True Tradition vs. False Tradition

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  • Опубликовано: 9 сен 2024
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    brianholdswort... or
    brianholdswort...
    When I first joined the Catholic Church, I heard a homily given by one of the more prominent priests in my Archdiocese which was probably fairly formative for me because it’s remained with me and, evidently still occurs to me today - in which he took the opportunity at one point to fire some shots at “Traditionalists”.
    According to this priest, the older some belief or custom is, the more traditional it is. For him, the measure of your commitment to tradition was based on how remote your practices are from the contemporary age - how far back they go in time.
    And since some practices were older than the Latin mass, it wasn't all that traditional and traditionalists should stop pretending to be something they are not.
    Music written and generously provided by Paul Jernberg. Find out more about his work as a composer here: pauljernberg.com
    Podcast Version: brianholdswort...

Комментарии • 521

  • @diegoforever1940
    @diegoforever1940 Месяц назад +151

    “Tradition is not the worshipping of ashes, but the preservation of fire.” -Arthur Kwon Lee

    • @SiccazHD
      @SiccazHD Месяц назад +4

      That is not who said it😭😭😭😭😭😭

    • @SiccazHD
      @SiccazHD Месяц назад +5

      Lættis aside, it was Gustav Mahler

    • @JonCrs10
      @JonCrs10 29 дней назад

      The Longest Johns' original song Ashes?

    • @lorddevonshire6382
      @lorddevonshire6382 29 дней назад

      Also attributed to Jean Jaures and Thomas More...

    • @Jim-nb3lq
      @Jim-nb3lq 28 дней назад +1

      Like so many quotations, we don't always have access to the original author. But so what, and why quibble about it if it's unproveable? The point is, is that the quotation itself is so awesome. Thanks so very much for posting that for us diegoforever1940.

  • @lonniestoute8762
    @lonniestoute8762 29 дней назад +76

    Let us never think the Catholic Church is a Democracy.

    • @ainsbaroz1905
      @ainsbaroz1905 28 дней назад +11

      True - it is hierarchical.

    • @BillyJoeBob-hd9fm
      @BillyJoeBob-hd9fm 26 дней назад +3

      ST. TERESA OF LISIEUX: “How great a joy it is to know that God makes allowances for our weaknesses and understands perfectly the frailty of our humanity. God our Father loves us always, absolutely, unfailingly, eternally.”

    • @LuisRamirez-vv4dk
      @LuisRamirez-vv4dk 12 дней назад

      That would mean respecting Catholic authority even the current one. Ths channel and other former protestants like him don't.

  • @soniamartin2007
    @soniamartin2007 23 дня назад +8

    J.R.R. Tolkien, confronted by having the Mass of Ages banned overnight and replaced by the New Mass (that claimed a return to origins) wrote in a letter, 'I do not understand the mania that the early Church is superior to the Church today because I don't understand why a sapling is superior to the full-grown tree; and in any case, if the sapling is superior to the full-grown tree, you don't get back the purity of the sapling by cutting down the tree. You simply kill the tree.' Any honest witness to the 'fruits' of the V2 Mass must acknowledge that it is, if not able to kill, wounds the 2000 year old holy and wise tree/Mystical Body of Christ. G.K. Chesterton wrote that, 'Tradition is the proxy of the dead and the enfranchisement of the unborn.' Through Holy Tradition the Holy Ghost saves each generation from being slaves of the zeitgeist that not only ignores but adopts the heretical and schismatic doctrines and practices that the 2000 year old tree has prudently and perfectly (the gates of hell shall not prevail) stood against. Kyrie eleison.

  • @andycopeland7051
    @andycopeland7051 Месяц назад +29

    Tradition is not deference given to the very old; tradition is preference for the eternal.

  • @jonathanstensberg
    @jonathanstensberg 29 дней назад +15

    Tradition is to be catholic: neither the just newest nor just the oldest, but the whole.

    • @duathellto1460
      @duathellto1460 28 дней назад +2

      "Nothing removed, nothing added, nothing altered!"

  • @petergreen8477
    @petergreen8477 Месяц назад +43

    The Anglican liturgist, George Guiver, said WTTE, “Jesus said, ‘Do this in remembrance of me’ - but we also do it remembering those who have also remembered”. The Mass brings us into communion with the whole Church - past as well as present - the whole body of Christ.

    • @robertd9965
      @robertd9965 Месяц назад

      Where does it say that in the Bible?
      Catholic mass has no backing in the Bible, none whatsoever.

    • @simonslater9024
      @simonslater9024 Месяц назад +4

      He belonged to the Anglican CULT. There’s ONLY ONE CHURCH the holy Catholic Church which is Jesus’s mystical body on earth.

    • @robertd9965
      @robertd9965 29 дней назад

      @@simonslater9024 You mean the one that has consistently violated Scripture, gone against Jesus's teachings, and made a ton of stuff up? Sure.

    • @simonslater9024
      @simonslater9024 29 дней назад

      @@robertd9965leave your man made protestant CULT or lose your immortal soul. The Bible a Catholic book condemns you your heretical and blasphemous comment.

    • @duathellto1460
      @duathellto1460 28 дней назад +4

      @@simonslater9024 He is right about this one though. That is why the Catholic Church has always either built her altars on the tombs of Saints and martyrs, or put their relics in the altar. It is why the communion of Saints show up in Revelation, and why we believe they are present at Mass. Not at Anglican services, but at Catholic Masses/Divine Liturgies.

  • @lucidlocomotive2014
    @lucidlocomotive2014 Месяц назад +78

    This is so annoying! I hear this all the time. These people are confusing tradition with antiquity. Something being older does not make it more traditional. Tradition is what has been passed down the longest!

    • @jgnogueira
      @jgnogueira Месяц назад +1

      Exactly lol, by that logic we should just go back to the Neo paganism of the Vikings and Germanic tribes, tradition is just the pillars of what makes a civilization advance.

    • @bloodspatteredguitar
      @bloodspatteredguitar Месяц назад +5

      And Pius XII already condemned it. Yet due to wishing to return to something they have not themselves received, Pius' warning against antiquarianism has become yet another stick to beat traditionalists with.

    • @Hope_Boat
      @Hope_Boat Месяц назад +5

      Orthodox here. It's not a love for antiquity that makes us preserve the tradition. It's our will to be in communion with the Church not only throug space but also through time.
      We believe in eternal life. The Saints are still part of the Church today.
      The Church is not a temporal (secular) institution.
      Kyrie eleison ☦️

    • @EasternRomeOrthodoxy
      @EasternRomeOrthodoxy Месяц назад

      No, we are not, it is you! You think we care about old forms of democracy - we reject democracy in all it's forms, we are consistent. But you liberals want to justify the pagan western way of life & this filthy "freedom of speech". Guess what? Democracy is *incompatible* with Christianity!!

    • @henryslatt9041
      @henryslatt9041 29 дней назад +2

      You contradicted yourself when you said “something being older does not make it more traditional. Tradition is what has been passed down the longest”

  • @jonthorson3997
    @jonthorson3997 Месяц назад +31

    Ok. But democracy is cringe and monarchy is based

    • @mrman5066
      @mrman5066 28 дней назад +3

      Democracy is cringe, monarchy is cringe, republicanism is based.

    • @APR310
      @APR310 24 дня назад

      No democracy, monarchy, and republicanisn is cringe
      Dictatorship is based

    • @APR310
      @APR310 24 дня назад

      *I am just a joking btw if you cant tell*

    • @InhabitantOfOddworld
      @InhabitantOfOddworld 19 дней назад +5

      ​@@mrman5066
      Lmao, no it isn't
      'murican moment right there

    • @christophersnedeker
      @christophersnedeker 13 дней назад

      "I love monarchy" *monarch he doesn't like takes power* wait not like that.

  • @jgnogueira
    @jgnogueira Месяц назад +33

    Brian I am from Brazil and I must say you are the only Catholic traditionalist from the Anglo sphere I still listen to, our brothers from the Anglo sphere have some great work but I fear there is a huge temptation of Americanizing the gospel, I am glad you are doing a fantastic job at recognizing the true teachings of the church without falling for some Neo paganism tricks.

    • @BrianHoldsworth
      @BrianHoldsworth  Месяц назад +18

      Yes, that is a difficulty for Americans. They have a strong sense of identity and patriotism that the two often come in conflict. Luckily, I'm not American.

    • @polemeros
      @polemeros Месяц назад +3

      @@BrianHoldsworth We feel the same way about you. Given the disastrous state of Canada, no reason to feel superior.

