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Author Topic: A teens view on the TLM  (Read 986 times)

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Offline Petertherock

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A teens view on the TLM
« on: December 11, 2013, 05:54:07 AM »
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  • This is a great article!

    http://reginamag.com/teens-view-latin-mass/



    A Teen’s View on the Latin Mass

    by Anya Proctor

    I am nineteen years old. All my life I’ve known the Novus Ordo Mass, where, as a young teenager, my attention would often wander. I’d gaze around at people, at their outfits and personalities, or think about school, or what I’d eat for lunch.

    Then I would snap back to reality, feeling guilty for not paying attention. I loved God, and understood the basics of my faith, but going to church was just sort of something I did every week. It wasn’t a fully spiritual experience.

    On top of that, homilies often got weird. Priests would drabble on about other religions, the gospel of Judas, funny stories in the newspaper, irrelevant anecdotes, and even blatant heresies.

    When my family moved to a small town, the weird Masses just became intolerable. Our first Sunday in the new town involved a priest using props on the altar to demonstrate his homily—as if we were all five-year-olds.

    Homilies often got weird. Priests would drabble on about other religions, the gospel of Judas, funny stories in the newspaper, irrelevant anecdotes, and even blatant heresies.

    My First Latin Mass at the Cathedral

    We decided to attend the traditional Latin Mass an hour away from home. Stepping into a Cathedral was impressive, but celebrating Mass with the images of Jesus, the apostles, and the angels beautifully crafted onto the walls and windows of a strong, awe-inspiring place offered me a spiritual experience I’d never had before.

    I did not get to know the priest’s personality at this Mass. I came to know God. I got to fully experience Christ Incarnate in flesh and blood, on my knees, deep in silence and prayer — to meditate on his union with me as he was placed reverently on my tongue by his holy servant. I closed my eyes when I received Jesus. I felt physically, spiritually, and emotionally transformed. Many times in the Cathedral, tears have come to me as I have prayed and focused on Jesus’s love and sacrifice for me.



    I felt physically, spiritually, and emotionally transformed. Many times in the Cathedral, tears have come to me as I have prayed and focused on Jesus’s love and sacrifice for me.

    Why the Latin Mass?

    At this Mass, I do not want to immediately leave church to dwell in the world with material things and selfish preoccupations. I want to dwell in that moment with Jesus forever. Not until I was 19 years old did I fully understand the spiritual gift of the Eucharist—this sacred cornerstone of the Catholic faith.

    The Novus Ordo focuses on people: shaking hands, singing folksy songs, laughing at jokes, watching people participate in a nice little ceremony.

    But Mass is not intended to celebrate people. That’s for luncheons, birthday parties, and maybe youth groups—but not Mass. The Mass is for the Lord. The Mass is where the priest is so reverent he faces the Lord, not the people, so that they don’t focus on him, but only on Christ.

    The Mass is for kneeling, praying, meditating with silent hearts which bring us closer to God. The Mass is for uniting with our Savior, who became a human being so he could horribly suffer on our behalf—have his flesh nailed to a wooden cross and be humiliated in front of an entire nation so we might live forever.



    Isn’t the least we could do show Him respect at the holiest point on Earth, where he meets us at the altar? Can we kneel down for Him? Close our eyes for Him? Realize that He is too sacred to touch with our sinful hands? Give up an hour of focusing on ourselves and instead focus all of our energy solely on Him? These ideas are lost and degraded in the new Mass.

    A Catholic at College



    So, as a college student, among people preoccupied with themselves and the things of the world, I find it difficult to connect with others about the way the Traditional Mass changed my life. Not even among Catholics.

    I attend a medium-sized liberal arts university in Florida. We have one Catholic group on campus, which attends a Novus Ordo Mass. It’s so hard to participate in that Mass since being transformed by the Latin Mass, so now I drive every Sunday by myself to worship and receive the Lord.

    I am lonely sometimes. Not just because I drive to Mass alone, but because I am largely alone here, period. I don’t know if anyone at my school really shares the same values as me. This is because the spirit of Latin Mass encourages a reverence which requires devout compliance. It’s hard to say Latin Mass and then hurt God by partying on Saturday nights, enjoying crude jokes, or devoting energy toward anything at all that doesn’t glorify Him.

