Fixing Misconceptions about Vatican II

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  • Опубликовано: 10 сен 2024

Комментарии • 648

  • @ashleynovels
    @ashleynovels 28 дней назад +259

    You’re brave father. Vatican II is like discussing politics at Thanksgiving

    • @BreakingInTheHabit
      @BreakingInTheHabit  28 дней назад +94

      It certainly chums the water for crazies online.

    • @Hrrjkf821
      @Hrrjkf821 28 дней назад +8

      @@BreakingInTheHabithey there! I have a question, will you ever respond to atheist RUclipsr Vhiced Rhino? He’s one influential RUclipsr that may hinder many to the Catholic faith.

    • @InExcelsisDeo24
      @InExcelsisDeo24 28 дней назад +3

      @@BreakingInTheHabitI love that you tell it like it is 🙌🙌🙌

    • @kendallkeiser280
      @kendallkeiser280 28 дней назад +1

      @@BreakingInTheHabit 😂

    • @troybyrne2916
      @troybyrne2916 28 дней назад +4

      ​@Hrrjkf821 also been seeing alot of Calvinist pastors that are going out of their way to attack the Catholic faith. I see alot of comments saying and I agree they never actually have discussions with Catholic theologians or priests,
      It would be perfect for Father Casey and others to go to those guys for debates

  • @Lavolanges
    @Lavolanges 25 дней назад +17

    I vividly remember the first vernacular Mass in my parish. A Sister had been training us at lunchtime for about a month so that we knew the responses. That Sunday, the responses, printed in little cardboard folders, were in all our pews. I was excited that we were finally able to actively participate, and confident in my responses. My volume matched my confidence, much to my mother’s dismay. “Not so loud!” the loud whisper that accompanied the tug on my sleeve.
    I was puzzled by the lack of response by those around me. I was much older when I realized that the adults, who all their lives had had to be silent in church, were simply not comfortable speaking out loud.
    I was decades older when I attended the first Mass that truly encompassed the wishes of Sacrosanctum Concilium. Notre Dame, Paris, 2013. Mass in French, responses in Greek and Latin. Settings of the Latin Gloria & Sanctus that I hadn’t heard since my childhood but that I was now allowed to sing. It was glorious!

  • @Nil-Hal_Kiggers
    @Nil-Hal_Kiggers 28 дней назад +10

    I love TLM and NO, and I would like both of them to be widely available.

  • @timboslice980
    @timboslice980 28 дней назад +13

    Another point to consider is it seems to me 9 out 10 complaints about vat 2 come from american cradle catholics. Ive never met a convert or heard someone from another country complain about it. My intuition is that they've been influenced by the loud minority voices online. The saddest part is i know 3 rad trads that i have breakfast with once a month where all i do is defend the pope for an hour. I tell them everytime, its ok i was a protestant, im used to people bashing the pope over misunderstandings. Maybe its pride but i feel like its my job to inform them so they dont leave the church over fake news.

    • @jasonrhtx
      @jasonrhtx 27 дней назад +2

      Traditionalists often hear alarmist news about further restrictions on the TLM. As I participate in both Novus Ordo (reverently celebrated) and TLM, I hear the concerns of laypeople participating in each-the need for reverence and for addressing our modern lives beyond the walls.

    • @WillHerrmann
      @WillHerrmann 26 дней назад +3

      I read a French theologian discuss the recent restrictions on the Tridentine mass as addressing “an American problem”. Even just looking at numbers, there are currently 410 every Sunday venues in the USA, which is roughly equal to the next five countries combined.

    • @timboslice980
      @timboslice980 25 дней назад

      @@WillHerrmann Wow that statistic pretty much confirms my suspicions.

  • @toadofsteel
    @toadofsteel 28 дней назад +68

    As a Protestant, Vatican II did one thing of great importance: Unitatis redintegratio. Just the fact that Catholicism was willing to acknowledge that the Sacrament of Baptism could be valid even outside the confines of ordained clergy was one of the biggest steps taken in centuries towards total Christian unity.

    • @carolynkimberly4021
      @carolynkimberly4021 28 дней назад +4

      Unitatis Redintegratio is heretical

    • @stephenferry3017
      @stephenferry3017 28 дней назад +15

      ​​@@carolynkimberly4021 no its not.

    • @tafazziReadChannelDescription
      @tafazziReadChannelDescription 28 дней назад +9

      ​@@carolynkimberly4021you're wrong

    • @junhaojiang5417
      @junhaojiang5417 28 дней назад +6

      ​@@carolynkimberly4021May God our Lord Jesus Christ guide you to realize the truth my beloved friend in Christ.

    • @helenbond8893
      @helenbond8893 28 дней назад +13

      @@stephenferry3017 Not at all, in fact to call it heretical is to call the decisions made by the church o be wrong, which is hiretical in itself

  • @BobHanson-w6g
    @BobHanson-w6g 21 день назад +2

    I really appreciate your videos, Father. My youngest just finished college and is now starting out on her own. While she still lives with my wife and me, we find ourselves feeling a little empty. As kids, we attended CCD somewhat unwillingly, then not attending church as young adults, then attending again with our children, putting them through CCD. They are now grown and the need for enlightenment shines brightly. My wife and I again attend willingly, not dragged as kids, nor dragging our kids.
    Your youth brings modernism; the fact you are reading emails or notes off of a cellphone , rather than a pad of paper is relatable. It’s today.
    Your plain spokeness, as well as not glossing over mistakes made by the church is wonderful. I don’t know a single Catholic who agrees with everything the church has done. Your approach is commendable.
    God bless you and your parents who raised you.
    Thank you

  • @cynthiaejiogu8442
    @cynthiaejiogu8442 28 дней назад +10

    Father, in some respects, I understand this movement of the Roman church back to Latin. I am eastern orthodox and we have our own little groups that think if the liturgy is in Slavonic or Greek it somehow more holy even though they’re losing their young people like water because who the heck can figure out what they’re singing.

    • @protoeuro
      @protoeuro 28 дней назад +2

      Fellow Orthodox here. I definitely agree about using the old languages being a major thing that sends young people away. In my experience, the people who usually want to keep Greek or Slavonic are the old people who don't care about missionary work---in their mind, the church is for Greeks or Russians, and that's that. It seems like people who want to use English run the whole spectrum from trad to whatever our closest equivalent to liberal is---the main thing they have in common is the desire to get people into Orthodoxy.

  • @kyletussing2382
    @kyletussing2382 28 дней назад +34

    Hi Father Casey. I'm an Eastern Orthodox Christian and I'm wondering how Vatican II was meant to court the Eastern Orthodox and engage them in reunification efforts.

    • @russellmiles2861
      @russellmiles2861 28 дней назад

      well, to create a unified Christian front in the Cold War ... so yes. In 1965 the respective church leaders announced an accommodation for the separation and not to try and convert each other.

    • @77thTrombone
      @77thTrombone 28 дней назад +2

      I'm not Fr Casey, nor was I invited to VII, but my sense is that
      • consistent with the objective of _resourcement,_ it was felt the Orthodox might bring some different, relevant insights to the conversation. After so many centuries of institutional cruft building up in the RCC, an Orthodox perspective on ecclesiology and tradition could be illuminating.
      • after so many years of less than collegial, if not antagonistic, relations, any opportunity for dialog is a step in the right direction. No great seismic agreements would be reached, but the first step is starting on the path of relationships and understanding.

    • @JhokiOK
      @JhokiOK 28 дней назад +1

      A lot of unification has already been done, check easter Catholic churches 🙂

    • @scott_johnson_
      @scott_johnson_ 27 дней назад +2

      @@russellmiles2861 if true that is a heresy. The Church cannot call us not to convert souls to the true faith.

    • @russellmiles2861
      @russellmiles2861 27 дней назад

      @@scott_johnson_ well it does ... Need to move on

  • @matthewkennedy6213
    @matthewkennedy6213 28 дней назад +6

    If the Mass was still in Latin and the priest still faced away from me throughout, if I didn’t have access to the amazing array of information about my faith (your channel a case in point Br Casey) I honestly can’t imagine I’d be as passionate and engaged with the faith as I am today.