    • @jgnogueira
      @jgnogueira Месяц назад +1

      @@polemeros well i was reffering to the anglo sphere as a whole on my comment lol, the current nationalism in The uk is valid, but the catholic side is doing some dangerously flirting with paganism, Except for Irland though, Irland catholicism is heading the right path.

    • @jesuslovesaves2682
      @jesuslovesaves2682 Месяц назад +1

      @@jgnogueira What precisely gives you knowledge of the "Anglo sphere?"

    • @GustavoFerreira56
      @GustavoFerreira56 Месяц назад

      @jgnogueira as a fellow Brazilian who lives in Canada, as Brian, I totally understand you. However after 15 yeas living here sometimes I feel the same about the brazilian channels... And it fair to be that way.
      When the government in Brazil try to sneak abortion all channels will start talking about. From Padre Paulo, to IBP, to Centro Don Bosco. (Brasil paralelo is a political channel)
      Same in the USA, Marshall, Return to Tradition, Pints with aquinas will all in a way or another comment.
      e. g. Return to tradition focus more in general Chuck news but brings some USA specifics. However it always has something interesting on the side. He is finishing up reading Pascendi.
      Some more inflammatory than others...
      Yes, Brian usually stays away from all of this and that's great!
      Another one that stays out of it is Ferris from How to be Christian. Super funny guy. He is catholic BTW. Watch one video and you understand the name of the channel.
      What are you watching down south?

  • @reinedire7872
    @reinedire7872 Месяц назад +159

    Claiming that others feel superior due to their attendance of a certain mass seems rather uncharitable and presumptuous on the part of that priest if you ask me. And I'm an n.o. attendee.

    • @DakkogiRauru23
      @DakkogiRauru23 Месяц назад +34

      Unfortunately that’s what the SSPX are like.

    • @alphaomega238
      @alphaomega238 Месяц назад +54

      Speaking for myself as TLM attendee who attended the NO most of my life, it's not that the average TLM attendee feels superior (I certainly don't), it is that the TLM liturgy itself is superior by far in so many respects. It connects us to the living tradition of Catholic liturgical worship, which developed organically over the centuries, whereas the NO liturgy was an artificial construct of a committee of theological "experts" in the 1960s, as Pope Benedict so eloquently described.

    • @pop6997
      @pop6997 Месяц назад +9

      ​@@alphaomega238 You claim one thing then defend another! If folk can agree that Liturgy for the sake of it is almost like a rock band for the sake of it....then perhaps the adult conversation on liturgy can start...instead of talking past 'Jesus'.
      Preserving beauty & tradition, but MOST importantly igniting the Holy Spirit & a true encounter with the person of Jesus - and by extension fearlessly being Christ to others? Certainly not being a tiny 'tut tutting' few who think without the wider beauty of the Church & dare I say 'diversity' in the proper sense, is an enemy. The wider body of Christ is where you get to stretch...and breath.

    • @kinsmarts2217
      @kinsmarts2217 Месяц назад

      Where I live mos of the TLM people feel superior, criticising the NO and the ways of the church while doing nothing to actually solve any problems, or converting people in any way, they just brood and moan, waiting for the world to end, being completely defeatists.

    • @aloyalcatholic5785
      @aloyalcatholic5785 Месяц назад +16

      ​@@DakkogiRauru23sspx masses are the best ones I've attended. Best observance of reverance

  • @tonygibson6436
    @tonygibson6436 27 дней назад +6

    People become 'traditionalists' when they see where the modern world is headed and know that it is in serious error. They understand that at some critical point in the past something happened that changed our society from what was once moral, truthful and faithful in keeping us in benevolent prosperity; and they therefore pine to go back to that earlier time and what preceded it to pick up on its mores & traditions, and to bring them to life again for the current generation and for those generations that follow.

  • @davidh1146
    @davidh1146 Месяц назад +25

    Brian, your videos are some of the most thoughtful and insightful of the Catholic RUclips space. Thank you, and I will support your endeavors in any way I can. Every video you upload forces me to think deeply about an issue, and I appreciate the fact that you don't optimize your videos for "engagement" AKA "conflict porn".

    • @BrianHoldsworth
      @BrianHoldsworth  Месяц назад +10

      That's a very kind sentiment. It's a joy to know that it has this effect for some viewers.

  • @antholianmartyr4860
    @antholianmartyr4860 Месяц назад +15

    Tradition, from "tradere" - to transmit, to hand over, or to give for safekeeping

    • @mrman5066
      @mrman5066 28 дней назад +1

      Latin is sigma based

  • @Deogratias21
    @Deogratias21 Месяц назад +22

    I like how you put it, Holdsworth: The Nouvelle Theologie went back and admitted only what they wanted from Tradition at the table.

  • @Braingrandchild
    @Braingrandchild 26 дней назад +2

    Mr Holdsworths children have a great teacher in him.

  • @ccl754
    @ccl754 26 дней назад +2

    Excellent short discussion on Tradition. Yes, I remember the 3 legged stool of: Tradition, Scripture & Magisterium. It’s part of the traditional catechism…the never old Baltimore Catechism. I also appreciate your speaking of the passing of the faith through our fathers. Strong societies preserve what is good and learn from their bad; not by self-destruction and re-invention. There is “nothing new under the sun”. -Benedicamos Domino🙏😇

  • @nicholassmith3899
    @nicholassmith3899 22 дня назад +2

    The vast majority of U.S. Catholics haven't been properly catechized for about 60 years. Be patient with people and meet them where they are with joy and kindness. I do think that a reverent NO or TLM in a gorgeous old ornate church should be the norm, but, most Catholics haven't even been exposed to that. Most of the people that want the clown show of the 80s and 90s are dead or dying. People that are about 35 - 75 have no idea, most of this age group think that Catholicism is just a denomination of Christianity. A little catechesis, patience, and conversation go a long way.

  • @MajorMustang1117
    @MajorMustang1117 Месяц назад +17

    Yeah... im not Catholic but I respect the "trads" way more.

    • @tralarimtamtum4899
      @tralarimtamtum4899 Месяц назад +14

      "trad" - this is simply how an ordinary Catholic can be described for the last 19 centuries of the Church

  • @blueknight5754
    @blueknight5754 Месяц назад +33

    Why is Taylor Marshal in your thumbnail?

    • @henryslatt9041
      @henryslatt9041 29 дней назад +20

      Because it’s clickbait

    • @DaeguDown
      @DaeguDown 29 дней назад +8

      "That's bait." - Tom Hardy.gif

    • @Thunderjerky
      @Thunderjerky 29 дней назад +14

      Cause he needs money and Marshall brings in the views

    • @blueknight5754
      @blueknight5754 29 дней назад +7

      I appreciate it but I was hoping that Brian would answer. 😂

    • @generic_account2138
      @generic_account2138 27 дней назад +1

      He's a relativey well known, contemporary example of someone handing down what's been given?
      Seems simple enough (to me). And I'm not a SuperFan of his either.

  • @penanceixx447
    @penanceixx447 14 дней назад

    I learn so much from you! That Chesterson quote was amazing, especially in the context of Catholicism. Not all the dead are gone with the Communion of Saints, yet we disregard their voices. God bless you! ♥️🙏

  • @batboy49
    @batboy49 Месяц назад +20

    Brian, you really nailed it. Tradition is what has "been handed down". Part of that is the oldest, but all legitimate understandings are actually Catholic.Augustine was as Catholic as Thomas Aquinas was and Augustine was also just as Catholic as Peter. We cannot consider ourselves Catholic unless we are as comfortable with Thomas Aquinas as we are with Peter.

    • @JesusRulez-l3j
      @JesusRulez-l3j Месяц назад +1

      ST. THOMAS AQUINAS: “Because of the diverse conditions of humans, it happens that some acts are virtuous to some people, as appropriate and suitable to them, while the same acts are immoral for others, as inappropriate to them.”

    • @JesusRulez-l3j
      @JesusRulez-l3j Месяц назад +2

      ST. THOMAS AQUINAS: “A penitent’s sins are forgiven, not when the priest says the sacramental words of absolution over him or her, nor when the penitent completes the assigned penance, but the instant the penitent is truly sorry for his or her sins.”

    • @Hope_Boat
      @Hope_Boat Месяц назад

      'Catholic' means 'Greeks not welcome'.
      I don't think saint Peter was 'Catholic' neither was saint Augustin.
      Aquinas was indeed anti-greek. Also he justified burning people alive.
      Saint Peter and saint Augustin were orthodox.
      Return to the orthodox faith.
      Kyrie eleison ☦️

  • @BensWorkshop
    @BensWorkshop Месяц назад +8

    I am not sure what sort of tradition we should be going for. I watch quite a few conversion stories of Protestants and it seems to me that they key issue is reverence. That is what blows them away. Regardless of the language of the mass, that is what we should be aiming for and as Michael Lofton points out, that is available in both the LTM and NO masses.

