It has nothing to say about the congregation.
That is what I remember as the normal practice, and what Cantalamessa would have been taught to do. And woe betide any seminarian or parochial vicar who did not follow these instructions with absolute robotic precision.Facing them he stretches out the hands and joins them again, as at the Dominus vobiscum. Meanwhile he says Orate fratres in an audible voice. He turns back to the altar, by his left side (completing the circle), while he continues, ut meum ac vestrurn sacrificiuin etc., in a low voice.
amen brother!And woe betide any seminarian or parochial vicar who did not follow these instructions with absolute robotic precision.
Alas not so. After VII they, particularly clergy, rejected the practices with which they were familiar, because they were told to think about them. Unfortunately they had no prior training in liturgy (as opposed to rubrics) and received none then other than from the sellers of musical snake oil. Thinking about liturgy had been discouraged. As Fortescue said (privately)clergy and people do not change the practices with which they are familiar
When priests were told to think, they could see much "disgusting nonsense" but had no firm basis for doing better."To them it is not the history nor the development of rites that matter a bit, it is the latest decision of the Congregation of Rites. These decisions are always made by a crowd of dirty little Monsignori at Rome in utter ignorance of the meaning or reason of anything. To the historian their decisions are simply disgusting nonsense, ..."
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