and wonder what it would take to pronounce widely that sitting during the Epistle is quite appropriate.
does it show a greater reverence for the Epistles... than for the Gospels
(http://www.newliturgicalmovement.org/2009/08/on-private-masses.html#.XY7NJ0bYqUk)First, the term "private Mass" does not refer to Mass with neither a server nor a congregation, but rather to an unscheduled Mass, regardless of the number of faithful present and regardless of the degree of solemnity (a High Mass can still be a private Mass)...
I now know better : Rubricae generales missalis XVII#2 (in the 1862 and 1920 editions, but not 1574 or 1962) suggests that at Missa Privata they kneel throughout except for the Gospel -The rubrics of the Tridentine missal give no directions to the congregation AFAIK.
[EDIT]I have now found a half sentence in the 1574 indicating the same (buried in a section about posture at Solemn Mass)Circumstantes autem in Missis privatis semper genua flectunt, etiam Tempore Paschali, præterquam dum legitur Evangelium.
Which doesn't mean on the other hand that suggestions should be discarded on the ground that they aren't requirements. So the question remains.The very fact that it's a suggestion indicates that there is no required posture, surely?
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