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T. Acolyte's avatar

I agree with your point, but something nags me from my parish experience. I attend a very traditional parish. It has both the NO and TLM. Our NO is celebrated on the old high altar with sung propers, hymns, incense, kneeling to receive etc. It is consistently better attended than our TLM high masses celebrated every Sunday. It seems to me that our NO mass is liked more than the TLM. I think there is a bigger market for reverent NO then trads give it credit for.

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Deacon Brad's avatar

The structure of the NO fights against devotion to it simply because it has so many options. Options require subjective choices, which moves the focus from the sacrifice of Jesus to the priest celebrant or music director or deacon who chooses this prayer or that hymn or the other dismissal. It's jerky because everyone has a line in order that we might actively participate, jerkiness is not conducive to prayer or devotion. TLM: one focus (Jesus), one agent (priest), on prayer (Roman Canon). NO: kaleidescopic focus (Us!), multiple ministers, countless options.

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