a-
Reports that the Italo-Argentinian Pope Francis is trying to crush the use of the Latin Mass reminds of the old question—old since Vatican II in 1962, but probably faced by the early Church, which is why there was a Latin Mass in the first place—in a multicultural country, which is the vernacular?
Peter Skerry wrote for the Brookings Institute in in
2002
If your friends and colleagues are like mine, they tend to orient their domestic travel plans around cherished ethnic restaurants. So do I. But many carry their enthusiasm a step further, seeing the extraordinary variety and quality of ethnic cuisine now available in the United States as evidence of the unalloyed benefits flowing from our racial and ethnic diversity. I call this syndrome “sushiology.”