1st degree:
**All** of the priest's dialogs with the congregation, the three collects, the preface, sanctus, and Lord's prayer.
2nd:
Kyrie, Gloria, Agnus, Creed and Universal Prayer (intercessions)
3rd:
The propers or hymns at the entrance, offertory, and communion, the alleluia/tract, and the readings of the Mass themselves.
At High Mass, everything was sung. All of it.
Also, rubrics which require a deacon and sub-deacon (and, I think, acolytes and/or additional servers).
Is there a better phrase we can use for this rather than 'Progressive Solemnity'?
that conjures up an image of priests in Bermuda shorts wearing polyester overlay stoles.
Yes, the ability to sing should be a requirement for ordination.
It is a travesty that priests are not required to be able to sing the mass as a condition of ordination.
We should do what is the The Best because it alone is appropriate and because we love the One to Whom it is offered, not because it has been legislated by a Church
Seems in no particular order, actually, and I have to doubt whether Musicam sacrum spells out the first part. At least, I don't yet plan on taking my cue from a spoken greeting from the visiting bishop and turning off the organ blower and sending the choir to the pews, secure in the knowledge I was carrying out "what the church wants" according to the internet....you don't use the second without the first, and if you use the third, you are also using the first and second...You may notice that this seems backwards.
40. Great importance should therefore be attached to the use of singing in the celebration of the Mass, with due consideration for the culture of peoples and abilities of each liturgical assembly. Although it is not always necessary (e.g., in weekday Masses) to sing all the texts that are in principle meant to be sung, every care should be taken that singing by the ministers and the people not be absent in celebrations that occur on Sundays and on Holydays of Obligation.
However, in the choosing of the parts actually to be sung, preference is to be given to those that are of greater importance and especially to those which are to be sung by the Priest or the Deacon or a reader, with the people replying, or by the Priest and people together.[49]
Seems in no particular order, actually, and I have to doubt whether Musicam sacrum spells out the first part. At least, I don't yet plan on taking my cue from a spoken greeting from the visiting bishop and turning off the organ blower and sending the choir to the pews, secure in the knowledge I was carrying out "what the church wants" according to the internet.
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