    • @lorddevonshire6382
      @lorddevonshire6382 29 дней назад +1

      I wish.

    • @BensWorkshop
      @BensWorkshop 29 дней назад

      @@lorddevonshire6382 It is available. Whether the mass you go to does it or not.

    • @nathanvangoor4979
      @nathanvangoor4979 28 дней назад

      Michael Lofton is just one of _many_ who claim that; among those he's just particularly controversial, which might mean you're trying to annoy people.

    • @BensWorkshop
      @BensWorkshop 28 дней назад

      @@nathanvangoor4979 Evil be unto him who evil thinks.

    • @nathanvangoor4979
      @nathanvangoor4979 28 дней назад

      @@BensWorkshop I don't understand what you mean by that

  • @amytheoptimist
    @amytheoptimist 28 дней назад +3

    Hey Brian. Thanks for always posting consistently.
    Is it okay to say I didn't understand much of what you said? It felt like a lot of big words strung together. My brain just isn't braining enough to get what you were talking about lol.
    I appreciate the quality and content of your videos though. I can tell they are truly heartfelt expressions of your deep love for God and the Church.
    If I struggled to understand what you said and you were speaking English, imagine people who have no clue what is happening in the Latin Mass.
    I think the Catholic Church as a whole is traditional, as you have said.
    The Latin Mass, Novus Ordo and any other form of Mass provided the Eucharist is present, is valid.
    Every other debate is a matter of preference.
    Either way, wanted to say thank you for being out here posting Catholic content. Your work is deeply appreciated and you are in our prayers.

  • @khatack
    @khatack Месяц назад +14

    I like that you use the word "description" rather than "definition". One reason people are so clueless and lost these days is that they cannot think outside defined language, they can't think in concepts and real things and have lost the understanding that language is indeed a tool to DESCRIBING reality, NOT to defining it.

  • @PabloVelarde1
    @PabloVelarde1 29 дней назад +14

    I finally went to a Latin Mass recently and yes, being a Catholic raised in the Novus Ordo, I do find TLM superior due to this fact: it is centered around God and treats the Eucharist as a precious item in every step of the liturgy. The NO, in comparison, is Man-Centered and treats the Eucharist as a token, not the real presence.

  • @MystoRobot
    @MystoRobot 25 дней назад +3

    The Latin Mass's liturgy brings about real piety and reverence towards God _(or at least provides the best opportunity to put that piety in practice, imo, compared to what is currently see in the Novus-Ordo)._ Once you know how the current N-O liturgy have been tempered with by suspected masons who actively sought to undermine the faith, you tend to seek what came before the reform, and TLM is the best answer to that.

    • @robertcoogan6421
      @robertcoogan6421 21 день назад

      The Paul VI Mass is in no way lacking in reverence or beauty. And the extended collection of votive masses, prefaces and Euchsristic Prayers give a richness that the sparseness of the Tridentine liturgy could never match. I suggest you put the two misals side by side and compare them. And, of course, no one would say that the old lectionary should be used. You can say the Paul VI mass in Latin if yoy want. To say that the mumbled, 20 minute weekday mass before the reforms had digniry, well one doesn't take the best of one mass and compare it to the mediocrity of the other. Both masses have been guilty of mediocre celebrations. A solemn Tridentine high mass where the celebrant rushes through the prayers and then sits down bored while the choir continues to sing was not very inspiring. In the Tridentine rite, what the choir did was not an integral part of the mass. The celebrant saying the gloria was the real prayer, not the sung version. When the priest finished, he would frequently sit down, and the congregation with him. In the Paul VI mass, the sung parts are the real parts, not decorations.

    • @robertcoogan6421
      @robertcoogan6421 21 день назад

      Somebody lied to you if they said Masons had a part in the liturgical reform.

    • @MystoRobot
      @MystoRobot 21 день назад

      @@robertcoogan6421 I think your reality looks a lot better than the one we really live in, pal.

  • @paulquist2475
    @paulquist2475 29 дней назад +2

    Brian, that was one of your best! Thank you!

  • @kylie5741
    @kylie5741 Месяц назад +6

    Thanks for sharing your perspective, God bless

  • @saetainlatin
    @saetainlatin Месяц назад +43

    The documentary "Mass of the ages 2" explains it well, tradition developed organically like a tree, the _nouve theologie_ came and chopped that tree to make it "more appealing" to modern man.

    • @von_nobody
      @von_nobody Месяц назад +1

      "We do not cherish things based on how old they are but how long they are in use"

    • @DavGre
      @DavGre Месяц назад +4

      More like blowtorched the limbs, cut the leaves, and dug up many of the roots, and blame tradition for the branches dying off

    • @nomassgoer8350
      @nomassgoer8350 Месяц назад +4

      Are you talking about the “documentary” that openly bases itself on the misquote about not making the Novus Ordo offensive to protestants? Because that line was literally about one prayer in the Easter vigil. Then it said a lot left the Catholic Church for evangelical denominations. But why would they? Why would someone leave the Church if they knew that is where Jesus is? Only if they didn’t understand their faith does this make sense.

  • @herardo04
    @herardo04 Месяц назад +3

    I have to admit that the thumbnail made me watch this video. I was wondering what Taylor Marshall, Pope John Paul II, Chesterton, etc. had in common 😂
    But in all seriousness, thank you for taking on this topic. Chesterton's quote on Tradition was spot on 🙏🏼

    • @EpoRose1
      @EpoRose1 Месяц назад

      Wasn’t the thumbnail yesterday Aquinas and Fr James Martin? Or am I imagining things?

    • @andrewbartel12
      @andrewbartel12 29 дней назад

      No, you’re not, it was Fr. James Martin.

  • @lorddevonshire6382
    @lorddevonshire6382 29 дней назад +2

    Pius XII condemned 'an exaggerated and senseless archaeologism' in liturgical matters in his encyclical 'Mediator Dei' (1947). Archaeologism is, of course, the antithesis of traditionalism.
    Good video, Brian.

  • @Hillcountry_Catholic
    @Hillcountry_Catholic Месяц назад +11

    We don’t like it because it’s oldest. We like it because it is the mass of ages and the liturgy is superior. We do t think we as attendees are superior. Stop lying about us and gaslighting us. You’re supposed to be up r brothers and sisters in Christ.

  • @plumfessor
    @plumfessor 22 дня назад +1

    Very lucid clarification. Thank you!

  • @hamothemagnif8529
    @hamothemagnif8529 12 дней назад

    The problem is rooting out corrupted traditions that are so ubiquitous people don’t even question them. Especially those that started mid-20th century.

  • @Hazzard483
    @Hazzard483 Месяц назад +13

    Traditionalism is more than just holding on to things which are ancient they're holding on to things which are reverent the reason so many young men and women are going to the traditional Latin mass is because of the reverence of the missile compared to the liturgical abuses of the missile promulgated in 1962 by his Holiness Saint Paul VI until the novus ordo missile is properly instituted there will be a call to that which is more reverent to the sacrifice of the mass which would be the tlm traditionalism isn't about what's more ancient it's about what's more reverent and more faithful to Mother Church

    • @duathellto1460
      @duathellto1460 Месяц назад +2

      The other reasons so many young people go to the Latin Mass is because we have missiles, and sometimes canons, and while some people think this is thurible and get all incensed and exaspergilliumed, we simply take it as a sign that the battle is the Lord's.
      I apologize to you and every sane person here. I should not hit reply, but clearly I have. Mea culpa.

    • @hsram1131
      @hsram1131 27 дней назад

      @@duathellto1460 Ha! underrated comment right here

  • @ccl754
    @ccl754 26 дней назад +1

    Excellent short discussion on Tradition. Yes, I remember the 3 legged stool of: Tradition, Scripture & Magisterium. It’s part of the traditional catechism…the never old Baltimore Catechism. +Benedicamos Domino🙏😇

  • @MrJking1962
    @MrJking1962 27 дней назад +1

    The Catholic Church is Traditional. Every Catholic should be Traditional. True Traditional Catholics simply reject Modernist ideas introduced to the Faithful which includes the NO Mass. I prefer the identity of a Devout Catholic. A devout Catholic will not adhere to this Mass or other Modernist ideas.

  • @andrewangelopacheco9960
    @andrewangelopacheco9960 29 дней назад +2

    I'm a Traditionalist in the sense that I hold to the living church before Vatican ll.