    • @ryanscottlogan8459
      @ryanscottlogan8459 28 дней назад +6

      @@matthewkennedy6213 Well it inspired hundreds of Saints for many centuries so…..

    • @yuri_sp
      @yuri_sp 11 дней назад +2

      Is the mass for you or for Christ?

  • @davemiller6055
    @davemiller6055 28 дней назад +11

    A video on the Old Catholics would be great. Who they are, why they split, what they believe, how are they different, how are they the same, what is their relationship to the Catholic Church, etc
    Ditto for The Church Of The East.

  • @ChaosOmnimon
    @ChaosOmnimon 28 дней назад +41

    Both the Traditional Latin Mass and the Novus Ordo have moved me to tears.
    I believe that no matter what language the Mass is in, our Lord and Savoir is there.
    To change anything, one must first have the understanding that it will not happen in an instant.
    There is certainly a revival happening both in and out of the Church. Young people are throwing off the shackles of modernity and hedonism. They are also looking for the one true light in the world.
    Even in parishes that have an aging populace more families and young men and women are slowing heeding the call of the Good Shepherd.
    I encourage anyone who is staunchly one or the other, to go an experience the other Mass setting. Do so with a truly open mind; as we are One Holy Catholic and Apostolic Church.
    If you want the Traditional Latin Mass to be at your specific parish, talk with the priest and see if he will do it.
    1 Corinthians 1:10-17

    • @zachinnes4650
      @zachinnes4650 28 дней назад +4

      I agree to a certain point. I think that TLM should be required for 1 mass on Sunday. Latin is the language that unites us. I've traveled extensively and it's quite difficult to follow mass even in languages I speak well as the vocabulary is so different. I find myself longing for TLM to be able to fully participate in mass.

    • @InExcelsisDeo24
      @InExcelsisDeo24 28 дней назад

      @@zachinnes4650Required?

    • @patrickdillon9188
      @patrickdillon9188 28 дней назад

      Yes, required.​@@InExcelsisDeo24

    • @cordasuenaviolin604
      @cordasuenaviolin604 28 дней назад

      I think all priests should learn both the Old and New Rite.​@@InExcelsisDeo24

    • @stephenferry3017
      @stephenferry3017 28 дней назад +3

      @@zachinnes4650 or you could just have the Mass in Latin. You don't need to have the Mass according to the 1962 Missal to make that happen.

  • @jenlovesjesus
    @jenlovesjesus 24 дня назад +3

    Loved this, Father Casey. Thank you for clarifying Vatican II. So many misunderstand it, and I think that’s why we see rad trads rejecting it.

    • @RomaCatholica
      @RomaCatholica 21 день назад

      "Latin america the church was small"
      Brazilian empire: Under the protection of the Holy Trinity... the official religion is catholicism.

    • @RomaCatholica
      @RomaCatholica 21 день назад

      Latin america: portugal and spain colonizing (catholics)
      North america: prots
      Al smith lose election for being catholic.

  • @kevinkirby4305
    @kevinkirby4305 28 дней назад +47

    I respect V2 but I love the TLM. I feel something different here. And the Gregorian chants completely fills my soul. And when the priests sings in Latin, especially the preface, I almost get teary eyed. But when the Father hold the body of Christ up and I say in silence “my lord and my god” I feel at peace. And communion in the tongue needs to come back. And finally, ending every single mass with the final gospel need to come back. I love my Catholic Church ❤

    • @zacmullins7811
      @zacmullins7811 28 дней назад +11

      you can take communion on the tongue, its not outlawed. My wife & daughter take communion on the tongue each week. I would suggest talking to your priest about it.

    • @DoctorDewgong
      @DoctorDewgong 28 дней назад +11

      No you don't understand! Removing the Last Gospel, prayers at the foot of the altar, gradual, offertory, tract, ad orientem, and signs of the cross...has made us all better Catholics!

    • @carolynkimberly4021
      @carolynkimberly4021 28 дней назад +2

      ​@@DoctorDewgong😅😅😅

    • @tonyalongi4409
      @tonyalongi4409 28 дней назад

      I love the revised missal and I completely agree with you.

    • @justkoala3843
      @justkoala3843 28 дней назад

      I do not know where you guys live, but in my childhood everybody took Comunion on the tongue (now bcs of covid half the people started to get it on their hands), and on latin mass everyone takes it on tongue and on the knees. n​@@zacmullins7811

  • @phyjcb
    @phyjcb 28 дней назад +2

    "If we want unity. I'd recommend that some people stay of the internet." That is infallibly true.

  • @dennisdolan7250
    @dennisdolan7250 28 дней назад +5

    A Council is the work of the Holy Spirit de Fide!
    “ Vatican II blessing or disaster” is a heretical question😳

  • @alfredomaclaughlin1185
    @alfredomaclaughlin1185 27 дней назад +3

    A bit of global perspectiva is useful. In the US many went overboard with reforms, things like gym mass, churches that looked like basements and crying out for women priests and so forth, and people keep bringing it out in heated discussions. In other places people just did what was needed and moved on. I’m from Argentina and grew up with Spanish mass, guitar songs, and the big change was letting girls be altar servers😮 but save for small schismatic groups no one ever brings up Vatican 2 as something problematic or still needing sorting out

  • @tyberius5615
    @tyberius5615 23 дня назад +2

    The more I live in this world, the more I realise that the catholics were right, despite controversies and fake claims of anti-christian media ( netflix, woke agenda, atheist millenials, etc... ) And the more I realise that we need to bring back more traditions to teach the youth and guide them in these deviant times.

  • @laurencantrell7631
    @laurencantrell7631 28 дней назад +22

    I didn't hear you say the changes that were made. I was in Catholic elementary school. My Dad was so excited that the priest would face the congregation and speak in English rather than Latin

    • @jmelinda6232
      @jmelinda6232 28 дней назад +9

      I was in high school. I don't remember anyone who was not positively excited by the changes. The phrase most commonly used was 'breath of fresh air.'

    • @satyannair4837
      @satyannair4837 28 дней назад +2

      He used the word "vernacular" to describe the change. This change was extremely positive, but Fr Casey's explanation merely skims through it. By giving actual examples, the full impact of this change could be understood.

    • @jasonrhtx
      @jasonrhtx 27 дней назад

      Yes, it can be good to involve more lay participation in Mass, as long as it’s reverent. But even TLM always used the vernacular for homilies during Mass.

    • @adelinomorte7421
      @adelinomorte7421 27 дней назад

      @@jasonrhtx ***when I was gowing up, the celebrant would take the big book and translate the gospel before start the homily, it was in the 1940s. At **10:00** mass there was always more attendants than at **8:00** mass, most attendants just pray the rosary while the mass was going on, but why? at **10:30** mass was for the "catequese" children, a senior catechist always dialog in the local language what the celebrant says in latin. It was in the 40s much before what came after with the Vatican ll.***

    • @youngc0930
      @youngc0930 24 дня назад

      Personally I prefer tridentine mass than vernacular mass because english is not my first language.

  • @kilandrayeuxdoux2804
    @kilandrayeuxdoux2804 28 дней назад +13

    I loved the Latin mass. Unfortunately, no one would remember the victims of Vatican II. The Children growing up with the changes being put into place. One week going to mass, relearning the entire mass in English from Latin, from Chants to guitar music (which I still find vulgar) and then rules put into place then yanked out and changed. Yes, we do have alot of people out in the boonies that are still victims.
    Wish the Pope would allow for one church in a community to have Latin Mass weekly. Then those who are living in fear of the ever changing Post V2 rules can come home.

    • @alessandroarsuffi9227
      @alessandroarsuffi9227 28 дней назад +3

      @@kilandrayeuxdoux2804 No need for that. The Mass of Paul VI may still be celebrated in Latin, ad Orientem, with Gregorian Chant, with the Roman Canon, any time the priest so wishes. And he can even omit the sign of peace at his discretion.

