The article is from a conservative blog about things liturgical, and comes to a conclusion in favour of restoring some use of the Tridentine Missal (the 'classical rite', it's called in those circles). But as a discussion of the proper way for liturgy to evolve it has interesting things to say to the rest of us too.
Two quotes to whet the appetite:
from the beginning until the sixteenth century, broadly speaking the sanction in the liturgy was not 'law' but 'custom'.
The whole development of the classic liturgies is by continual liturgical experiment. Every church had its 'customary' way of doing the liturgy, which was 'customary' only because it adequately expressed that church's mind and belief as to what the eucharistic action is and means. Whenever an idea which seemed to enrich that conception was encountered, whether in the teaching or in the devotional experience of that church itself, in the rites of other churches or in the works of theologians, it could be and was incorporated into the customary rite. If, after the only trial of which such things are capable, a period of actual use at the altar, it was found that it did more fully express the eucharistic action, it was absorbed into the local eucharistic experience as something which had become that church's own, and permanently incorporated into the local eucharistic tradition. If it did not serve, then ultimately it fell out of use again.
A message for our times?
M.