    • @sebastiankaczmarek635
      @sebastiankaczmarek635 27 дней назад

      So a schismatic? In which way are you any better than orthodox?

  • @id9653
    @id9653 Месяц назад +7

    Greek isn't more traditional than Latin.
    The starting point of tradition is an apostle and the Latin Roman rite comes from St. Peter and St. Paul.
    It comes from the very beginning.

    • @JonCrs10
      @JonCrs10 29 дней назад

      Hebrew is more traditional than both. Then again, all three languages were represented on the Cross

    • @Tarantula-hawk
      @Tarantula-hawk 28 дней назад +1

      ​@@JonCrs10I read somewhere liturgy in Rome was also in Greek up until a time. But I am not sure. I don't remember it well

  • @decluesviews2740
    @decluesviews2740 Месяц назад +14

    I’m disappointed with this video. It appears that Brian does not understand the quite varied views within the unhelpful term “Nouvelle Théologie,” and-even worse-misrepresents the best thinkers labeled (against their will) with that appellation: the ressourcement crowd. They weren’t against the high scholastics at all. One of de Lubac’s major contributions was a multivolume work on medieval exegesis (to recover it in the face of liberal progressive scholarship). Even his work on nature & grace intended a correction to misunderstandings of Thomas’s thought. Ratzinger worked deeply on St. Bonaventure. They took issue with NEO-Scholasticism that focused so heavily on one strand of one commentatorial tradition of one Scholastic and lost direct contact with the study of Sacred Scripture and the Fathers in favor of more recent commentators almost exclusively. And it wasn’t the ressourcement/nouvelle guys who were rejecting Scotus: it was the neo-Thomists! The ressourcement movement was in favor of studying more scholastics. It’s quite ironic that at the end he says its wrong to take the worst examples of a group and act like they are representative of the whole. It was the ressourcement group that was advocating for the whole tradition and not only one subset to have a voice, even if the latter also has a right to a voice.

    • @gregoryross1693
      @gregoryross1693 Месяц назад +7

      Fantastic comment- I was thinking about this when he said nouvelle theologie - it's just too broad a brush.

    • @decluesviews2740
      @decluesviews2740 Месяц назад +6

      @@gregoryross1693 Yeah and to conflate them with antiquarianism is just absurd.

    • @thelogosproject7
      @thelogosproject7 Месяц назад +7

      You’ve taken the words right out of my mouth. I know Brian is a good guy, but dang, this video is really disappointing.

    • @halleylujah247
      @halleylujah247 Месяц назад +5

      Excellent response, perhaps Brian would discuss this with you Dr DeClue and discover a broader and true understanding.

    • @tombretislow7091
      @tombretislow7091 29 дней назад +1

      I suppose you would also sneer at Garrigou-Lagrange's understanding of the “Nouvelle Théologie” as well.

  • @DavidLarson100
    @DavidLarson100 Месяц назад +5

    That's really odd that your first homily you heard was bashing the Latin Mass... I've never heard it brought up in all my years of being Catholic. It's a very small minority of Masses (probably a fraction of 1%), and those few Masses are now being limited by the hierarchy, mostly because a lot of "trads" spend their time bashing instead of building the Church so they're seen as an enemy by some bishops. The lay people though probably are not even aware it still even exists.
    On your points about Nouvelle Theologie vs Scholasticism, I think you're looking at Scholasticism as the real synthesis across time (taking into account the early fathers as well as the best thinking up to that time) but fail to see that Nouvelle Theologie was a synthesis of early fathers, scholasticism, AND a ton of new insights from science, world wars, human rights efforts, Biblical scholarship etc. Each generation should do its best to synthesis the new and old to get as close as we can to the full truth. Taking Aquinas or Augustine as gospel now would be kind of ridiculous based on what we know. They were very important, but they were not the final stage. The development of doctrine always moves us closer to understanding reality as the Holy Spirit guides us into all truth, as John 16 says. Humbly following the magisterium of the bishops, who are given this task of reconciling past to present, is hard. But antiquarian LARPing only divides us, maybe just as much as the progressive wing of the Church, who also don't accept the magisterium but for opposite reasons.

  • @Mn14785
    @Mn14785 4 дня назад

    St. Thomas Aquinas is a great example of this Chestertonian idea as he drew from the Fathers and Jewish thinker Moses Maimonides, Al Ghazali and Plato along with Aristotle.

  • @poetmaggie1
    @poetmaggie1 Месяц назад +3

    Tradition vs Moderism/False Tradition/Progessive/LAZY.

  • @BillyJoeBob-hd9fm
    @BillyJoeBob-hd9fm Месяц назад +10

    St. Tarcisius was a 12-year-old boy in ancient Rome who while bringing the Eucharist to Christians in prison was attacked by a group of boys. Tarcisius died protecting the Eucharist. A holy Eucharistic Minister!

    • @friedawells6860
      @friedawells6860 Месяц назад +8

      Eucharistic ministers may be needed to bring the Eucharist to sick and imprisoned Christians when it is not possible for a priest to do so. That does not mean that they are needed during the Sunday mass simply so that parishoners do not have to wait an extra two minutes in line.
      The first situation, regarding St. Tarcisius, reveals an attitude of reverence towards the Eucharist where Christians go to great lengths to receive it even under difficult circumstances. The second situation, regarding modern eucharistic ministers, reveals an attitude of complacency where Christians prefer the *convenience* of a shorter waiting time over seeing the Eucharist handled in the most reverent way possible.
      Such ministers could still be understandable where the congegation outnumbers the celebrants 200 to 1, but I see them most often in dying parishes with less than 40 regular attendees.
      Personally, I feel that such parishes are dying precisely because they centre the celebration of the mass around the participation of the lay volunteers and not around giving honor and worship to God. If the mass is not felt to be clearly focused on honoring God but more so like a community theatre production put on by retirees, it is foreseeable that people (especially young people) will start looking elsewhere for spiritual food.

    • @BillyJoeBob-hd9fm
      @BillyJoeBob-hd9fm Месяц назад

      @@friedawells6860 When parishes offer communion under both species ("Take this and drink."), Eucharistic ministers are certainly needed. In our diocese, the congregation outnumbers the celebrant by far more than 200 to 1. Not so at the two Latin Masses in our city at which about 12 people attend.
      And our parishes are flourishing, not dying. It is the Latin Masses that are dying.
      Latin Masses I've seen are more like community theatre productions with the priests wearing elaborate, Diana Ross style vestments. And what's up with the lace albs? Real men don't wear lace.
      Eucharistic ministers are part of God's holy people, but you seem to have a very low opinion of them. We should know by now that priests are not any holier than the average Catholic lay person. In many cases, far less holy.

    • @friedawells6860
      @friedawells6860 Месяц назад

      @BillyJoeBob-hd9fm Hmm, I actually don't attend a TLM, and I didn't mention anything about the Latin Mass in my reply either. If the TLM is so naturally unpopular in your area, as you claim, what is the problem?
      That's a genuinely valid point about offering both species, and I always love it when both are available. I think there is still a distinction in ministers simply holding the chalice with the Holy Blood and ministers distributing the Eucharist, which involves touching it directly with unconsecrated hands. Ideally, it would be handled minimally to prevent fallen particles, and only by the priest
      One of the exact problems with Eucharustic ministers is that this allowance to have them (which is granted for the sake of congregants outnumbering celebrants) is being deliberately used by some people blur the distinction between the priests and the lay people. I feel like you have admitted that that is partly the intention of having these ministers: to make a grand demonstration that the lay people are not distinct from the priests.
      The priests have consecrated their whole lives to the Church (they are married to it), foregoing the possibility of earthly marriage and children. Christ has appointed them through apostolic sucession to be his representatives and minister the sacraments.
      If circumstances and lack of priests absolutely call for eucharistic ministers, then so be it. But it should not be implemented so that the lay people can exalt themselves and prove to everyone that the priest is "not holier" than them.
      I have felt a spirit of self-exultation and jealousy towards the priesthood among some eucharistic ministers, and that is exactly why I have a somewhat low opinion of them.

    • @BillyJoeBob-hd9fm
      @BillyJoeBob-hd9fm Месяц назад +2

      @@friedawells6860 I assumed you were a devotee of TLM because it's absurd to claim that parishes with Eucharist ministers are dying. Again, no problem in my area, and yes, that's a good thing.
      I haven not seen anyone deliberately bluring the distinction between priests and lay people. And how could they? The priest is the one wearing flowing garments, praying the prayers at the center of the altar, and preaching. Only an idiot could not tell the difference between priest and laity. Ministers I know consider it a privilege to be able to assist the priest at Mass, including lectors, Mass servers, cantors, choir member, ushers, and yes, Eucharistic ministers.
      These people you have a low opinion of are your brothers & sisters, the People of God, members of the Body of Christ.

