presbyter wrote:Does the moderated red removal refer to -http://www.caterinati.org.uk/aim.html - Society of Saint Catherine of Siena?
Alas, no. It was, as stated, a flame.
Moderators: Dom Perignon, Casimir
presbyter wrote:Does the moderated red removal refer to -http://www.caterinati.org.uk/aim.html - Society of Saint Catherine of Siena?
presbyter wrote:Southern Comfort wrote:and Alcuin Reid's The Organic Development of the Liturgy is well worth the read - and it says a lot about active participation.
NorthernTenor wrote:SC wrote:On a point of fact, the Vatican's English translation of Sacramentum Caritatis contains the following:(see footnote [6]).I am referring here to the need for a hermeneutic of continuity also with regard to the correct interpretation of the liturgical development which followed the Second Vatican Council
Yes, but the problem with TF's blog is that at the time he christened it the only relevant quote from BXVI referred to "a hermeneutic of rupture" with the past. TF made up his title. The papal endorsement appears to have come along much later.
Southern Comfort wrote:The problem is that no one can see who the "flame" was about, due to the vital omission of the conjunction "and". In fact it referred to two people who had already been mentioned in the thread. It was nothing to do with the Society of St Catherine of Siena.
The second problem, which is a moderation problem, is that there is a significant grey area between what can be described as a flame and what can be described as fair comment.
At the risk of getting another warning, I have to say that musicus has evidently not been reading what the said gentlemen have written over the past several years, both in print and on blogs. Nor, it seems, has he been following their activities not only as recorded on various YouTube videos but also in journals which are readily available to the general public. This is what I was commenting on.
At what point can one's reactions to this sort of thing be muzzled? I do think that the whole concept of "fair comment" is a thread which we could legitimately debate.
I do apologise for any distress caused, but I also feel that the Society and its members need to be able to point out when opinions are being quoted which are not necessarily all that they might seem. If there is a better way of doing this, let's hear about it.
mcb wrote:Worse still is the way proponents usually disregard the word hermeneutic in favour of the word whose meaning they actually understand.
presbyter wrote: hermeneuticus ................................. explicationis.
Both words can mean a method or style of interpretation.
Southern Comfort wrote:Thank you, musicus, for the reply.
my aim … was to ensure that readers … were aware of where some of those cited were coming from … I do not include Professor Dobszay among these… However, some of those who are lending support to him may not be so well known to readers of this board, and it was my intention to provide an indication that their motives may not be (and in my opinion certainly are not, judging from their track records) identical with his.