I'll add for conpro:
> "Seven times a day I have given praise to thee, for the judgments of thy justice." Psalm 118:164
Jewish custom was prayer seven times a day? The Divine Office Was 8 times a day: Matins, Lauds, Prime, Terce, Sexta, Nona, Vespers, Compline. By removing Prime, it makes it seven. I don't know if this was to be more "ecumenical" and like Jewish practice, but this came to mind.
> "Seven times a day I have given praise to thee, for the judgments of thy justice." Psalm 118:164
Jewish custom was prayer seven times a day? The Divine Office Was 8 times a day: Matins, Lauds, Prime, Terce, Sexta, Nona, Vespers, Compline. By removing Prime, it makes it seven. I don't know if this was to be more "ecumenical" and like Jewish practice, but this came to mind.
Then if you want check FSSPX and an audiobook by Archbishop Marcel Lefebvre called They Uncrowned Him. Once you learn, you just reached the beginning of the black hole. It goes back to 1666. Enjoy.
Hmm, what do you have in mind going back this far? I've thought jansenism might have been set up as a heresy to then push the opposite heretical reaction, of strict going to loosening the rules. Also there were relaxations of opposition to interest on loans. There seemed to be a weakening over time but no overt embrace of heresy that I could find. But Vatican 2 didn't happen overnight.
I take the sedevacantist view and reject the SSPX / sedeplenist viewpoint, although certainly they're in agreement on many other issues.
And yes the (latin) mass was also suppressed. I have just been posting continually on all the things that were changed to try to get people to question it. To me getting rid of Prime seems in some ways like a pretty big deal like the suppression of mass. It's basically getting rid of the discipline of prayer of the clergy, which would seem to open the Church up to spiritual "attack". To anyone watching it just should look like a giant red flag. All these changes don't look like "genuine" developments but red flags with no real purpose but destruction, or at best being random changes.