What normally goes into a "Presider's Script"... I would just assume they use the Roman Missal since all of the rubrics are in their and the only additional item would be the Universal Prayers...
There's no such thing as a "presider's script." The priest celebrant prays the prayers of the mass from the Roman Missal. Done.
It's not his script, it not his show. It's the representation of the one inestimable sacrifice to God the Father through his son Jesus Christ, which is accomplished by the priest praying the prayers laid out for him in the missal.
Considering how many options there are in the modern Roman Rite, I can't fault a priest for wanting something in writing to help him follow a particular course of options through the Missal.
@ marc this is lovely. I note you don't mention incense at the consecration as per GIRM 150. It seems unbalanced to incense the gifts before they are consecrated, and ignore incensing the Eucharist after the consecration. Is there some reasoning behind this?
If one has to prepare a "script" (I shudder at the P-word used before it -- there is no such thing as a mere "p******r" at Mass, and the word always comes up underlined in red in my spell-check), Marc's is a very fine example, especially giving musical notation to the orations. However, maybe outside of the Holy Week liturgies, in a normal parish situation I don't think such a thing is necessary, save for perhaps the Universal Prayer. As @chonak points out, given there are legitimate options at several points, perhaps an outline of what has been chosen (or reminders of variations from the routine, such as the Sequence this coming Sunday [Pentecost]) could also be helpful. A priest shouldn't need much more than that, I would think.
As @chonak points out, given there are legitimate options at several points, perhaps an outline of what has been chosen (or reminders of variations from the routine, such as the Sequence this coming Sunday [Pentecost]) could also be helpful. A priest shouldn't need much more than that, I would think.
At a wedding I was involved in, we printed and bound a one off missal for the presider. In addition to navigating the huge plethora of options in the English missal, it would have required swapping two different books.
Also, binders of this sort are also common if if there are no servers to hold the Missal, no lectern near the presidential chair, and the celebrant needs larger type, the celebrant needs larger type, et cet.
I noticed that Marc's* pointed prayers use the simple tone. My priest is using the simple tone during Easter, as well. Is there a precedent for using it during this season, since ICEL seems to be encouraging the use of the solemn tone in the new Missal?
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