    • @Rl55322
      @Rl55322 28 дней назад +3

      I’m glad you mentioned the music. I think that is what disturbs me the most about v2 masses is the atrocious music. Even when it’s done well, it still isn’t all that great. If I wanted something so generic I’d turn on a non denomination Christian radio station

    • @kilandrayeuxdoux2804
      @kilandrayeuxdoux2804 28 дней назад

      @@alessandroarsuffi9227 Have you looked at the priests age? Very few of them know the Latin mass enough to even pull it off. And those that do are in high demand. Not sure if its correct right now as it blows in the wind on occasion - many places are limiting the LRM from being done - except by permission.

    • @stephenferry3017
      @stephenferry3017 28 дней назад

      @@kilandrayeuxdoux2804 they never do come home. They haven't come home. Those that left over liturgical changes didn't come back.

    • @russellmiles2861
      @russellmiles2861 28 дней назад +1

      Yes, Rock and roll was evil ... do you wonder why your children abandoned the faith.

  • @DoctorDewgong
    @DoctorDewgong 28 дней назад +8

    Its not really "only" 60 years since the last ecumenical council. There's plenty of historical precedent for holding another one this soon. Many were even closer together than this, and the world changes far more rapidly than it did then.

  • @CafeteriaCatholic
    @CafeteriaCatholic 25 дней назад +2

    There was innovation in doctrine. Slavery as an institution was condemned in Gaudium et Spes.

  • @psoon04286
    @psoon04286 28 дней назад +4

    It was some of the changes that Vat ll recommended that influence my decision to be baptized as an adult back in 1965🙂

  • @Motomack1042
    @Motomack1042 28 дней назад +9

    While I totally understand what you are presenting, and I have read the documents of Vatican II. While I do believe what was written in the documents and what was put into practice are not quite the same. I am not a Trad, but their is no doubt that the Tridentine mass is much more reverent and has a greater focus on the Eucharist than the Novus ordo does. I agree with our Orthodox brothers that full and active participation means paying full attention at the liturgy. It seems we would have been better served by translating the mass into the vernacular, keeping familiar prayers, Sanctus, Agnus dei, and the Gloria in Latin. Institute the new lectionary along with lay lectors. We believe in doctrinal development, this includes the mass, which was stripped of much of its beauty and mystery. This seems reductionary. These are my thoughts. Thanks for your presentation. St Joseph parishioner.

    • @scott_johnson_
      @scott_johnson_ 27 дней назад

      @@Motomack1042 I don’t think it’s the Mass that’s problem with Vatican II. It’s the suggestion of religious liberty and indifference

  • @rayanagi
    @rayanagi 28 дней назад +14

    V2 was a frequent topic of conversation in my house when I was a kid. I remember when my mother stopped pinning the scrap of lace to the top of her head. Watching my parents receiving the communion wafer AND sip from the chalis. I was really jazzed for that part when I was preparing for my first holy Communion. Serving as an altar girl. Watching nuns from my school having more active participation in the Mass. Saturday night "folk" mass. I didn't learn until I was an adult that the bishop didn't really like that one. Secular music, with a spiritual theme, and guitars instead of the organ apparently was going too far. 😂 But I sang in the choir and it was very moving experience for me. I was sad when we moved away and our new church was a very old school parish. No girls allowed. No folk mass. No secular music. Nothing progressive. I had no role there It broke my heart.

    • @alvintcura
      @alvintcura 28 дней назад +3

      I must admit that I feel some concern that your comment talks only about your feelings, and says nothing about redemption or the work of the Holy Spirit in the world or the betterment of humanity or evangelization or anything.

    • @CafeteriaCatholic
      @CafeteriaCatholic 25 дней назад +1

      @@alvintcura Someone told you, that she was enthusiastic about mass and you don't see the work of the Holy Spirit.

  • @MrMustang13
    @MrMustang13 28 дней назад +20

    It would seem that it wasn’t the council that was the issue but the generation that implemented it.

    • @briandelaney9710
      @briandelaney9710 28 дней назад +8

      Yes. The experimentation from 1965-1970 and continuing on was the problem

    • @jamesbell6203
      @jamesbell6203 28 дней назад +6

      @@briandelaney9710 Agreed, and I wonder if Pope Paul, after seeing how the reforms got out of hand, was just too exhausted to do anything about it.

    • @dalspartan
      @dalspartan 27 дней назад

      I’ve wondered that myself. We had very good elementary Catechism until ‘65, for me my seventh grade. As I am now reading the Catechism, I can’t for the life of me understand why it wasn’t taught in the Church where I grew up. What a difference it would have made for me, and I imagine, the many others I knew who wandered away from faith.

  • @protoeuro
    @protoeuro 28 дней назад +1

    Excellent video. As an Orthodox Christian, I feel like my fellow Orthodox generally don't realize how much we both contributed to the cultural milieu of ressourcement leading up to the council (through figures like Florovsky emphasizing the importance of the church fathers) and adopted some of its pastoral recommendations (having lay readers at the Divine Liturgy, using the vernacular, as well as more sporadically-applied things like reinstating the kiss of peace and encouraging congregational singing).

  • @blujeans9462
    @blujeans9462 27 дней назад +9

    As a senior who experienced both the birth of Vatican II and prior, what I find odd is for the first 50 years, few people had any issues. 50 years!!! Then suddenly, out of nowhere, people who weren't even born or experienced pre-Vatican II suddenly wanted to go back to something they 'feel' needs reviving - with a wild 'movement' ensuing! True, only on social media - but social media is part of who we are today; there is no turning that off. The older I get, and the more I hear the outcries of society - with some wanting to go back to the past, others want to villainize it, while others want to pretend it never happened, or the worst: those that try to rewrite history so those that they want to control will blindly follow - but all coming from people who never experienced any of it, first hand. That all said, there are some people (such as this video) that are trying to set the record straight - and that is a start. Sadly, most people prefer to only listen to those who share their opinions, rather than listen to factual, historical information.

    • @yuri_sp
      @yuri_sp 11 дней назад +1

      "for the first 50 years, few people had any issues" may be because nowadays the access to information is more decentralized ? Just a thought.

  • @philipthompson2436
    @philipthompson2436 27 дней назад +1

    I really wish that Upon Friar Review wasn't deleted I realize that there is controversy but that channel and its videos brought me to the Catholic faith. I wish that we could still have the videos but make a video addressing the controversy.

    • @Hedgehogz856
      @Hedgehogz856 26 дней назад

      I’m pretty sure Fr. Pat got investigated by the friars for sexual misconduct or something. Prolly best it’s gone

    • @philipthompson2436
      @philipthompson2436 26 дней назад

      ​@@Hedgehogz856 I still miss it though

  • @tigernotwoods914
    @tigernotwoods914 25 дней назад +1

    Technically, we do have married priests if an ordained priest is an Anglican and converts to Catholicism. He can become a priest in the Roman Catholic Church and still be married obviously so that’s one of the exceptions and I think the Eastern Roman Catholic churches the same thing they have married priests, so it does exist and always has.

    • @user-lj3hu8fe7g
      @user-lj3hu8fe7g 23 дня назад +1

      and celibacy, while long encouraged, was not mandatory in the "western" church for the first thousand years of Christian history.

  • @user-km4ro7xp2s
    @user-km4ro7xp2s 28 дней назад +2

    I have read the article about the Liturgy. I can't even spell the Latin Vernacular for its title, but because it was the first one that consecrated lay people in the Lincoln NE Diocese had to read, I thought it was pretty clear: priests are men, women are helpers in various ways, but in terms of the Mass itself, we are limited to only certain work, and women can't be priests but we do have a lot to do to promote and protect the Catholic Faith. I read it because Sister Phyllis Hunhoff, OSB read it with us consecrated lay women. She was also the woman who counseled me to continue to seek quality spiritual directions for my own ministry, keep up my studies by myself, and be smart about how I teach subjects, as well.

