
Dear Rev. Know it all,
Why must we endure more
monkeying around with the Mass? Isn’t this just another attempt to roll back the
great advances made during the times of the Second Vatican Council?
Why can’t we just have the Mass in plain ordinary English?
Sincerely,
Verne A. Kiular
Dear Verne,
Perhaps a look back in
History might help, a look far back, before the Second Vatican Council, back
before the First Vatican Council, back to one of the least known and most
misunderstood of Church Councils: Vatican Zero.
Vatican Zero is not
accepted as a true Church council because we know so little about it. We have
only fragmentary evidence and this is gathered from the remnants of a treatise
by St. Euflimsius the Stylite, titled “What are These Goofballs Up to Now?” (In
Latin, “Quaecumque Facient Hi Stulti Nunc?”)
Another problem is that this particular gathering was held under no known
Church auspices.
It is to be remembered that
at the time the Vatican was not the home of the Holy Father. It was the Emperor
Nero’s favorite race track. Those who question the importance of the council
remind us that there seem to have more bookies present at it than theologians.
When asked if he planned to send representative to the meeting, Pope Clement
responded “Mercules! Congregare deliris istis?
Nunquam!” (Good heavens! Meet with those loons? Never!)
The Treatise begins with “Introivit
anas in tabernam....” this seems to be an attempt at humor which
loses
more than a little in translation. St. Euflimsius goes on to decry the replacing
of the noble Greek language with barbaric Latin tongue. However, Euflimsius
comes out solidly in opposition to any return to Aramaic at all as a surrender
to the hard core reactionaries of the Jerusalem and Damascus Churches.
Remember that Latin was
allowed in the Mass because it was the NEW vernacular. The universal language of
commerce was Greek. Greek was used from Germany in the north to Egypt in the
south, from Spain and England in the west to India in the east. East of the
Jordan, Aramaic, a Semitic language closely related to Hebrew and still spoken
by modern Assyrians, was better known. It was the vernacular until Christianity
caught on in Alexandra, Egypt and in Rome which were Greek speaking cities.
There were more people in
Rome who spoke Greek than Latin at the time of Christ. It was an international
city whose immigrant population, if one includes slaves, probably exceeded its
native population. Antioch in Syria and Alexandra in Egypt were also thoroughly
Greek cities. The Church used Aramaic in the east and Greek in the west.
As the second and third
centuries unfolded, Christianity slowly caught on in the wild west, in Carthage
(Tunisia) and Spain, Germany, Italy and Northern France. Southern France around
Marseilles was largely Greek speaking. As the empire started to split along a
sort of cultural fault line stretching down the coast of the former Yugoslavia,
the west including Rome began to speak Latin more commonly and the use of Greek
died out in the far west. The Christian East from Syria to India spoke Aramaic,
and the Christian heartland, Northern Egypt, Turkey, the Holy Land and Greece
continued to speak Greek.
The Islamic conquest of the
Christian heartland changed all that. By 750, after beginning in about 630 AD,
the missionaries of Islam had conquered the Christian world from Spain to
Pakistan leaving only Greece, France and Italy as major Christian lands. The
Aramaic speaking Church in the east was eclipsed by the Muslim conquest and even
the Greek and Latin speaking areas of North Africa and Syria slowly started
speaking Arabic, the language of the conquerors. It was not such a
stretch for the Christians of the east, because Arabic like Hebrew and Aramaic,
is a Semitic language, but the Latin and Greek culture of Egypt, Libya, Morocco
and Tunisia were wiped out.
The Greek speaking
heartland of Christianity slowly fell to the Muslims beginning with the gradual
conquest of Turkey beginning around 1000 AD. That meant that the
center of the Christian world moved to what had been the far west of the
classical world. It was practiced mostly by hulking, unwashed, illiterate
barbarians, from whom I happen to be descended.
They didn’t get out much,
except for the occasional crusade. Most people in Europe of the dark ages never
got more than five miles away from home. Each little village had its own
dialect. It was unwritten and incomprehensible to those from the next town over.
You still see traces of it in Europe. My mother’s cousins in Lower Upper Hessia
(Yes there really is such a place) get into heated discussions with my father’s
cousins from about seven miles down the road as to which village speaks a better
form of German dialect. To me, both dialects sound like the Swedish chef on a
bender. (Note to the humor impaired; the Swedish chef is a puppet character who
talks with a vaguely Scandinavian accent) And don’t get me started on the
Bavarians. No one can understand them. Probably just as well.
Where was I? Oh yes, Latin
was the only possible common language in the West. It was spoken by anyone who
could read, and by many who couldn’t until about 1750! Sir Isaac Newton wrote
his best stuff in Latin. It was the only way it could be read by scholars
worldwide.
So you see, dear reader,
language has it’s problems. It is always creating incomprehensible dialects.
Let’s look at simple liturgical phrase, “the Lord be with you”. In some places
it would be perfectly acceptable to translate this as “Yo, What up dog?”
Americans, especially those
from the Bridgeport area of Chicago, talk funny. I remember a rather tedious
Englishman who lectured me every time I asked him to pass the butter. I, having
been raised to speak Prince Richard’s English don’t say “butter.” I
say “Budder”, all the while thinking I am saying “Butter.” He would remonstrate
with me endlessly saying “but-t-t-t-er.” To which I would respond,
“That’s what I’m saying, you English twit! Now please pass the @$#%! budder!”
Surely if you are a native
of the People’s Republic of Chicago you have caught yourself using those
colorful dialectical phrases, such as “Jeet yet?” (Did you eat
yet?) “No, d’jew?” (No, did you?)
Language changes as fast as
a pair dice on an Indiana craps table. This is why universal languages appear.
It’s the only way people who live more than five miles apart can talk to each
other. English is the new Latin. It is spoken by about 1.8 billion people world
wide. Airplane Pilots have to speak English lest there be chaos in the skies.
There are more people in China who speak English than there are in the United
States. They may not speak it well, but they manage. Especially if you are in a
souvenir shop in Shanghai. If you only speak an obscure language like Flemish or
high-middle Bridgeport and, having been shanghaied, find yourself in Shanghai,
you are going to have problems. But, if you come from Belgium where the
eponymous Flemish language is spoken, you probably speak English better than
this author does. So, English is the new Latin.
Now to insult everyone! The
die hards who can’t stand the Vernacular Mass need to remember that Latin was
once the controversial new vernacular. Those who don’t want to return to a more
precise and universal translation of the Vernacular Mass need to admit that
American is increasingly different from English. And Sout’ Side English bears
little resemblance to either. Stop being so narrow and provincial
and learn to speak English, not just American.
So Verne, to answer your
question, we are going to translate the Missal into modern English. Finally!
Peace wit’ all yous guys,
Rev. Know it all
(Next week we’ll look at
the actual text and have fun mocking the “dynamic equivalence” school of
language translation.)
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