    • @BillyJoeBob-hd9fm
      @BillyJoeBob-hd9fm Месяц назад +1

      @@friedawells6860 ST. JOHN CHRYSOSTOM: “Respect that Table in which we all participate. After participating in such a Table, and communing such Food, why take up arms against one another? Not only arrows and javelins cause wounds. Certain words inflict more profound wounds. A word pronounced against your brother is poison shot from your mouth. If your neighbor harmed you, ask God to show mercy to him. He is your brother, a member of Christ’s body. He is called to one and the same Table with you.”

  • @matthewgaulke8094
    @matthewgaulke8094 Месяц назад +3

    Interesting thoughts! I like it. Thank you 😊

  • @pablotremolada1715
    @pablotremolada1715 25 дней назад +1

    Don't you undertand that Latin is one of the sacred languages? The church in Rome spoke latin and if we believe that our first pope was Peter we should follow the traditional mass in latin, but if you want it in your language ok but at least use the old liturgy not novus ordo.
    The church is in trouble from Germany to the USA. I pray for you 🙏🏻 from the bottom of my heart from Peru

  • @Thunderjerky
    @Thunderjerky 29 дней назад

    The single best account of the liturgical reform/ liturgy as such is Laurence Hemming's "Worship as A Revelation." Really the only one we need tbh

  • @NorthwoodsWolf
    @NorthwoodsWolf Месяц назад +6

    The worship of modernity is a big contributor to the Church’s decline, both Catholic and Protestant.

  • @josephgreen350
    @josephgreen350 Месяц назад +1

    I think the past couple decades of the church has been plagued by overcorrections. I will quickly note that when we refer to Tradition in the context of the three pillars of the church we are just referring to Apostolic Tradition or the teachings of the Apostles. (I am sure Brian knows this, just wanted to make sure everyone else knew that because it could easily be confused how it was worded in the video) And Apostolic Tradition has little to no barring on the current liturgy wars. But it is true we as Catholics should respect our other traditions (sometimes referred to as little t traditions) but they are not infallible and can be developed and reformed as needed and dictated by the magisterium. Now, as I was saying about overcorrections. An example would be traditions, it is true that some in the church have recklessly disregard tradition but some have overreacted to this by holding on to traditions of men to the point of disobedience to the First See and seeing violations of tradition everywhere even when it is legitimate development and reform. Some even go as far to arrogantly think themselves worthy to judge the See of Rome. Or the liturgy wars were Vatican II saw that the liturgy needed to be simplified slightly and slightly increase the use of the vernacular for the sake of the faithful. This was overcorrected by totally eliminating Latin and oversimplifying against the instructions of the Roman Missal. However, have traditionalists have overcorrected from that by saying that Novus Ordo masses are invalid or that we all should revert back to the Missal of 62. Same with the scholastic vs Patristic thing. The church realized we need to have a revival of the patristics especially some of the newly rediscovered writings. But this was overcorrected to the detriment of the scholastic tradition. We need to, as Aristotle taught find the mean.

    • @Tarantula-hawk
      @Tarantula-hawk 28 дней назад

      If the pope kisses the Quran be sure I will judge him. All the way

  • @edukaeshn
    @edukaeshn 28 дней назад

    Brian, it's obvious to me that God is working on you. Thank you for the wisdom you shared in this video. I will admit that I have found your content increasingly unfavorable, but I keep coming back to give you "just one more chance" and I'm glad I did because it's obvious to me that you have hit a new milestone with this video. I look forward to see where this line of thought takes you. God bless you!

  • @lemonprime7889
    @lemonprime7889 27 дней назад

    Does Chesterton really not understand why one would feel that democracy is incompatible with traditionalism?
    My thought is that Democracy is heavily linked with the French Revolution and its ideals, one of which is that of the "Free Thinker." I think the French Revolution is bundled up with this idea that mankind has always been enslaved in his mind to some kind of perceived higher power - God, the gods, Monarchs, Emperors, Clergymen, Patriarchs, etc. but that now, with science, with the "light of reason," man can, for the first time in human history, chart a new course for himself.
    Using Democracy, to vote in a way that's piously faithful to one's ancestors, kind of misses the point.
    The freedom that's been granted to you, has not been used to venture out into uncharted waters, but instead, to stay in the lakes that one's grandfathers knew. Such voting is democratic, but it seems to lack the spirit. (Rejecting the spirit of the French Revolution, is of course, a good thing!)

  • @KeeperPlus
    @KeeperPlus 19 дней назад

    Theres a war going on. Protestant vs "Catholic" vs Catholic

  • @RomaCatholica
    @RomaCatholica Месяц назад +1

    Wrong, both are wrong. The latin mass is much older than that, but each pope added to it, we cannot know for certain how old is it.
    The latin mass was the mass of the surroundings of Rome and was taken to combat "protestant influences" in other territories.
    Do not say it was "invented" at Trent for it's false.

  • @chidmania8485
    @chidmania8485 16 дней назад +1

    I'm at a loss how many people, including Brian are both swallowing and propagating the narrative that it is people like this priest of the N.O. who are being divisive by feeling suoerior about the Mass they celebrate/attend, when the fact is thst it is the traditionalists eho normally engage in such behavior.
    For one thing, Novus Ordo faithful are typically ignorant of the Mass wars and are content with what they have. Trads, on the other hand, know something about the history of the Mass and the changes of the Second Vatican Council. They are the ones who typically express a preference to one form of the Mass, namely the Tridentine, and in some cases take this too far in displaying contempt for the Novus Ordo.
    Just wait. Even under this video or even this very comment, they will appear to start throwing insults at the Novus Ordo.
    So it's disingenuous for people to claim that it is the Novus Ordo people who attack or ridicule trads, or that trads just want to celebrate the Tridentine rite but are being persecuted.
    That's nonsense.

    • @tookie36
      @tookie36 5 дней назад +1

      Pretty standard behavior. Push, push, push, then when they push back you tell the world “hey look at this violent savage. This is why we must defend ourselves”. Then push, push, push, and repeat

  • @chidmania8485
    @chidmania8485 16 дней назад

    This is not the priest's logic.
    It's the traditionalists' own logic, which he's demonstrating to be false.
    If you think that's not traditionalism, well, that's the case most trads make and we run with it.

  • @chriscochis4615
    @chriscochis4615 Месяц назад +2

    Over your left shoulder, what is that lamp called?

    • @BrianHoldsworth
      @BrianHoldsworth  Месяц назад +3

      I don't know. I haven't given it a name yet. Gerald maybe? At any rate, you can find it here: www.etsy.com/ca/listing/1705072306/diy-wooden-gothic-lantern-hanging-lamp

    • @chriscochis4615
      @chriscochis4615 Месяц назад

      @@BrianHoldsworth lol. Thanks for the link.

  • @buukkreider544
    @buukkreider544 10 дней назад

    The Last Days of The Church Period
    We are in the last days of The Church period. Once the rapture of The Church occurs, then the professing Church will be left behind - and the world will experience, THE DAY OF THE LORD!
    Those who heard the Gospel of The Grace of God and rejected it --- it does not look good for them for God himself who at this time wants them saved, but at that time will become their enemy. The Apostle Paul explains this in the epistle of 2Thessalonians.
    What's happening now is that many professed believers who are supposedly in The Church are falling away - they are admittedly saying they don't believe in God, Church, or Religion. They, many of them were just professed believers only.
    During The 70th Week (AKA: The Tribulation Period) many of the mockers will meet their fate - it's really sad, but true.
    Right now these non-believers, especially from the left want to talk about justice and things like that, but they go absolutely against God's Word - and say Christians are racists and hateful and are hazardous to the world.
    Also, the 70th Week of Daniel 9:24-27 is where we get The 70th Week. This will start as soon as Israel signs that deal with The Beast. It is very near.
    The Children of Israel will seek after God, but during this 70th Week, two-thirds of them will be cut off - and the one-third will go Through The Fire - as mentioned by The Prophet Zechariah in 13...
    Zechariah 13:8,9
    8 And it shall come to pass, that in all the land, saith the LORD, two parts therein shall be cut off and die; but the third shall be left therein.
    9 And I will bring the third part through the fire, and will refine them as silver is refined, and will try them as gold is tried: they shall call on my name, and I will hear them: I will say, It is my people: and they shall say, The LORD is my God.
    This is when The Children of Israel will enter The Messianic Kingdom on Earth and fulfillment of Isaiah 9 will occur...
    Isaiah 9:6,7 The Mighty God and Everlasting Father
    6 For unto us a child is born, unto us a son is given: and the government shall be upon his shoulder: and his name shall be called Wonderful, Counsellor, The mighty God, The everlasting Father, The Prince of Peace.
    7 Of the increase of his government and peace there shall be no end, upon the throne of David, and upon his kingdom, to order it, and to establish it with judgment and with justice from henceforth even for ever. The zeal of the LORD of hosts will perform this.
    Part of this prophecy was fulfilled when Jesus of Nazareth was born and served during his Earthly Ministry, but the rest will occur at the Messianic Kingdom.
    This is when The Prophecy of Ezekiel 47 and 48 will be fulfilled when Israel will get their inheritance in that Promised Land. This will occur.
    Meanwhile there will be no peace in the Land of Israel until they sign that Covenant with The Beast. They will at that time have a peace for 3 1/2 years, but they will be set up - and that is what Jesus of Nazareth was talking about in Matthew 24 about the last generation.
    Now is the time to believe. We are still in the Period of The Church which happens to be the simplest time to be saved. Once the Rapture of The Church occurs... things will be VERY DIFFERENT!

