Liturgically, it was an era of subsistence rations. Mass was offered (solemnly on great occasions, without splendor most of the time), and Sundays were observed as days of rest, respectable dress, and sober conduct, often climaxed by parish devotions in the evening. Holy Communion was becoming gradually more common, but was still thought of as something extra, added to the Mass on certain significant days. There was no participation by the congregation; silence, in fact, was generally imposed and observed as the only fitting response to the sacred mysteries being enacted on the distant altar.
If hymns were sung, they had little relevance to the eucharistic action, and were for the most part rendered by the choir rather than sung by the assembly. The rosary or other devotional prayers were recited during the greater part of the service, sometimes aloud and communally, more often silently. Missals were so rare as to be virtually unknown; a few people used prayer books but occupied themselves as a rule rather with the devotions they continued than with the text of the Mass itself.
Is this a surprise to anyone? It was to me. I didn't realize, for one thing, that the people didn't have missals as such, and that their use was, in fact, a product of the Liturgical Movement.
Dear O.F.:--Well, well, so you have sufficient courage to print the following: 'The writer recalls the monotonous drawling of the rosary during Mass in many localities,' and 'the writer confesses frankly that much opposition to the introduction of liturgical Mass prayers is raised by narrow educators, who, because of hide-bound custom, would rather drone the rosary or sing some popular hymn than pray the Mass.' Congratulations! The above expressed the vortex of the whole liturgical problem. It is my conviction that nothing has done and is doing more harm to and causes greater disintegration of the liturgy than the enforced recitations of the rosary at Mass. It has come to be and is still almost universally advocated by 'narrow educators.' Until this situation can be rectified, there is little progress in store for the liturgy. Your correspondent, who had to listen to the advocacy of the rosary for the Mass, is just one of millions; just a sample of the state into which things can come in the kingdom of God.
In America, though, it seems that passive participation was in most places the norm.
the Holy Ghost Fathers
Irish and the Germans wanted little to do with each other.
then they should follow the mandates of the preconciliar and postconciliar popes and the Second Vatican Council and encourage the full, conscious and active participation of the people at the Vetus Ordo and not try to keep the people mute spectators, not worthy of lifting their voices in prayer in the house of God, not worthy of "dialoguing" with the sacerdos, not worthy of uttering the responses in their Missal, not worthy of singing one syllable of chant.
I've known some who prefer to blame "active participation" for destroying the treasury of sacred music.
And, it is why a beautifully celebrated NO is a far better thing than the pre-counciliar Tridentine usage. This is not just the way it was in the 1930's. This is the way it was for hundreds upon hundreds of years. We are no longer in the mediaeval era. People are now educated, they can read, they know things, with the catechesis that they deserve they have a functional understanding of the sacred mysteries, and, ideally, should be intelligent participants in the sacred rites, not mere dumb observers
I don't even really know what my ideological identity is anymore. I feel like an ideological nomad most of the time. : )
if the laws and traditions of the Roman rite had been faithfully observed?
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