PDA

View Full Version : French poll shows support for traditional Mass


Boleslaw
11-13-2006, 02:23 PM
http://cwnews.com/news/viewstory.cfm?recnum=47581

French poll shows support for traditional Mass

Nov. 10 (CWNews.com) - Although French Catholic bishops have said that the faithful would oppose wider use of the Tridentine rite, a poll of French Catholics has found that nearly two-thirds would like to have the choice of attending a traditional Latin Mass.

When asked whether Catholics should have a choice between the Novus Ordo Mass and a traditional liturgy, 65% of French Catholics answered that they should, while another 22% said they did not care; only 13% opposed the idea.

Among the 1,000 people surveyed, 60% said that they would attend a Mass celebrated in Latin with Gregorian chant, at least occasionally. On the other hand, in an apparently contradictory response, 51% of the respondents said that they would either "rarely" or "never" attend a Mass celebrated in the traditional rite.

The survey was conducted by the CSA Institute, an established French polling firm, on behalf of the Catholic group Paix Liturgique. The poll results were introduced to English-speaking readers by the Rorate Caeil blog site.

Jimbo Gomez
11-13-2006, 02:46 PM
Doesn't mean that 2/3rds would attend those masses pr00n. I think this just indicates a wider appreciation for the more traditionalist fellow-Catholics.

Boleslaw
11-13-2006, 03:00 PM
Doesn't mean that 2/3rds would attend those masses pr00n.

Maybe not, but as this article suggest, it's not far-fetch to claim that they would:


http://www.ad2000.com.au/articles/1991/oct1991p12_711.html

The traditionalist movement in France is today far more vital than 'mainstream' Catholicism, whether ultramontanist or liberal.Churches and chapels where the 'immemorial' Mass is offered by priests of the late Archbishop Lefebvre's Society of St Pills X or under the 1984 Indult are generally well-attended, whereas the more numerous parish churches and cathedrals given over to the Novus Ordo liturgy of Vatican II are more often than not close to empty, even in former bastions of religious practice like Brittany and Alsace.