Added: 3 years ago
From: ZonjushaMalsore
Views: 65,081
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  • call me old fashioned but I believe there is something very magnificent and BEAUTIFUL in singing Kyrie, e lesion

  • je pense aussi que faire la messe en latin, de temps en temps, surtout pendant les jours de fête, ne serait pas plus mal. je suisafricain et j'entendais plus de latin en afrique, qu'en europe où je vis maintenant.

  •  DUMNEZEIESC

  • Placet.

  • ahhh, just like i remember it from St. Annes, Copenhagen.

  • Wow. you can even here the thurible in the background.

  • @bmccoy78

    That's actually what I like best about this version. I find the rhythmic clanking of the thurible relaxing.

  • Mesha me me famë në botë. Faleminderit.

  • beautiful!

  • très très très beau!!! Excéllent!!! Stupend!!!

  • très beau chant

  • Thanks for posting this. As i say, latin ( well in this case greek ) must return to our churches as a matter of urgency.

  • It isn't so much the Latin the needs to return to our Churches, but the recognition of the presence of Christ and the proper solemnity that that should entail.

    I've experienced a few Masses in the Vernacular which retained the proper solemnity, and made you leave amazed. When looking at Catholic liturgy, we need to realize that the Latin language, though beautiful, is not a necessary facet of our liturgical experience.

  • @SemperServiam I get your point, but I must say I disagree. It's obvious that what lacks today is solemnity and respect for the presence of Christ, but I do believe that Latin is a necessary point. Latin is the language of the Roman Church; considering that we, as human beings, speak the language of our mothers, why shoudn't we take part in the most important thing our spiritual Mother has, i.e. the Holy Liturgy, in its proper language, in HER universal (καθόλου>catholic) language?

  • After all, the Apostles did not use the Tridentine rite, and neither do our Orthodox or Eastern brothers and sisters, yet their liturgies remain valid and proper because of the reverence for God.

    Unfortunately, with Vatican II, much of the solemnity of the Catholic Mass was sacrificed for simplicity and a modern, often horribly Protestant expression. The Sanctity of the Most Blessed Sacrament, while not truly losing its value, lost respect and understanding with these changes.

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