  • @piafounetMarcoPesenti
    @piafounetMarcoPesenti Месяц назад +7

    From an FSSP parishioner: That is actually a funny statement to say: Those Trads are not traditional enough with their Latin Mass. Let's go a greek, hebrew or slavonic one :D

    • @duathellto1460
      @duathellto1460 Месяц назад +1

      It's a type of argument I've seen in a variety of circumstances: You can't achieve a truly pure version of what you're looking for (according to my interpretation) so just give it up now. Erroneous on two counts: First, we aren't antiquarian, and second, even if antiquarianism were correct, why should anyone give up on something better, just because it isn't perfect?

  • @Jmyth44
    @Jmyth44 22 дня назад

    First of all, no one said that Latin was more traditional. Neither is it the of time a particular language is used at Mass is what makes it traditional.
    Latin is the “ritual language of the holy Catholic ROMAN Catholic Chuurch . It is important for that reason . And it remains so because it adds to the sanctity of the ritual, the mass is-a “Ritual” sacrifice of Christ on the cross until the moment of the transubstantiation when he actually takes residence in the host, body blood soul” and divinity .
    The problem with the vernacular is it doesn’t feel nor confer “the sacred” It looks like a cooking demonstration as Joseph Campbell put it also the vernacular has too many tawdry associations
    to it . The change in the language has also been the impetus for some of the ridiculous events that happen at masses around the world.
    We need a return to the ritual language if not the entire Tridentine rite as soon as possible.

  • @BindingTheYoke
    @BindingTheYoke Месяц назад +2

    Well the irony of that priests argument is assuming that simply living in the modern world and being a modernist equates to the same thing. 🙃 Is it just me.

  • @carolinafine8050
    @carolinafine8050 28 дней назад

    Was the thumbnail changed to remove Fr Martin and put Taylor Marshall in his place?

  • @johnfisher247
    @johnfisher247 Месяц назад +6

    The statement by the priest that says traditional Catholics should use Greek not Latin is ignorant and false. The traditional Mass and liturgy does use Greek...the kyrie is is Greek. Also the traditionsl Easter liturgy includes Greek. In addition Greek and Latin have many words and grammar they share because these were absorbed into Latin. The West of Europe used Latin for government administration. The East did too but Greek and other languages such as Aramaic were used. The apostles were multi lingual as was Jesus. How then did he communicate with Pontius Pilate who would have only spoken Latin. The West's unifying language was Latin. The East Greek.

    • @eraimattei
      @eraimattei Месяц назад +4

      Sorry but Pilate probably spoke Greek too. Due to the massive possessions of the Romans in the East they probably took Koinè Greek as a form of lingua franca. Latin in the East was a very niche thing and in general it would be easier to make emissaries and governors of Rome learn Greek than it would be to force the native population to learn Latin while Greek was perfectly available. This is also probably why the New Testament is in Greek, even the parts tradition tell us were written in Rome. Now whether Jesus actually spoke Latin it is a much harder to topic, but I'll take a guess and say he only knew a handful of words.

  • @JesusRulez-l3j
    @JesusRulez-l3j Месяц назад +6

    Returning to the Vernacular was greatly opposed over several centuries. In 1660 Joseph de Voisin published a translation in French of the Roman Missal. The Assembly of the Clergy of France immediately condemned this translation. Pope Alexander VII also condemned it, and in 1661, he prohibited the printing and reading of the Missal in the vernacular under a sentence of excommunication. Thus, the Mass had become a complete mystery to Catholics. Recitation of the rosary during Mass was common, and preaching, when it occurred at all, was divorced from the biblical readings - which didn’t really matter since the readings were read in Latin, and the people didn’t know what the readings were saying. Vernacular translations of the missal were on the Index of Forbidden Books until 1897. After 1897, missals in the vernacular began appearing in Europe. In the U.S., there was no vernacular missal until 1927, when the St. Andrew’s Daily Missal was published in St. Paul, Minnesota. The biggest impetus given to the use of vernacular missals in our country came during World War II, when Father Joseph Stedman produced pocket sized missals that American service men and women took with them all over the world. So, with World War II, the vernacular missal in the United States and throughout the world became commonplace. It was a small beginning towards the Second Vatican Council’s call for a return to the ancient practice of the holy Fathers, and full, active participation of the laity in the Eucharistic celebration.

    • @dodoki36
      @dodoki36 Месяц назад +3

      Yeah people back then didn't know their faith nor the scripture and did not get anything at what was happening during the mass. This is the reason why we didn't get saints and proper catholic faith since the vernacular got introduced.
      Lol

    • @littleboots9800
      @littleboots9800 Месяц назад

      .

    • @JesusRulez-l3j
      @JesusRulez-l3j Месяц назад +1

      @@dodoki36 LOL You're right, people didn't know their faith nor the scripture and didn't get anything about was happening during the Mass because it was in a foreign language..
      The scriptural readings provided in the 1570 Tridentine Mass included only 1 percent of the Old Testament and 17 percent of the New Testament, and had only a one year cycle of readings-with most of the Gospel readings taken from the Gospel of Matthew. In the Mass restored by the 2nd Vatican Council, the scripture readings include 13 percent of the Old Testament and 71 percent of the New Testament.
      We have had thousands of martyred saints over the past few decades. You dishonor their memory.
      Also, you have a limited understanding of what it means to be a saint:
      POPE BENEDICT XVI: “Dear friends, Saint Paul in many of his letters does not shrink from calling his contemporaries, members of the local community, ‘saints’. Here it becomes clear that every baptized person - even before accomplishing good works or special achievements - is sanctified by God. In baptism the Lord, as it were, sets our life alight with what the Catechism calls sanctifying grace. Those who watch over this light, who live by grace, are indeed holy.” Germany, 2011

    • @wg820
      @wg820 Месяц назад +2

      How old are you? Do you remember all this non participation in the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass, or are you using other people's ideas.
      Have you ever attended the Traditional Latin Mass?
      In my experience of attending both the Novus Ordo Mass and the Traditional Latin Mas 9:27 9:27 s, there are more participatory actions and gestures which the lay faithful in the pews do at the Traditional Latin Mass. For instance, striking one's breast during the Confitior( I confess to Almighty God)the Agnus Dei (Lamb of God) and the Domini non sum dignus ( Lord I am not worthy). During the Nicene Creed and the Gospel of John, the entire Church genuflects at the mention of the Incarnation.
      It is true that there are no women or any lay people, for that matter doing readings or distributing Holy Communion during the Mass. However, that is NOT what the Council Fathers meant by full and active participation.

    • @JesusRulez-l3j
      @JesusRulez-l3j Месяц назад +2

      @@wg820 I remember the old Latin Mass very well in the 50s. I remember people praying the rosary during Mass. I remember men leaving the church during the sermon to smoke cigarettes. I remember people liking Fr. So&So best because he could rattle through the Latin prayers fastest. I remember as an altar boy a couple of very "affectionate" priests. I remember black people having to sit in the back of the church. Oh, the good ole days of the Latin Mass!

  • @masscreationbroadcasts
    @masscreationbroadcasts 19 дней назад

    1:06 Well technically, heresies are also very old. Councils were made in the early church to address them.
    I don't like the democracy analogy, but its message about incorporating the lives of all who lived across time I do.