  • @georgevanhoose6333
    @georgevanhoose6333 28 дней назад +1

    CoE, 1961: *Reforms their liturgy to more-closely resemble the Catholic Mass: Lots of Latin and Greek, and smells & bells.
    Catholic Church, 1962: *Vatican II

  • @RealPJ
    @RealPJ 28 дней назад +7

    Good video Father, thank you for defending the Church 😃

  • @catholic_zoomer_br
    @catholic_zoomer_br 28 дней назад +2

    I think that both are needed. Eastern Catholics have different Liturgies, and we don't think more or less of them. I personally don't like the TLM as much as NO, but if I were traveling to some place that speaks another language, I can more easily follow the TLM since it will be the same regardless of location

  • @Mike-zb2ri
    @Mike-zb2ri 28 дней назад +1

    Thank you for answeing my question, father. May the most holy Trinity continue to bless your apostolate.

  • @kevinkirby4305
    @kevinkirby4305 28 дней назад +6

    Can you make a video about the TLM, and what we are doing right and what we are doing wrong. How we can be more united with the church and still enjoy the extraordinary form?

    • @DoctorDewgong
      @DoctorDewgong 28 дней назад +2

      He has

    • @kevinkirby4305
      @kevinkirby4305 28 дней назад

      @@DoctorDewgong Where?

    • @stephenferry3017
      @stephenferry3017 28 дней назад +1

      Here's one simple trick: dump any and all content coming from Una Voce and other "traditionalist" influencers.

    • @ryanscottlogan8459
      @ryanscottlogan8459 28 дней назад

      @@stephenferry3017 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂

    • @stephenferry3017
      @stephenferry3017 28 дней назад

      @@ryanscottlogan8459 yeah I'm not joking. It's all tainted with schismatic Lefevbrism.

  • @fmcevoy1
    @fmcevoy1 28 дней назад +2

    I watched Vatican II's opening on TV when I was home sick from school. I remember pre-Vatican II Church well, and it wasn't much different from the Church we kick around in today.
    I agree with you on the chaos in the world after the Council. Vatican II didn't cause it; the 1960s sure did!

  • @remiphillips
    @remiphillips 28 дней назад +11

    What I'd want answered is how do you respond to the young people that find the mass of Vatican 2 "cringe" or "embarassing" while the traditional Latin mass feels more serious to the general youth

    • @alessandroarsuffi9227
      @alessandroarsuffi9227 28 дней назад +6

      Tell them to look for a parish where the priest celebrates seriously.

    • @userJohnSmith
      @userJohnSmith 28 дней назад +8

      Tell them that it's great that they love the Latin Mass.
      Then tell them that when you pray you find it useful to know what you're saying just like Christians in the early Church did.
      Then start asking them about Church history and theology, of which they probably know very little. A lot of these guys find the vestments more important than what's inside the Tabernacle, and usually don't realize it. Just never be mean about it. They're seeking God, that's enough.

    • @dgeos4740
      @dgeos4740 28 дней назад +1

      In the words of the great theologian Taylor Swift: "Lean into the cringe!"

    • @helenbond8893
      @helenbond8893 28 дней назад +4

      tbh I have only ever found young people to find the VII mass to be something they can relate and understand better than the Latin mass which they often claim to be unrelatabe or just redundant

    • @ewrvwergwergwergwerg
      @ewrvwergwergwergwerg 28 дней назад +9

      This opinion is held by a fairly small minority of very "online" young people who, for political reasons, have a bias towards traditional ways of doing things. Their default stance is to be wary of anything that can be viewed as "modernist". Certain older, savvy, more traditionally-minded people have noticed this trend and spread their views among fertile soil.
      That being said, the Latin mass hasn't been soured by a childhood full of boring priests and irrelevent homilies. Ironically, it's newer to them and has accrued less negative baggage for them personally.

  • @superduck6456
    @superduck6456 28 дней назад +3

    Time for me to ramble. I have a problem with how Vatican II has worked out in practice. I know it’s anecdotal, but the only packed churches I’ve seen are less “liberal” with the application of Vatican II. My church is an English novus ordo, but it has traditional sounding music, a more traditional looking altar, and a general culture of solemnity. On the other hand, I’ve been to guitar and tambourine-playing, t-shirt and flip flop-wearing “contemporary” churches. There is no question which churches are doing better, numbers-wise (and which ones have more young people) We now have something the Church of the 50s and 60s didn’t have: the known fates of (for lack of a better term) liturgically “liberal” high church faiths. Look at the ELCA, look at the PCUSA, look at the Episcopal church and CoE. They are collapsing and hemorrhaging members. The misapplication of Vatican II needs to stop. I don’t want this fate to happen to these specific churches as well. To speak bluntly as a younger person who once was an atheist, the more modern churches, while well-meaning, feel kinda phony, like they’re trying to look hip and cool and draw the young-ins in. It didn’t work on me. More traditional churches did….
    Btw, Look up St. Vincent de Paul Catholic Church in Andover, KS, for the most egregious case of Vatican II misapplication. It is still a Catholic Church, but it is alarmingly and nightmarishly modernist.

  • @valentin_bunin
    @valentin_bunin 28 дней назад +4

    Thank you for the video!

  • @jamesbell6203
    @jamesbell6203 28 дней назад +2

    I wish Latin and Gregorian Chant were the preferred and normal use. My local parish priest "dared" to reintroduce incensing the altar and Gospel but the now-older parishioners, young when Vatican II came out, put a quick stop to that. Very sad. There is a real thirst out here for a return to traditions of the Church. Holding hands during the Our Father and ill-rehearsed guitar accompaniments to poor congregational singing is not cutting it anymore. I'm not against the Novus Ordo, in fact I treasure its simplicity and efficiency; I just want the traditions that can go along with it.

  • @patriciafeehan7732
    @patriciafeehan7732 28 дней назад +1

    These changes from 1960’s VII were not easy at first, but slowly we adapted the new methods.
    Since most of these posts are lengthy there was an Australian Mini Series called The Brides of Christ about a group of Nuns trying to adopt Vatican II. Both serious and humorous how some of the changes for Sister’s were difficult, in this series one scene depicts an Elderly Nun who has to change her Habit. All her sisters are praying for her, they help her into the new Habit, she takes a deep breath and faints. There were many things that Vatican II changed internally, as well. Nuns wearing lighter, shorter and more work appropriate Habits, Priests no longer wearing those long black robes - now they wear black slacks and many other minor changes.
    We began to say “Peace be with You” that was odd to get used to, but then it felt welcoming.

  • @michaelanthony6403
    @michaelanthony6403 10 дней назад

    I remember the Latin Mass when I was alter boy in grade school. The priest had his back to the congregation which essentially was more of an group of observers rather than participants. On one occasion I was called upon to read the Epistle in Latin! To be understood the congregation had to consult their English/Latin Missal. By the time I was in 8th grade the mass was now being celebrated in English and most of us couldn't be happier. Those who blame Vatican II for the current state of the Church and the world just don't get it. It is based more on nostalgia than an understanding of a world and Church in transition.

  • @myguitardidyermom212
    @myguitardidyermom212 28 дней назад +3

    as someone who is almost always in favor of decentralization in most aspects of life, I still think that Vatican 2 gives entirely too much room for interpretation in it's implementation details. or at least, more time needed to be spent in considering the ways in which the reforms could be most efficaciously implemented. The Council spent a lot of time designing a really great bicycle and not nearly enough time figuring out how to teach people how to ride a bicycle without eating dirt for the next 60 years.
    Maybe you could argue that that was the point, but I've found that so-called "freedom" that simply results in chaos isn't actually all that freeing. Or to follow up with another bike analogy, it's hard to ride to figure out how to ride a bicycle while concussed and dealing with a broken collar bone.

  • @dimasbagus7551
    @dimasbagus7551 28 дней назад +3

    I have an actual case study about liturgy in my on country, Indonesia. In 1971, there are 10 Eucharistic Prayer and many of it like Eucharistic Prayer 8,9 and 10 that Eucharistic Prayer must be Presidential Prayer, but because of "participation" the Laity in some part of that prayer did have a part on it. Next, one of the Gloria song, did not using the same text in order of "inculturation". They change the text and lyrics and for some years i mean 30 years this practice both of the cases are still held, until 2005, the Indonesian Bishop Conference revised that practice and structure. And the next revision is held in 2020 before covid hit Indonesia.

