What is happening to Catholicism? Was Vatican II a precursor to its troubles or a cause? What did the council set out to do? For many, the biggest change was the virtual elimination of the Latin Mass. Masses can now be said in the local language. This is fine and dandy, but what happens when a Catholic visits a Polish parish in Poland? Or even in my case, when an American visits Winnipeg and sits through a Mass in French? The language becomes insurmountable. Sure, we know what section of the Mass we are in, but how can we know which version of the Eucharistic prayer is being used? How can foreigner follow a Mass not in his native language? Too bad, so sad?
This is one example of Day’s book where he excoriates some legacies of Vatican II that panders to the great unwashed. This includes dumbing down the liturgy, conformity to a single person’s whim whether that person is a bishop or a pastor, the use of contemporary composers to supplant many old hymns. When I was a kid, I attended Masses in Latin and I would have been good to attend such a Mass anywhere in the world. Sure, I did not have fluency in Latin, but I picked up a lot from the bi-lingual missals that were available: English on one side and Latin on the other. It was fun to see the English and Latin compared and try to figure out how one language translated to the other. Day also addresses issues surrounding architecture and singing. He sees these as dull and predictable. So, generally, the book does not care for how the Church has become formulaic and thus lost its soul.