  • @mininowa
    @mininowa Месяц назад +1

    Thank you for your work. And now I come with the most trivial, if not disrespectful, question : where do you buy your clothes ? I'm looking to buy durable clothes and yours seem to be it.
    I have a more serious question brewing, but it' still blurry yet. God bless you.

  • @MegaMetal96
    @MegaMetal96 29 дней назад +3

    0:26 NOs are great at converting people to Eastern Orthodoxy

  • @mistermusik
    @mistermusik Месяц назад +1

    Amen. Thank you, Brian.

  • @KeeperPlus
    @KeeperPlus 19 дней назад

    Latin mass
    Recieve on the tongue and kneel
    No extra "ordinary ministers"
    No lay people "participating" in mass

  • @BT7M
    @BT7M Месяц назад +29

    The problem is when they claim to be "traditionalists" but ignore one of the most ancient Traditions, fidelity to the living Magisterium.

    • @StoaoftheSouth
      @StoaoftheSouth Месяц назад +3

      Bingo.

    • @andrewbartel12
      @andrewbartel12 29 дней назад

      This is the elephant in the room of modern Traditionalism. Suspicion or rejection of the living Magisterium, especially concerning Vatican II and its reforms, has become an increasingly dominant theme of the movement. For this reason, Catholics should be more cautious about identifying themselves with it or calling themselves Traditionalists. False ideological Traditionalism is absorbing the Traditional Catholic movement in the same way the scxual revolutionaries came to possess the feminist movement.

  • @brendantriffett322
    @brendantriffett322 29 дней назад +5

    Brian, the Nouvelle théologie theologians were not averse to Aquinas or the Middle Ages but to the NEO-scholastic approach which (they argued) was insufficiently catholic. You only have to read de Lubac or von Balthasar to know the high esteem in which they held Aquinas and Bonaventure, for example.

  • @Trabunkle
    @Trabunkle 12 дней назад +1

    Standing on the shoulders of others and claiming to be the sole proprietors of knowledge!
    What is so "Novel" about that?

  • @RayNaraine
    @RayNaraine Месяц назад +4

    GK Chesterton attended the Latin Mass.

  • @Koki-qe7vz
    @Koki-qe7vz 29 дней назад

    7:43 “what it means to be catholic OR a follower of Jesus”
    Honestly refreshing to my ears to hear a Catholic distinct the two, to my understanding you don’t say those outside of the catholic faith aren’t saved. Many of your people would disagree with you understanding Him in such a light.

    • @DaeguDown
      @DaeguDown 29 дней назад

      Look up, Extra Ecclesiam Nulla Salus.

  • @Arete312
    @Arete312 Месяц назад +3

    It’s just like RCIA; they’ll say it’s how the early Church did it to attract traditionalists, but it is in no way organic.

  • @tombretislow7091
    @tombretislow7091 29 дней назад +3

    The Nouvelle théologie is the source of a lot of the church's current problems.

    • @Thunderjerky
      @Thunderjerky 29 дней назад +1

      Cringe and gay

    • @andrewsheedy4513
      @andrewsheedy4513 27 дней назад

      Neoscholasticism and the manual tradiition is the source of a lot more problems than the nouvelle théologie!

  • @christopherwilkens4460
    @christopherwilkens4460 22 дня назад

    Very good teaching.

  • @macabeo
    @macabeo 21 день назад

    But here you are with lot of old things and style in your background and channel

  • @JAP-os2sv
    @JAP-os2sv 29 дней назад

    I feel like you quickly went through the fact that the latin mass is older than the 16th Century. From my understanding it was codified in 1570, The tridentine mass at least. Maybe you can do an entire video about its history. I know it wasn't your focus for this video but I feel like a lot of us could really use a good explanation on its history and you create GREAT videos! Thanks for all you do.

  • @buckleysangel7019
    @buckleysangel7019 19 дней назад

    Well, the Novus Ordo is going to survive. You need priests that say the Mass and all the NO priests took the 💉. So sad 😢

  • @anthonyhulse1248
    @anthonyhulse1248 Месяц назад

    The “Tradition” that we are tradere, handing on, is Jesus, his teachings, his Truth.
    Small t traditions are cultural practices.

  • @Kingless_Kingdom_2
    @Kingless_Kingdom_2 18 дней назад

    3:39 nah, democracy is the god that failed

  • @carlosmurillo2264
    @carlosmurillo2264 28 дней назад +1

    the catholic patriarchy of Rome in other words the latin rite should definitely be said in LATIN. I would not mind the catholic patriarchy of jerusalem to be said in hebrew. just like the byzantine rite should be said in greek. SIMPLE AS THAT KEEP THE ROMAN RITE LATIN ONLY

  • @veekee75
    @veekee75 18 дней назад

    Read the New Testament, just study what the Church leaders did then and compare them to what is being practiced in the RCC now. It is difficult to find anything similar.

  • @gerddonni2017
    @gerddonni2017 Месяц назад

    Excellent! Very insightful 🎉❤!

  • @josephc9963
    @josephc9963 Месяц назад

    Well put sir!

  • @13igorsm
    @13igorsm Месяц назад

    The church is not about "old vs new" is about the forbidden and the permitted.

    • @philalcoceli6328
      @philalcoceli6328 29 дней назад +1

      More like the real pursuit of holiness vs. the justification and glorification of sin.

  • @lamaterfamilias
    @lamaterfamilias Месяц назад +1

    This is exactly what my Melkite pastor loves to say all the time. Want to be traditional?? Be Greek!! 😂

  • @Prohortico
    @Prohortico 28 дней назад +9

    ⁠I was just talking about all of this two nights ago with my wife’s 89 year old grandpa, born in 1935… a very devout and faithful catholic.
    As ‘Younger Catholics’ (those of us with no living memory of life pre Vatican 2) we NEED to listen to the last of our kin who actually lived this, I mean really lived it - not just those who attend the TLM but have no significant living memory of life pre-V2.
    My wife’s grandfather was 27 years old in 1962, and his parents made him serve as an alter server at daily Mass until he was old enough to leave the house. Now, he’s never left the faith, and is a faithfully practicing Catholic, but he told me he HATED the Latin Mass because of how he never understood anything, even after being a lifelong alter boy, and the priest would get really mad at him for mispronouncing any of the words that only the alter boys had to say - the priests would rush through the prayers with little regard to ‘true worship’ like the modern day ‘traditionalists’ claim is the reason the TLM is so great…
    By his own admission, he was not an academic and only went to grade 9 in school - but he was a very successful business man having started owning gas stations in the 50’s when it was classy, and involved getting dressed up to serve your customers and pump gas. He also built a plastics manufacturing plant and manufactured bottles for Coke, which he then sold, and he’s also made a lot of money trading stocks - He’s only read one actual book in his life after finishing school, but still LOVES to learn in his own way (by doing things) - yet, ALWAYS faithfully attending Mass. So he was the literal stereotype of the demographic of a truly faithful lay Catholic with whom the Latin Mass was completely ‘out of touch’ and intellectually inaccessible too (probably none of the people watching this video).
    The lived experiences from all of the Catholics who I personally know who grew up with the rigidity and rules of life pre-V2 (and in my wife’s grandpa’s words “rules - and that’s all they were, rules.”) are drastically different than what devotees to the TLM claim today.
    V2 was greatly welcomed by many people once they could understand the Mass - and actually be invited to participate and understand the entire Mass. Now, V2 did go too far in many, many ways, but it was done because of a genuine need to stop the abuses of the ‘Mass of the Ages’ - perhaps by enacting V2, it helped save the true dignity and worship that the TLM actually does have, when said the way it’s intended, but as the only liturgy mandated to the global church for many centuries, it did experience a lot of abuses, just as the NO Mass is famous for accomplishing.
    I personally believe, a reintroduction of Latin into the NO done incrementally for small parts of the Mass, and in a way where people are actually being taught what they are saying and actively participating, as well as alter rails, communion on the tongue, ad orientum, the reintegration of more sacred music, longer mandatory fasting periods prior to communion, and encouraging people to be more respectful in their attire and towards one another during the sign of peace would go a long way towards reclaiming the dignity of the Mass, without alienating the laity in the same way that was the prevailing experience of the lay faithful of pre-1962… this same thing applies to my grandfather as well who was born in 1918 and died in 2009 - he attended regular Mass on the battlefields during WW2, and grew up as a cradle Catholic with only a grade 3 education, but was a voracious lifelong reader, and prayed with his Pieta prayer book daily for as long as I can remember him - and he knelt down and prayed the rosary every day when he baby sat me when I was very young… some very devout Catholics welcomed the switch to the vernacular.
    We would all be wise to remember these people as we discuss these topics going forward, and as a very wise priest once told my wife and I (in 2011) regarding world peace; “When we no longer remember the pains of war, we will no longer have peace.” I think we are there in so many ways, and this ‘Us vs. Them’ bickering about what Mass is better is proof of the lived memory which we’ve collectively lost.
    We need to move forward and acknowledge that there have been many grievous abuses as a result of Vatican 2, but also that for most common people, the TLM was also abused and out of touch, but an integration of the best parts of all of our history could be harmonized moving forward - we don’t need to live in the past, but we do definitely need to remember it.