    • @dimasbagus7551
      @dimasbagus7551 28 дней назад +2

      I think Vatican II implementation on Liturgy is a disaster. My diocese there is still have a spirit to go back in those era. Where the experimenting liturgy is still hold. Like using traditional dances for the procession of the priest entering the altar and out of the altar, and change the homily with a show like drama, or a film created by the Youth or even a talkshow sometimes.

    • @dimasbagus7551
      @dimasbagus7551 28 дней назад +1

      By no means i'm anti-inculturation, i still enjoy the Mass that held in a parish from deep Javanese area that far from the city, like using old Javanese language or using traditional Javanese music instrument. But inculturation in a right manor can be good for cathecism and understanding the liturgy for participation. I'm also a youth that still 27 years old, but i dislike the practice done by the youth that want to deform the Liturgy.

    • @carolynkimberly4021
      @carolynkimberly4021 28 дней назад +4

      The Mass had one Canon for nearly 2,000 years. Then the Modernist crowd decided they knew better.

    • @alessandroarsuffi9227
      @alessandroarsuffi9227 28 дней назад +2

      ​@@carolynkimberly4021We don't know what canon was used in Rome before the mention of it but Ambrose - and it didn't even sound like its present version back in the day, though similar.
      The Latin Church was an exception as all other rites have more than one Anaphora.
      That said, I prefer the Roman Canon over the later alternatives.

    • @ryanscottlogan8459
      @ryanscottlogan8459 28 дней назад

      @@dimasbagus7551 Chicago Spokane Seattle?😂😂😂😂

  • @joannebywaters4154
    @joannebywaters4154 25 дней назад

    ❤🙏Amen, thank you once again Fr Casey!!❤🙏 Good St Joseph pray for us

  • @studibakre
    @studibakre 27 дней назад +1

    In the modern era, of "arrested adolescence", hedonism, and debauchery the Church doesn't need to adapt to society
    We need to strengthen our commitment to the Faith

  • @tommypain
    @tommypain 28 дней назад

    Your answer and reflection on the last question stands out to me as the most important one. We the laity and priests, lead by our bishops, and guided by the Holy Spirit, are all called to be implementing daily the charisms of Vatican II.

  • @JamesTheJocund
    @JamesTheJocund 28 дней назад +1

    Thanks for the video Fr. Casey!

  • @bubbles581
    @bubbles581 28 дней назад +1

    I think V2 was important in helping the church understand what is actually important

  • @ScreamingReel500
    @ScreamingReel500 18 дней назад

    "For a person is not to be called a
    heretic as soon as he shall have offended in matters of faith; but he is a heretic who, having
    disregarded the authority of the Church, maintains impious opinions with pertinacity."

  • @maaxt
    @maaxt 28 дней назад

    Thank you , Father. These videos help to strengthen my faith.

  • @tonyalongi4409
    @tonyalongi4409 28 дней назад +2

    Interesting trivia. The First Lateran Council (1123), the Second Lateran Council (1139), and the Third Lateran Council (1179) were not dogmatic councils either. They were purely disciplinary councils, and didn't define dogmas or condemn heresies.

    • @alessandroarsuffi9227
      @alessandroarsuffi9227 28 дней назад +2

      That is true. What some people don't understand is that disciplinary decisions help us clarify our dogmatic beliefs.

    • @tonyalongi4409
      @tonyalongi4409 28 дней назад

      @@alessandroarsuffi9227 Exactly. You could say that about about Vatican II's Lumen Gentium and Dei Verbum, both of which were dogmatic constitutions.

    • @alessandroarsuffi9227
      @alessandroarsuffi9227 28 дней назад

      @@tonyalongi4409 Precisely. And how can people say that V2 wasn't dogmatic when it literally defines the essence and boundaries of "Extra ecclesiam nulla Salus"? Or when it completes V1 by declaring the role of bishops in synodality? Or when it formulates the title Mother of the Church for the Blessed Virgin? I just don't get it...

  • @loremipsum720
    @loremipsum720 28 дней назад +5

    Maybe one of the problems that Vatican II brought was the idea that mass had to keep changing to "accommodate" the likings of more people. And as a result in many cases made it a circus, where any respect for traditions and the house of God and His presence has been lost.
    We see singing that looks more like a bad Hollywood production. People talking before, during, and after mass before they leave, as if it was a restaurant. Announcements about upcoming events, luncheons, and money collections before the priest gives the final blessing ("if you want your blessing, stay seated while we read some announcements"?!!!). Oh, and don't forget the final clapping for the singers and musicians.
    As with many other things in our culture, we tend to take things too far.
    I wonder how we would behave if one day we enter the church's building and see at the altar the body of Christ, nailed at the cross, bleeding and giving HIs life for us. Would we talk?, clap?, play the drums?. Oh wait, that's what the Blessed Eucharist is... never mind.

    • @Rl55322
      @Rl55322 28 дней назад

      Well said. Vatican 2, while maybe not intentional, certainly allowed churches to gut out any and all reverence for the Eucharist and for the mass. And we wonder why in recent years a majority of Catholics don’t believe in the real presence? (And yes I know that has to do with terrible catechesis too).
      But seriously, I’ve seen Protestant services and many non Latin masses have been just as irreverent as those. It’s shameful

  • @user-lj3hu8fe7g
    @user-lj3hu8fe7g 23 дня назад

    The very movement of the Spirit since Vatican II is the great growth of the Faith in Africa. The retention in toto of the old Latin mass would not have assisted this trend; quite the contrary, as a matter of simple practicality. As Father correctly says, Gregorian chant, and for that matter Latin, were not forbidden or eliminated, which is a good thing as respect for Tradition, history, and catholicity (a universal Church language) are edifying. One more comment: you don't have to go that far back to find that enormous numbers of people were not afforded much opportunity to become literate, hence Bible stody on one's own (which is prolematical to begin with as experience has shown) COULD not be globally widespread. Those who present Vatican II as "rupture" rather than "continuity" need to learn more about it. Thank you as always, Father Casey.

  • @ScreamingReel500
    @ScreamingReel500 18 дней назад

    The Church operates visibly in the premises of Matthew 16:18. "This Article hinges upon the preceding one; for, it having been already shown that the Holy
    Ghost is the source and giver of all holiness, we here profess our belief that the Church has been
    endowed by Him with sanctity."

  • @oneghost1257
    @oneghost1257 23 дня назад

    Can't wait for more of my Catholic friends to learn about Vatican Three when I get them in a Cyberpunk campaign with me

  • @trainlover6099
    @trainlover6099 28 дней назад

    Wow fantastic video, father. Well paced and very informative!

  • @sptomase
    @sptomase 27 дней назад +1

    The way the NO is celebrated it’s an issue. You really can’t get around that. If it was implemented wrong or priests just do it how they want you can’t find a reverent NO very easily. St John Cantius in Chicago is the only one I know of. I plan to go to Chicago just to experience a reverent NO and that’s pretty sad I have to go state’s away to find something that should be in every Catholic Church.

    • @Hedgehogz856
      @Hedgehogz856 26 дней назад

      Yeah, NO isn’t a problem, but the weird Protestant way it gets celebrated is. As long as they keep NO as traditional and reverent as possible it’s great

  • @dominicganteaume8274
    @dominicganteaume8274 27 дней назад

    Well put overall Father Casey. A very brave undertaking to discuss Vatican II with all of the misunderstandings and misinformstion surrounding it. We need a Vatican II B to reset the record. 😊 Good answer to the question at time stamp 8:22. 🎉🎉🎉

  • @TheChurchofBreadandCheese
    @TheChurchofBreadandCheese 28 дней назад +1

    You know what I am just going to say it, if I had my choice I would probably always go to the regular vernacular mass over the Latin mass, I just get more out of it spiritually,! Of course the much anticipated sequel to Vatican 1 isn't just about the mass (Lumen Gentium Ch. 5 is the best) but online conversations about V2 seem to always return to the mass so I thought I would share that I am a complete lover of the ordinary form mass.