    Now, I’m no better than anyone and am a great sinner. But I no longer have the same desires as my fellow classmates. When I meditate so deeply on the Lord as the Latin Mass enables me, I feel so spiritually inclined to serve God and no one else—not money, possessions, or even self-satisfaction. These are all inferior to the fullness of serving God.

    So although I might go to Mass alone, and be alone much of the time, I am never truly alone, because Christ is here with me when I pray at night, or say the rosary at my desk, or go to Mass on Sunday.



    And that is enough.

    I am lonely sometimes. Not just because I drive to Mass alone, but because I am largely alone here, period. I don’t know if anyone at my school really shares the same values as me.


    Offline TKGS

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    A teens view on the TLM
    « Reply #1 on: December 11, 2013, 06:33:34 AM »
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  • I have had conversations with my children that are very similar to what this person says.  My oldest three, who have real memories of the Novus Ordo, would say just about the same thing about how they sat through the services, except, I think, they didn't feel guilty about daydreaming--that was the only thing that made sitting through the service bearable.  The only reason they even tried to listen to the homilies was because they knew I was going to discuss it with them later--to correct some of the things the priests said and I would be disappointed in them if they didn't remember anything that he said.

    My younger children either have no memory of the Novus Ordo or a vague memory of the old Novus Ordo parish and some of the people, but, Frankly, they don't remember the actual service at all.  Through a series of coincidences, my youngest accompanied his uncle's family to a Novus Ordo service a few years ago and, when asked about it later by another relative said that it wasn't a Catholic Church.  


    Offline Tiffany

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    A teens view on the TLM
    « Reply #2 on: December 11, 2013, 06:40:50 AM »
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  • It's a shame young trad women are attending college instead of being married, in a convent, or helping their mothers or guardians.

    Offline soulguard

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    A teens view on the TLM
    « Reply #3 on: December 11, 2013, 07:51:49 AM »
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  • The Latin mass has a miraculous way of converting lifestyles. I know this from my own experience. I converted 5 years ago and began going to Latin mass. It takes over your life and gives you a reason to exist. Enough cant be said for the TLM. It is truly the most flawless act of man.

    Offline OHCA

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    A teens view on the TLM
    « Reply #4 on: December 11, 2013, 09:40:36 AM »
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  • Great article--dead on across the board.  I was horrible about daydreaming when I attended the NO--everytime.  But I cannot recall any specific instance of daydreaming since I left conciliardom.  I had not even given this aspect any thought until I read this article.


    Offline Frances

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    A teens view on the TLM
    « Reply #5 on: December 11, 2013, 11:01:00 AM »
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  •  :dancing-banana:
    As a very young child, ages 2, 3, 4, I loved going to Mass with my Grandmother.  It was still in Latin at that time and place, rural Northwestern Connecticut, 1962-1964.  Where I lived, it just wasn't the same.  After 1966, it was changed everywhere, so I never learned the Mass in the intellectual sense.  By my teen years, "Church" was just somewhere I went because it pleased my father and he required it.  The Mass of my early years was finally rediscovered at age 45 after spending 25 years seeking Truth in Protestantism.  Young people, appreciate what you have!
     St. Francis Xavier threw a Crucifix into the sea, at once calming the waves.  Upon reaching the shore, the Crucifix was returned to him by a crab with a curious cross pattern on its shell.  

    Offline Capt McQuigg

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    A teens view on the TLM
    « Reply #6 on: December 11, 2013, 01:55:04 PM »
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  • Quote from: Tiffany
    It's a shame young trad women are attending college instead of being married, in a convent, or helping their mothers or guardians.


    She's new to the TLM.  God willing, she will do one of the three action items you mentioned.   :cheers:

    Offline LoverOfTradition

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    A teens view on the TLM
    « Reply #7 on: December 11, 2013, 07:21:30 PM »
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  • Quote from: soulguard
    The Latin mass has a miraculous way of converting lifestyles. I know this from my own experience. I converted 5 years ago and began going to Latin mass. It takes over your life and gives you a reason to exist. Enough cant be said for the TLM. It is truly the most flawless act of man.


    This is very true, soulguard. Without the Church and the TLM, I would be lost.

    The TLM is everything.