<http://www.ucanews.com/2008/10/08/traditional-latin-mass-movement-is-appreciated-by-a-noticeable-number-of-young-working-adults>SINGAPORE
 
Traditional Latin Mass Draws Young Working Adults
October 8, 2008  |  SG05819.1518  |  698 words     Text size
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SINGAPORE (UCAN) -- "Dominus vobiscum" (the Lord be with you), the 
priest says, and about 40 people answer, "Et cum spiritu tuo" (and 
with your spirit). The priest then turns his back on them and 
continues the opening prayer facing the cross and tabernacle.

singapore_1.gif
A traditional Latin Mass has begun in the bright chapel of St. 
Joseph's Institution International School. This Mass, held the fourth 
Sunday of every month, follows the liturgical books published with 
the approval of Blessed John XXIII in 1962, before that pope opened 
the Second Vatican Council (1962-65). It features Gregorian chant, 
and only the homily is not in Latin.

What immediately strikes a first-time visitor to this Mass, organized 
by the Traditional Latin Mass (TLM) movement in Singapore, is the 
congregation. The young working adults, mostly in their 20s, who make 
up about three-fourths of the people were born after local languages 
replaced Latin in liturgies following Vatican Council II.

Only Catholics 45 and older, just one-fourth of this group, would 
have had the chance to attend the traditional Mass in Latin as 
children. Jenson Tay, coordinator for the TLM movement, did not.

The 28-year-old tonsured seminarian is taking a leave of absence 
after his first year of seminary life with the Priestly Fraternity of 
St. Peter (FSSP) in Australia. The fraternity, founded in 1988 with 
Pope John Paul II's approval, trains its priests to celebrate the 
traditional Latin liturgy, which the Church recognizes as an 
extraordinary form of the Roman rite.

Tay also spoke of his role as "master of ceremonies" in another Latin 
Mass, held the second Sunday of every month at the Church of Our Lady 
of Perpetual Succour.

That Mass uses the ordinary form of the Roman rite, used around the 
world today, in which the priest faces the congregation. But 
everything except the Scripture readings and homily are in Latin 
rather than a local language. Gregorian chant is used for the hymns.

Tay ensures the smooth conduct of these parish liturgies, which draw 
around 100 parishioners. The TLM movement does not organize them but 
sees them as a way to promote Latin as a liturgical language.

About 20 active members make up the movement's core team, which has 
three sub-groups: Schola Cantorum, the Gregorian chant choir; altar 
servers; and logistics.

Several times while speaking with UCA News, Tay stressed that 
movement members have no association with the Society of St. Pius X, 
which rejects the liturgical reforms of Vatican Council II and is not 
in full communion with the Church.

The TLM community has "remained faithful to the local bishop and the 
Holy Father," and demonstrates this through "patience, obedience and 
perseverance," Tay insisted. He added that despite hindrances such as 
being denied use of a church for their Masses and being openly 
criticized for "rejecting" the Second Vatican Council, community 
members patiently believe the archdiocese will one day open a Mass 
center for them.

Educated young TLM members "read Church documents and want to worship 
in the way the Church wants them to," Tay said. Other members "grew 
up with the traditional Mass," often called the Tridentine Mass.

Father Paul Staes, ordained in 1961, also grew up with the 
traditional Mass but sees two main problems with its use in Singapore today.

People can learn to recite the prayers, but "you don't know what you 
are saying, because you don't know Latin," said the priest, who spent 
six years studying the language. "It's like having a Mass in sign 
language where no one is deaf."

Even if everyone understood Latin, he continued, the old form of the 
Mass raises a more fundamental issue.

"As priest, you are doing your own thing, and the people are doing 
their own thing. Is Mass not more a participatory event of the 
people? To me, one of the biggest achievements of the Second Vatican 
Council was the new form of the Mass. The language is not the most 
important thing; it's the whole set-up," Father Staes told UCA News.

Tay, far from a diehard traditionalist, confided to UCA News that he 
likes contemporary praise and worship songs, only "outside of 
liturgy." He believes the TLM movement can help Catholics regain 
reverence for the Mass.

END

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so that all our prayers and works may begin in You and by You be happily ended.
We ask this through Christ our Lord.
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