  • @RomanCatholic
    @RomanCatholic 28 дней назад +21

    The Holy Trinity will remain forever ❤

    • @theguyver4934
      @theguyver4934 28 дней назад

      The trinity is something that was never taught by jesus and his apostles

    • @anitasez
      @anitasez 28 дней назад

      @@theguyver4934snooze

    • @HMFOG
      @HMFOG 28 дней назад

      Just so you know, Jesus and the apostles dont have to use the word "trinity" to speak about the trinity​@@theguyver4934

    • @jidrit999
      @jidrit999 28 дней назад

      ​@@theguyver4934yes it was. Same concept is found in hindoo books

  • @NDHS1990
    @NDHS1990 6 дней назад

    I’m a Traditionalist Catholic (FSSPX) since 2006, and althought I enjoy your videos, I completely disagree with your line of defending V II. Saying that V II has not contributed to the secularisation of Catholic nations, is false. For example, in Poland more and more people stop attending Novus Ordo M and attend traditionalist Catholic masses saying they feel Lord’s presence during the mass etc.

  • @troybyrne2916
    @troybyrne2916 28 дней назад +1

    Father can you make a video on what the church teaches on what happens to good people that die before they before finding their way to the Church and Christ properly? And what can we do if anything to assist in there salvation after death?

  • @rudyblea1633
    @rudyblea1633 20 дней назад

    The council took place and needed. Time to move on and fulfill it's mission love God and one another. I support Vatican 2.

  • @NGAOPC
    @NGAOPC 28 дней назад +8

    An Eastern Catholic. I’m never surprised when I meet visitors to my parish who either are professing “trads” or are clearly influenced by engagement with them, when they begin to frame everything by supposed Liturgy “Wars” (that exist mostly online), and alleged-mandated “reforms” from Vatican II, and how they prefer parishes and Liturgies such as mine because they’re “traditional”. Not sure they’ve read a single document from the Council, but definitely not read Ecclesiarium Orientalium, which declared the self-ruling equality of even the smallest SuiJuris Eastern Church, counseled Eastern Catholic Churches to return to their practices, renouncing Latinization and affirming much else.

    • @briandelaney9710
      @briandelaney9710 28 дней назад

      Like those who were “liturgical advisers “ in the Latin church never read Sacrosanctam Concilium

    • @pablononescobar
      @pablononescobar 28 дней назад +2

      One could argue that the Latinizations were liturgical innovations, and dropping them and returning to eastern practice was a form of traditionalization.

    • @NGAOPC
      @NGAOPC 28 дней назад

      @@pablononescobar yes, that Vatican II “caused”.

    • @cordasuenaviolin604
      @cordasuenaviolin604 28 дней назад

      So why did Eastern Churches, like the Maronite Church, "Latinise" even further, basically making a Novus Ordo versus populum? The Syro-Malabar also Latinised by celebrating versus populum, something breaking against their longstanding tradition stretching back two millenia. Why? The Eastern Churches were supposed to stop looking to Rome for liturgical guidance, but instead did the opposite. The UGCC, for example, and many other Churches, forcefully vernacularised the language from, say, Old Slavonic to Ukrainian, excommunicating and casting out all who opposed. At elast, in that case, it only happened after the fall of the Soviet bloc in the 1990s. Why so much Latinisation?

    • @NGAOPC
      @NGAOPC 28 дней назад +1

      @@cordasuenaviolin604 you’d have to ask each of their hierarchies, they’re not one Church and didn’t all “do the opposite” and I’m not going to answer for them. This excommunication in 90s Ukraine? - that sound like Society of St Josephat who are SSPX and had organized under Bp. Fellay (Interestingly also favored maintaining Latinizations they had was part of their dissent that led to schism). That was the reason, not simply using Slavonic, which was still used outside Ukraine. I can say I know Primate Shevchuck in 2020 noted Church Slavonic is the language of the UGCC and its importance amid diaspora communities using vernacular in other countries. I’ve only heard English and Slavonic in Uki churches, with one of three in my area liturgy in Ukrainian.

  • @oliverbell5765
    @oliverbell5765 25 дней назад +1

    Do you think the Catholic Church is better off now than it was before Vatican II?

  • @lydiapereira1942
    @lydiapereira1942 27 дней назад

    Bless you Fr Casey

  • @paddy1987ify
    @paddy1987ify 26 дней назад

    Excellent responses to a complicated subject

  • @colinwithonel
    @colinwithonel 28 дней назад +2

    "Sacrosanctum Concilium did not envision what we have in the liturgy today" -- no that is not correct. Everything that is actually in the liturgy today is consistent with Sacrosanctum Concilium, and you can see that in the extensive GIRM footnotes that cite that document at length.
    If what you mean is that all the weird liberalism and gross disobedience in celebrating the liturgy, those things which should not be done, which have no permission in the official documents or from the episcopal authorities, and which often contradict the official documents in explicit ways, then yes, that is not what was envisioned.

    • @briandelaney9710
      @briandelaney9710 28 дней назад +1

      Where’s the Gregorian Chant and Sacred Polyphony ? Where is the Latin in use in parts of the Mass?

    • @colinwithonel
      @colinwithonel 28 дней назад

      @@briandelaney9710 Latin is explicitly used in the English translation of the Missal for a variety of parts, including the Agnus Dei, the Pater Noster, the Sanctus, as well as Greek for the Kyrie. Beyond that I myself have heard Latin used in the Gloria or in other parts. As for Gregorian Chant and Sacred Polyphony, GIRM #41 explicitly instructs this to be in the "main place" and asks for Latin to be understood by the laity for parts of the Ordinary and for the Creed and Pater Noster. There are certainly a variety of musical movements in this country that have risen up to bring Gregorian chant and its recent innovations to the forefront in parishes.
      If you dont see this in your parish, you need to ask, knock, seek, etc. a little more perhaps. Dont let the hippies bully you into accepting their mediocrity. If they wish to ignore the MIssal then they are in the wrong and need to be told this until they recognize it.

    • @ryanscottlogan8459
      @ryanscottlogan8459 28 дней назад

      @@colinwithonel Nonsense.

    • @colinwithonel
      @colinwithonel 28 дней назад

      @@ryanscottlogan8459i thought my remarks were at very least sensibly drafted. If you have some point to make why dont you make it?

  • @eugenteel
    @eugenteel 14 дней назад

    Well said

  • @Nightmare_Mage
    @Nightmare_Mage 28 дней назад

    Thank you for another excellent video Father, I would love a video on the church's history with the Jewish people, Zionism and Israel.

  • @RazboiulInformational
    @RazboiulInformational 26 дней назад

    who convened the first seven ecumenical councils? because according to Catholic doctrine it should have been the pope. if the Pope was invited by someone else to participate in the first seven councils then we have a major problem with papal supremacy.

  • @stevenbergstrom4360
    @stevenbergstrom4360 28 дней назад +3

    That we still have these arguments 60 years later speaks volumes about the real nature of Catholic worship. Form versus substance. ‘I want MY Latin mass” versus “I need real communion during mass.” These aren’t necessarily contradictory but have been forced into apposition by the political transformation of Catholic institutions. Mean while, the Eucharist has lost its centrality and no longer invites the believer to dine at the Lords table

    • @russellmiles2861
      @russellmiles2861 28 дней назад

      meanwhile very few children who attend Church schools continue going to mass. UI guess while arguing about Latin mass you leave the rest of us alone.

  • @thatblissguythatblissguy9703
    @thatblissguythatblissguy9703 17 дней назад

    you pointed to a full answer but it did not appear

  • @jonsumner5899
    @jonsumner5899 28 дней назад

    Actually as a protest I've heard of Vatican II that was really never sure what it was and in fact this was the only Catholic meeting then I had ever heard a specific name for and so I appreciate this information that you provided this video

  • @theoriginaljohn
    @theoriginaljohn 24 дня назад

    i was a lay minister for 10 years and i did a session with my people about Vatican 2, without it we wouldn't be watching catechism videos on RUclips or commenting on them. but i think the problems of old remained, it is just Vatican 2 helped EXPOSING them.
    simple example: when lay people get together from different parts of the world and they talk about faith and practices which they inherited from their parents or from their local priests, it takes 2 minutes to conclude that there are differences, and sometimes dangerous differences.
    Here on RUclips we have for example Father Casey, Father Mike, to name a few, those are faithful and authentic to the faith and church teachings, and it is hard for most people to realize that other channels are wrong just because they resonate with them more.

