The Penitential Act
51. After this, the Priest calls upon the whole community to take part in the Penitential Act, which, after a brief pause for silence, it does by means of a formula of general confession. The rite concludes with the Priest’s absolution, which, however, lacks the efficacy of the Sacrament of Penance. From time to time on Sundays, especially in Easter Time, instead of the customary Penitential Act, the blessing and sprinkling of water may take place as a reminder of Baptism.55
The Kyrie Eleison
52. After the Penitential Act, the Kyrie, eleison (Lord, have mercy), is always begun, unless it has already been part of the Penitential Act. Since it is a chant by which the faithful acclaim the Lord and implore his mercy, it is usually executed by everyone, that is to say, with the people and the choir
or cantor taking part in it. Each acclamation is usually pronounced twice, though it is not to be excluded that it be repeated several times, by reason of the character of the various languages, as well as of the artistry of the music or of other circumstances. When the Kyrie is sung as a part of the Penitential Act, a
“trope” precedes each acclamation.
That was SOP in parishes in Indiana, as well.SE Wisconsin, a 'conservative' OF parish uses the sprinkling rite while the Gloria is sung, and (needless to say) eliminates the mandatory Kyrie at the end of the sprinkling.
No. The Kyrie is omitted in this case, as the USCCB Committee on Divine Worship stated in one of their recent newsletters:the mandatory Kyrie at the end of the sprinkling.
"When the Rite for the Blessing and Sprinkling of Water is used in place of the Penitential Act at the beginning of Mass, the Kyrie is always omitted."
I'm fairly sure it was in specifically in directions from the diocesan OofW we were given when the Bishop would be celebrating; we were told, (our church was a large building, long aisles) to loop back and repeat part of the Gloria as needed.
you either never do the penitential act, or never do the sprinkling rite.
(another reason the EF is easier, no optionitis)
Yes, they do, and it's that abrupt. I take it as a drive-thru mentality, as our former pastor called it specifically. Drive-thru church, best way to start your week. Our new pastor is very careful liturgically, but can eschew the Kyrie at times. Some celebrants are confused by the rubrics there regarding the form of Pen. Rite that includes the Kyrie/Lord Have Mercy. In their confusion they take great offense when someone even mentions the Kyrie. I suspect there is some subcommittee promoting drive-thru liturgy. When I was a kid, I thought it was so people could go home and catch the game. A bit older now, and realize that we're called liturgists rather than musicians in part because we tend to scrutinize complex road maps (flashbacks of waltz gigs)...do they leave it out even in Lent and Advent? That would be strange: skipping directly from "The Lord be with you/And with your spirit" to "Let us pray" and the Collect.
Either way, thank the priests who do include the 'Lord, have mercy', so they'll be aware of the omission by others.
Thanks for the reminder, I always say Kyrie due to my lingering case of musicmajoritis.For Latin/Greek-phobic priests, you'd have to refer to it as the "Lord, have mercy". :-)
I believe you are Indy?
How much does the OofW of the metropolitan oversee those of smaller sees?
I am trying to discern if there are dioceses where the Sprinkling Rite is or was officially allowed, encouraged, mandated, to be carried out while the Gloria is being sung. Can't tell, from the above.
Ah, you're in one of the other dioceses in IN.
That's what I thought, also making sure the smaller dioceses are on the same page regarding Ascension Sunday/Thursday, whether or not frogs' legs are meat, that sort of thing... :oDThe power of the metropolitan over his "suffragan dioceses" is not very strong. It's mainly administrative in matters of canonical appeal or vacancies in the other seats of the see.
I love the Asperges and the Kyrie and the use of incense during mass, yet I notice an effort to make the mass more pedestrian and less sacred. Many priests here only sprinkle the PIPs rarely and incense seems to require a papal bull.
The Easter Vigil has no Entrance Antiphon. It is the conclusion of that which began at the Mass of the Lord's Supper. Therefore it makes sense that there would be no Kyrie.
My guess is that in keeping with Tradition, if the Sprinkling rite is to be used, the Kyrie should follow the Introit, even if the Sprinkling Rite does not precede the Entrance Chant. And since in the Ordinary Form you can sing just about anything for the Entrance Hymn, we can always add a Kyrie, "if appropriate."
Ben, it really is simple, is it not? We *always* have the Kyrie. The default position of the Kyrie is right after the Introit, that is, unless the Missal directs otherwise (which in the OF can be the vast majority of the time).
The penitential act for the faithful takes the form of a sprinkling rite. Then comes the Inroit. The faithful do not actively "participate" in the penitential act of the priest (i.e. Confiteor). Instead, during this time the faithful are to meditate on the sung Introit. The EF then has the Kyrie follow the Introit. It is often chanted while the altar is still being incensed.
In fact: 1) the "people", represented by the altar servers, DO recite the Confiteor (by deputation); and 2) it matters not whether there is or is not a 'sprinkling;' the Kyrie is always sung immediately after the Introit in the EF.
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