And it is not just professors and specialists who are passionate about Latin, Vatican Radio journalist Alessandro De Carolis told CNA.
De Carolis edits Hebdomada Papae, a new weekly Latin language news bulletin on Vatican Radio.
The program, which airs every Saturday, gives a five-minute weekly recap of papal and Vatican news, completely in Latin.
Launched in June, it is produced with help from the pope's Latin Letters office, which is part of the Secretariat of State and is the office responsible for writing and translating Church documents into Latin.
The pope's Latinists, De Carolis said, not only read and write Latin, they also speak it among themselves. "They keep this language that would die, they keep it pretty alive instead."
He said Latin is a language which has renewed itself throughout the centuries. "In fact, Latin never died," he argued, "because even today the Latinists of the pope are inspired to create new words that did not exist in classical Latin to explain modern terms."
For example, he said, if they report some news regarding the computer, they need a Latin word for computer. "There is this work even to create words [in Latin] for these more modern concepts."
Hebdomada Papae airs through Vatican Radio's Italian language audio channels but will soon be available also through the English channel. The program can also be heard on the web.
Fr. Waldemar Turek, director of the Latin Letters Office, also hosts an Italian radio program about Latin directly following Hebdomada Papae called "Anima Latina" and exploring the value and significance of Latin as the language of the Church.
As an employee of the Secretariat of State, Turek declined to give an interview for this story, citing Vatican policy.
De Carolis recalled a comment by Vatican News editorial director Andrea Tornielli, who first proposed the idea of the Latin news program, that Latin is a language "that looks toward the future."
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"Seems like a paradox," De Carolis said, but he thinks it is true.
He believes that, "certainly tomorrow and the day after tomorrow, we will always in some way, somewhere in the world, continue to speak Latin."
Hannah Brockhaus is Catholic News Agency's senior Rome correspondent. She grew up in Omaha, Nebraska, and has a degree in English from Truman State University in Missouri.