  • @mickhawkins9864
    @mickhawkins9864 28 дней назад

    Vatican 2 acknowledged not only changes that had occured over a hundred years, not least of which was the effects of the Oxford Movement and the writings of Newman, Mannix, and Knox but also the effects of the Second World War. At Nuremberg, the Defence that one acted in accordance with the directions of a superior was firmly rejected and individual responsibility for actions was recognised. Vatican 1 attempted to deal with the loss of the Papal States and the implications of a secular Italy as much as anything else. Vatican 1 was about individual responsibility and acting in accordance with an informed conscience. Dumping the decision on the priest became more difficult and priest shopping became irrelevant.

  • @Dabhach1
    @Dabhach1 27 дней назад +1

    "Let's not confuse high mass attendance with flourishing." Dear, oh dear, oh dear...

  • @marktapia8327
    @marktapia8327 28 дней назад +3

    I guess my question is why did the Church want more inclusion of the laity?

    • @BreakingInTheHabit
      @BreakingInTheHabit  28 дней назад +9

      Isn't that self evident? All the baptized are called to live holy lives and evangelize, not just the priests.

    • @komnennos
      @komnennos 28 дней назад +1

      ​@@BreakingInTheHabitbut why should I be allowed participate in running the church leadership and administration? Don't we have a hierarchy for a reason?

    • @Rl55322
      @Rl55322 28 дней назад +1

      @@komnennosone reason I have seen is that certain minor issues like a broken window (regular, not stained glass), buying new cleaning supplies, etc can be offloaded to laity, or that specialists like accountants can lend their services to aid a church. This frees up more time for the priest to focus on shepherding his people and drawing more to God. That said, I personally think bigger leadership positions should be reserved for priests alone. We don’t need to hand power over to the laity in order for them to be heard, because what can very easily happen (I’ve seen it on a parish council) is very poorly catechized people who are too caught in feelings and wanting to make decisions end up changing a church. Not every lay person will be like this nor will every priest be free from error, but it opens the door for great error with little opportunity for positive growth. (Last thing I swear: if there aren’t enough priests available, obviously I think trusted lay people should help even if it isn’t ideal. One man cannot run everything in a parish by himself)

    • @russellmiles2861
      @russellmiles2861 28 дней назад

      Liberal democracy embraced in the west ... Kings were out ... We can see what happens when parishioners are ignored ... they leave.

    • @user-lj3hu8fe7g
      @user-lj3hu8fe7g 23 дня назад

      There was a widespread liturgical reform movement in the 20th seeking more participation by the laity long, long before Vatican II.

  • @jessicaf4159
    @jessicaf4159 28 дней назад +1

    My question is how did Lutheran and Anglican services end up almost identical to the Novus Ordo Mass if they split from Catholicism well before Vatican 2?

    • @davidcope5736
      @davidcope5736 27 дней назад +1

      Lutheran and Anglican liturgies have always been derived from the Roman rite, albeit in the vernacular. So there has long been a close similarity. Lutheranism especially has always kept much of the content and ceremony of the Catholic liturgy, Luther's Deutsch messe is very recognisable to any Catholic. The Book of Common Prayer's communion service by Cramner was much more distinct, although still ultimately an adaptation of the Roman rite.
      And the Catholic influence has continued even long after the Reformation. The newer Anglican Book of Common Worship's Order of Communion was remodelled deliberately to be even closer to the Roman Mass.

    • @jessicaf4159
      @jessicaf4159 23 дня назад +1

      @@davidcope5736 Thank you for that explanation! I have been to Lutheran and Episcopalian services and was surprised that most of it is familiar to me. The Bible readings are even the same throughout the year (my mom goes to Episcopalian church and we compare notes). I understood that those branches of Christianity came from Catholicism, but I didn't understand how they were still so similar after Vatican II.

  • @ScreamingReel500
    @ScreamingReel500 18 дней назад

    It's hidden in plain sight as they say. Sometimes I wonder. People in the past surely do not have the information on the tip of their fingers. If they want to know what the Church teaches, they must read. Today, they don't read. This was written 4 centuries ago from a counsel of the Catholic church
    "ARTICLE IX : "I BELIEVE IN THE HOLY CATHOLIC CHURCH; THE
    COMMUNION OF SAINTS"
    The Importance Of This Article
    With what great diligence pastors ought to explain to the faithful the truth of this ninth Article
    will be easily seen, if we attend chiefly to two considerations.
    First, as St. Augustine observes, the Prophets spoke more plainly and openly of the Church than
    of Christ, foreseeing that on this a much greater number may err and be deceived than on the
    mystery of the Incarnation. For in after ages there would not be wanting wicked men who, like
    the ape that would fain pass for a man, would claim that they alone were Catholics, and with no
    less impiety than effrontery assert that with them alone is the Catholic Church.
    The second consideration is that he whose mind is strongly impressed with the truth taught in
    this Article, will easily escape the awful danger of heresy. For a person is not to be called a
    heretic as soon as he shall have offended in matters of faith; but he is a heretic who, having
    disregarded the authority of the Church, maintains impious opinions with pertinacity. Since,
    therefore, it is impossible that anyone be infected with the contagion of heresy, so long as he
    holds what this Article proposes to be believed, let pastors use every diligence that the faithful,
    having known this mystery and guarded against the wiles of Satan, may persevere in the true
    faith.
    This Article hinges upon the preceding one; for, it having been already shown that the Holy
    Ghost is the source and giver of all holiness, we here profess our belief that the Church has been
    endowed by Him with sanctity.

  • @onlyingod
    @onlyingod 19 дней назад

    You cannot on the one hand praise Vatican II and on the other seek to ascertain why the Church or the presence thereof has diminished. Despite all your fine words the answer is obvious! Indeed the outcome of Vatican II was very heavily influenced by disparate sources within the Hierarchy! The outcome was not in line with what John XXXIII envisage when he died!

  • @geraldinetoughey9622
    @geraldinetoughey9622 27 дней назад

    If one feels moved by religious music that is just aesthetics, as pointed out by Fr Benny McHale at the Knock novena a few years ago.

    • @user-lj3hu8fe7g
      @user-lj3hu8fe7g 23 дня назад

      That's true in a way....but....the Church since very early times has used art, music, incense, to try to help people turn their thoughts and souls away from the passing world and toward the divine and the eternal. Aesthetics are not the aim, correct, but they really can help....or not help.

  • @fcaacf2291
    @fcaacf2291 28 дней назад +1

    And nevertheless.., latin doesn't change. And the truths which were expressed by means of it remain intangible and unchanged. I keep on searching Father, and God knows I appreciate your knowledge and the way you articulate it, but I have to acknowledge that.... Sedevacantism has become compelling to me...

    • @tonyalongi4409
      @tonyalongi4409 28 дней назад

      Sedevacantism is a dead-end. Once you accept the idea that the Pope, and therefore the teaching authority of the Church (which is apostolic, and thus *must* have a visible constitution and unbroken apostolic succession) can fall into error and heresy, you've thrown everything the Church ever taught into question. If the Magisterium can defect in 1962, who's to say it couldn't have happened before? Tradition becomes a free-for-all, subject to everyone's fallible, personal judgment.
      In short, sedevacantism is protestantism in denial. In my mind, there's no point in being Catholic...or even Christian...if the Church's teaching authority, which brought Christ to us to begin with, is so capable of falling into error.

    • @zombiekiller13able
      @zombiekiller13able 28 дней назад

      Sedevacantism is just Protestantism wearing the skin of Catholicism when taken to its logical conclusion, friend.

  • @donaldshelton1720
    @donaldshelton1720 28 дней назад

    I grew up with the old rite, I never want to go back. But communion wine , incense mor singing etc is needed. Too often mass is just not reverent.

