So the question is: was Benedict lying? Surely not. Was he badly advised? That seems certain. Was what he said the truth? It seems clear that it was not, and that is where this issue keeps rumbling on and on. Benedict himself may well not have realized that what he said was not the truth, because he had received incorrect advice. No one is accusing him of lying, therefore, but perhaps there is the possibility of a lack of good judgement.Because the other possibility, that the Holy Father may have been right and Paul Inwood wrong, is clearly inconceivable. It's not as though the Holy Father has any particular interest or expertise in Liturgy, unlike Inwood...
Sunday Mass Readings
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Sunday, November 24Christ the King – SolemnityRoman Ordinary calendar St.
Andrew Dung-Lac and His Companions Book of Daniel 7,13-14. As the visions
during ...
9 hours ago
5 comments:
I'm not sure this Inwood fellow knows what he's talking about.
He seems to have overlooked the possibility that the Pope, being a pretty considerable theologian in his own right (even if not a "trained liturgist"), might have studied the documents and reached his own conclusion.
Oy! Inwood! That's Pope Benedict to you.
I like the fact that he says that the whole thing is easy to verify he cites Worship magazine rather than the Magisterium.
Not good for my blood pressure on a Saturday morning.
Paul Inwood, you are now on my little list...
You really won't be missed . .
It is surely somewhat perplexing that someone who has neither interest nor attachment to the Extraordinary Form of the Roman Rite appears so exercised by it!
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