And, within just a few years, many Seminaries did not offer Latin at all, even as an elective!
I remember, probably 25 years ago, reading about something that happened that illustrates the problems that arose because VS was ignored.
A Priest in Africa was seeking financial aid for his Parish. He wrote to an American Chancery, hoping an American Parish would 'adopt' his. Since he didn't speak English, he wrote in Latin.
Upon receipt of the letter, no one in the Chancery could read it. Not only that, but no one knew what language it was written in. Someone realised, however, that it was a romance language, so they took it to the local university. There, they found out it was in the official language of the Roman Church and managed to get it translated.
From Veterum Sapientia Institute
By James Walther
Enjoy this sneak preview of what we’re pretty sure is the first-ever translation — into any language, not just English — of a momentous Latin document published in 1962 and, strangely, nearly impossible to find anywhere outside the printed or online edition of the Acta Apostolicae Sedis, the official documentary records of the Holy See.
We’ll call it the Ordinances for short. Its full Latin name is Ordinationes ad Constitutionem Apostolicam “Veterum Sapientia” rite Exsequendam, which is literally, in English, Ordinances for the Correct Implementation of the Apostolic Constitution “Veterum Sapientia” — the great papal defense of Latin from which our new Institute takes its name and mission.
The Ordinances were to have taken effect worldwide beginning in the fall of 1963. Had they done so, our Church today would be a very different place. But Pope John died in June of that year, and the Ordinances, together with Veterum Sapientia itself, virtually disappeared, though no subsequent Vatican documents dealing with Latin have ever contradicted or negated them.
The document below is still a draft. We’ll be publishing the final version on our website on February 22, 2021, in commemoration of the fifty-ninth anniversary of the signing of Veterum Sapientia. But even in draft form, it’s crystal-clear that Pope John meant business. The glittering vision he articulated in VS was no mere nostalgic ode to the Church’s past, but a bracing summons to build Her future. Here are a few essential quotes from the Ordinances:
… the goal is to make [seminarians] able to use this language to learn their major academic disciplines, to write Church documents and letters, and to correspond with their brother clergy of other nations. Finally, at the highest levels, the objective is to make them able to take part in the sort of ecclesiastical debates on articles of Catholic faith and discipline which occur in councils and meetings… (II.i.§2)
This curriculum is to last at least seven years, for young people beginning their Latin classes in seminaries. They are to have no fewer than six hours per week in the first five years, and no fewer than five hours weekly in the remaining two. (II.ii.§1.1)
… the other academic disciplines will have to be sequenced and abridged (and some perhaps cut entirely or left for later), so that our mandate concerning the time to be given to Latin language study may be obeyed in every respect. (II.ii.§2)
Latin language teaching method ought to cause students to acquire the ability to use it. For this reason, the overflowing philological pot-au-feu which makes up nearly the entire menu in schools of the Humanities, especially graduate schools, will have to be thrown out, since it does not give the nourishment one would reasonably expect from such study. (II.iv.§2)
Any textbook used for teaching Latin syntax shall itself be written in Latin. (II.iv.§7)
Get the idea? There’s plenty more in the document. Read on!
VETERUM SAPIENTIA INSTITUTE
Ordinances for the Correct Implementation of the Apostolic Constitution “Veterum Sapientia”(1) Eidem praeterea Sacro Consilio mandamus, ut linguae Latinae docendae rationem, ab omnibus diligentissime servandam, paret, quam qui sequantur eiusdem sermonis iustam cognitionem et usum capiant. VS. 8. AAS. LIV (1962) p. 135.
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