    • @CalebTheCatholicDoctor
      @CalebTheCatholicDoctor 26 дней назад +2

      I appreciate your comment. Thank you. It’s sound and seems like the most realistic.

  • @jmanuel722
    @jmanuel722 Месяц назад

    What is the whole Catholic tradition and which communities honor it?

  • @bhas3373
    @bhas3373 Месяц назад

    Well done Sir

  • @jadwigasmith6420
    @jadwigasmith6420 Месяц назад

    Thanks!

  • @BaremetalBaron
    @BaremetalBaron 29 дней назад

    I understand what you're trying to get at re: the nature of tradition, but as the saying goes "Democracy is cringe, read Aristotle."
    I'm also not certain that democracy is even compatible with traditionalist Christianity. Christ is the king of kings, not "president of presidents".
    You also might be taking Chesterton a little too literally here. Granted I might be taking YOU too literally.

  • @AdithiaKusno
    @AdithiaKusno Месяц назад

    Brian will you be open to have a conversation with Erick Ybarra?

  • @treewalker1070
    @treewalker1070 Месяц назад

    What's that lovely music playing at the end? And, for that matter, at the beginning? You should give credit for the music in the video descriptions. Unless it is your own music and you're just being modest.

  • @plainwhitepaper3898
    @plainwhitepaper3898 20 дней назад

    The RC church is wicked. None of you, not even one member can answer even one simple question.

  • @SteveKilgore27
    @SteveKilgore27 24 дня назад +1

    Me, wearing a tunic, growing a beard, and only attending masses in Aramaic using a whole loaf of unleavened bread: “I’m not much of a frequenter of any of these newfangled liturgies in Latin or the local dialect”

  • @MarkelBeverley
    @MarkelBeverley Месяц назад +5

    I seriously admire Brian Holdsworth.

  • @miguelsemidei7619
    @miguelsemidei7619 Месяц назад +1

    This video is great !!!! Fot the normal run of the mill person a bunch of pretty words and didn't understand anything meaningful . But, just to be fair, all the arguments for TLM or NO are null. In the majority of cases you cannot chose the mass , we get NO because of the situation the churches are in , there is no way of choosing tradition or not . We have to be grateful for what we have available . And thank God there are still priests in our area, we have gone down from 10 priest to 2. Confessions are also limited .

    • @duathellto1460
      @duathellto1460 Месяц назад

      "Tradition" doesn't refer specifically to the Mass, but to the Divine Revelation, handed down from the Apostles, that is found in the Mass, in the missal, lectionary, rubrics, and calendar. It is also found in music, art, architecture, the writings of the Church Fathers, and anywhere else that the authentic teaching of the Apostles can be found. You can choose Tradition, because you can choose to seek out that teaching, through those things, in the clearest and richest forms you can find. That's not just going to Mass, it's also reading (you can find and read the old lectionary for free online. And those of other Rites too.) You can read the Fathers, the Saints. You can find images of sacred art on museum websites, or go visit in person. You can play traditional sacred music on youtube, learn traditional chants, practice traditional feasts and fasts and prayer.
      While it is unfortunate that the TLM itself is not available to you, that is hardly the totality of Tradition to be found, because the Mass is not the totality of the spiritual life.

    • @miguelsemidei7619
      @miguelsemidei7619 Месяц назад +1

      @@duathellto1460 all of that is wonderful . I live in an area where we are lucky to have mass, if not, a deacon comes and celebrates a Liturgy of the Word. The "tradition" where I live is basically what is passed on by the older generation , nobody here even comes near to speaking about Latin masses or arguing about the missal . None of that has any relevance in our Catholic celebrations . Besides all you are telling me is to look at the HISTORY of the church.

    • @duathellto1460
      @duathellto1460 Месяц назад

      @@miguelsemidei7619 Tradition is not just history. It contains things that are true now, and therefore relevant now, and therefore life-giving, now. It contains things that you can *do*, and not just learn about, as I mentioned learning chants, practicing traditional feasts and fasts and prayer. Actual practices, I agree study alone isn't enough.
      There are 5 pillars of the spiritual life: prayer, fasting, almsgiving, study, and Sacraments. Only one of those, Sacraments, is something that you cannot control (and even there you still have your Baptism, which is all that generations of persecuted Japanese Catholics had, and nearly all St. Mary of Egypt had). It is the 21st century, and you don't have to rely strictly on the older generation around you to pass on the Faith of our fathers. And no Catholic ever had to passively accept the available Eucharistic celebrations as the entirety of living out the Faith of our fathers. Even if you had Mass every week, if you never prayed, your spiritual life would stink, yes? Like a relationship between husband and wife would stink if they ignored each other except for one hour a week. So you can incorporate Tradition into all of your spiritual life that takes place for the 111 waking hours of the week that aren't spent at church on Sunday. That's hardly irrelevant.
      I'm not telling you anything that most traditionalists haven't thought through, due to closures of TLMs. This is the practical plan. Traditional Catholicism is a lifestyle, not just a Sunday Mass thing, therefore it continues, even without a TLM, or any Mass on Sunday. Frankly, I think it's far worse if (perhaps you do not think this) a person thinks of Catholicism as being totally contained in the Sunday Mass/service, than that you can't get to a TLM. A right relationship with Jesus cannot be so constrained.

    • @miguelsemidei7619
      @miguelsemidei7619 Месяц назад +1

      @@duathellto1460 you just don't get it . A tradition is something you do because it was passed on to you . Like ornaments for the tree or thanksgiving at grandmas. Church traditions vary from country to country , when was the last time you helped carry a 2000 pound statue of St Blas , which is a tradition in Spain . Tradition is according to what has been passed on to YOU which you in turn teach your children .

    • @duathellto1460
      @duathellto1460 Месяц назад

      @@miguelsemidei7619 That is one definition of tradition, although one can always look up grandma's traditions, or great-grandma's, or start your own. There are some second or third generation immigrants who get interested in their heritage and work at reviving their customs for their children.
      That is not the only definition of tradition. Capital T Tradition is one of the three sources of Catholic teaching regarding Divine Revelation, along with Scripture and Magisterium. It specifically refers to what has been passed on from the Apostles, regardless of the intervening path (converts generally don't get it from their parents). They taught the truth, and anyone who teaches what they taught, teaches the truth, while anyone (even your immediate elders) who teach something different, is teaching falsehoods. This much can be found in virtually any catechism.

  • @jesuslovesaves2682
    @jesuslovesaves2682 Месяц назад

    That first bit on Latin makes little sense to me. When I was in the Protestant world the Cross's label was a bit of a problem for me. Why was it labeled in Hebrew, Greek AND Latin? Latin was the language of Rome. It is also the language of the Vulgate, which for much of Church history was the Bible as far any anyone was concerned. It was/is the Catholic Bible. Latin goes all the way back to the Cross and seems to tie all three of these languages together in a special prophetic way. So, that argument makes little sense to me.

    • @user-et8vm9cc3t
      @user-et8vm9cc3t Месяц назад

      Yes, but even the Vulgate is but one of many translations. Scripture was originally written in Greek for the New Testament and Hebrew for the Old (with some passages in Aramaic, e.g. Daniel).

    • @jesuslovesaves2682
      @jesuslovesaves2682 29 дней назад

      @@user-et8vm9cc3t How many of those translations were used by how many people? Over what period of time? During that time by what percentage of the Christians?

  • @philalcoceli6328
    @philalcoceli6328 29 дней назад

    Tradition isn't and can't ever be an antique preservation movement as Real Living Faith Tradition is full of the Living Jesus. Modernism is the progressive bleeding out of that Divine Life in Authentic Tradition with the excuse of a false renewal and inclusion.
    Real Tradition is Divine Life inside Human Holiness lived each day, each year, each century, each millenia, forever, as God's Family. Anything and anyone of any time that truly helps us grow in holiness in Jesus, and shun and crucify sin and pride is Authentic Real Tradition.