Thank God—I say it now without
irony—that Roman Catholic architecture, murals, sculpture, paintings,
music, and the theater of the traditional services were there to nourish
my soul, exactly as my father believed they would.
HT: Badger Catholic
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