  • @RedKnight-fn6jr
    @RedKnight-fn6jr 28 дней назад

    Vatican III could sort out within its congregation, a major problem associated with Christian Churches in general. There would need to be a major emphasis on bringing God into all of livelihood and to clarify the issue of double lifestyles that seem common - for example, the idea of going to Church and carrying out rituals to 'keep God happy' in the absence of any meaningful change to the lives we as Christians live out in the world. True repentance would mean a change of heart and a re-evaluation of the way we live. It's no use going to Church everyday (regardless of denomination) while offending those close by and doing wrong in general. Although I'm of a different Christian faith, I do feel that the Catholic Church could lead the way in solving this widespread problem in the Christian Community.

  • @jamesdarcy666
    @jamesdarcy666 27 дней назад

    I believe only in the US they care so much about the reforms of Vatican II. In Latin America we want a Church closer to us. Furthermore, I don't understand this longing for the Latin mass (and I have a degree in classical studies and read Latin). In this sense, a mass in ancient Greek or Aramaic would be better.

  • @turperper
    @turperper 26 дней назад

    I wonder why Roman Catholicism seemed more Protestant after they returned to tradition

  • @Forsthman64
    @Forsthman64 24 дня назад +1

    BUT THE CHURCH DIDN"T THRIVE!!!

  • @MM22272
    @MM22272 27 дней назад

    Excellent presentation, Father Casey. Perhaps you can make a video on the Canadian Bishops Winnipeg Statement in which they they basically endorse contraception and contradict Humane Vitae and have failed to resend it

  • @CountesssBathory
    @CountesssBathory 28 дней назад

    im in RCIA and this is one question I've had for a while

  • @PeteHob
    @PeteHob 28 дней назад

    My main concern with Vatican to has to do with the Mass itself. Once you allow changes in such a well established tradition, then human beings tend to see how far they can go with changing other things. Not everybody of course, but there are always some. During the times of the traditional Latin mass, a person who could go to any church in the country, I suppose the world, and hear the same mass with nothing and nothing taken away. After Vatican, it seems to me that you had to go “ shopping” around to find a parish that you liked or rather could live with. I was attending at one parish and they went out of the way to behave and look Catholic at least my eyes. When they built their new church, they had no crucifix in the church. It will sound like a very trivial thing, but the final straw for me was when lent started. The statues were covered with cloth as they were traditionally, but the clock was a kind of baby blue color. They tried to explain that it was a shade of purple. So that was it for me. As full disclosure, one reason I feel this way is that I had fallen away from going to Mass sometime in high school right around or maybe just before the changes were implemented. When I came back around 1982 everything seemed glaringly different. So what I’m saying is I didn’t live with any kind of gradual transition. Just my two cents. Stay well all. Deo Gratias.

  • @Rene_Lhote
    @Rene_Lhote 28 дней назад +1

    So much devision, even in these comments. So sad.

  • @ScreamingReel500
    @ScreamingReel500 18 дней назад

    Who is guiding the Church if they claimed the Papacy and the College of Bishops are the enemy, and they will not follow the teachings of that counsel? Of course they have to set up a usurpation, a parallel church, or live in a state of schism/auto excommunication. I don't see the way they interpret the Scriptures any different than that of Protestant, accept what they like and reject what they don't.

  • @sololoquy3783
    @sololoquy3783 27 дней назад

    The Eucharist gets me every time. I don't case if the priest is facing me or not. I see Christ being lifted up, and I get goosebumps.
    Though, I do think TLM has its own charm and should stay! I just wish some TLM people weren't so high & mighty about it, like they're begging for it to be taken away.

    • @Hedgehogz856
      @Hedgehogz856 26 дней назад

      TLM will stay so don’t worry, the Pope has said the special fraternities like FSSP and the one that starts with ick or something I don’t really know will stay and be allowed to celebrate TLM, plus there is SSPX which Pope Francis made a totally valid form of mass which you can go to, take the Eucharist, and even confess in

  • @LearndingLife
    @LearndingLife 28 дней назад

    Beautifully said brother! (I know father, but I'm only little c catholic 😂 )I really do love your videos and your channel though, you speak in power and truth and my prayer is one day for the whole body to be united, because we got screwed on the Eucharist (Communion is awesome, but it's not the same) we got the lay reach, both together, add in our Greek brothers and sisters, and show unity and uniformity are not the same calling or the same thing.

  • @bradyenjacobs6954
    @bradyenjacobs6954 28 дней назад +4

    Reuniting Christianity should be vatican lll

    • @77thTrombone
      @77thTrombone 28 дней назад +1

      Ha! Right after solving droughts in deserts, overpopulation & hunger, crime, and global warming.
      Seriously, there are many Protestants who are devoted to the word, but who wouldn't touch Catholicism with a 10' pole. For some, there's a rigidity in opposing rigidity. For example, I was in a Protestant service a few months ago where the pastor practically apologized that the prayer he was about to say "was not a ritual." Imagine looking over your own shoulder so much to avoid even the slightest appearance of ritual.
      Reunification is a noble cause, but I think the ongoing fracturing of protestant denominations highlights a streak of theological independence (self-righteousness?) that would not tolerate a magisterium.

    • @alessandroarsuffi9227
      @alessandroarsuffi9227 28 дней назад +2

      ​@@77thTrombonereuniting with the Orthodox would be a priority, and maybe with High Church Anglicans and some Old Catholics who didn't protestantize their faiths.
      Protestants just wait for they're own self-destruction before they come back to the Apostolic Faith.

    • @carolynkimberly4021
      @carolynkimberly4021 28 дней назад

      The only way to reunite Christianity is through actual ecumenism -- the heretics renouncing their heresies and returning to the Catholic Church.

    • @Rl55322
      @Rl55322 28 дней назад

      @@alessandroarsuffi9227yeah that’s a better goal. The only fate for Protestants is to either convert back to tradition and, even if gradually over the course of generations, return to Catholicism; or the opposite where they can spiral so far they no longer remain Christian in any meaningful way, using our lords name to label themselves as such but severing all other ties. This hasn’t quite happened yet, but I believe by the end Christianity will be united as one and we know that will be in the Catholic Church. Regardless, lets pray for the conversion of even the most crazed of Protestants

    • @77thTrombone
      @77thTrombone 28 дней назад

      @@alessandroarsuffi9227 I think those reunifications are certainly the most doable. As you get further from those groups, it gets exponentially more difficult for various reasons, some better founded, others very poorly founded.

  • @ChristIsLord7
    @ChristIsLord7 28 дней назад +3

    Where can I read the actual Vatican 2 documents so I can read exactly what it taught? I’ve always wanted to do that since becoming a catholic in 2020.

    • @alessandroarsuffi9227
      @alessandroarsuffi9227 28 дней назад

      Go on the Vatican website and select your language. At the bottom of the page, you can slide and find the link RESOURCE LIBRARY. Click it.
      On the page that opens, click ECUMENICAL COUNCILS and later SECOND VATICAN COUNCIL.
      The page contains all Constitutions, Declarations, and Decrees of VATICAN 2.

    • @BreakingInTheHabit
      @BreakingInTheHabit  28 дней назад +6

      All free online in more than a dozen languages: www.vatican.va/archive/hist_councils/ii_vatican_council/index.htm

    • @tafazziReadChannelDescription
      @tafazziReadChannelDescription 28 дней назад +1

      Lovely attitude!

    • @killianmiller6107
      @killianmiller6107 28 дней назад +1

      Would you agree the Vatican website needs a redesign?

    • @ChristIsLord7
      @ChristIsLord7 28 дней назад

      @@BreakingInTheHabit thank you father

  • @coleweathersbee2388
    @coleweathersbee2388 28 дней назад

    How would the Mass of Paul VI be considered “Protestant-Resembling” ? In what way because the radical reforms of the Anglican/Episcopal Church didn’t come until after Vatican II was convened

  • @TheGrenadier97
    @TheGrenadier97 28 дней назад

    The answer lies on how the post-conciliar Church prays the new liturgy.