By Fr. Higgins
•
July 21, 2024
On Monday, July 15th, amidst the rumors that Pope Francis was on the point of issuing new restrictions upon the celebration of the Traditional Latin Mass, an open letter was published, signed by a group of prominent cultural and intellectual personalities in the United States, both Catholics and nonCatholics. The Letter was entitled: An Open Letter from the Americas to Pope Francis. The Letter was a plea for the Mass as a part of the patrimony of human civilization: We come to you with humility and obedience but also the confidence of children, telling a loving father of our spiritual needs … To deprive the next generation of artists of this source of mystery, beauty and contemplation of the sacred seems short-sighted … All of us, believers and non-believers alike, recognize that this ancient liturgy, which inspired the works of Palestrina, Bach, and Beethoven and generations of great artists, is a magnificent achievement of civilization and part of the common cultural heritage of humanity. It is medicine for the soul, one antidote to the gross materialism of the postmodern age. The “Open Letter” was organized by the former chairman of the National Endowment for the Arts, Dana Gioia. Among other signatories: Morten Lauridsen, composer (“O Magnum Mysterium”, “Les Chansons des Rose”, “MidWinter Songs”) , Nina Shea (international religious freedom advocate), composer Frank LaRocca (Mass of the Americas), David Conte (Chair and Professor of Composition at the San Francisco Conservatory of Music), Larry Chapp (theologian and founder of Dorothy Day Workers’ Farm), Eduardo Verástegui (film producer and actor), and public intellectual Andrew Sullivan. Their plea to Pope Francis: “[That] no further restrictions be placed on the Traditional Latin Mass so that it may be preserved for the good of the Catholic Church and of the world.” Archbishop Salvatore Cordileone of San Francisco singled out this Open Letter for praise on his social media account. A week earlier, in an essay published in the National Catholic Register , His Excellency said that the beauty of the Latin Mass in an important part of the Church’s ministry in “a de-Christianized age that is becoming increasingly inhospitable to any traditional sense of religion.” The Second Vatican Council sought to “read the signs of the times.” “One sign staring at us right now in large block letters is: BEAUTY EVANGELIZES.” “We live in an age when we need to leverage the power of beauty to touch minds, hearts, and souls for beauty has the quality of an inescapably real experience, one that is not subject to argument … In an age of anxiety and unreason, beauty is thus a largely untapped resource for reaching people, especially young people, with the Gospel message of hope.”