It is permitted. It is the EF feature (or bug) which most influenced my welcoming of the reform of the liturgy. (It still bugs me.)
maybe this is only a modernist complaint driven by rationalist arguments
524. In the choir those who are actually singing do not sit, but the rest may sit:
a) when the celebrant is sitting;
b) while the lessons and the epistle, the gradual, the tract and the Alleluia with its verse, and the sequence are being sung;
c) from the offertory until the incensing of the choir or, if the choir is not incensed, until the preface;
d) from the end of the communion until the Dominus vobiscum before the postcommunion.
At other times they stand, genuflect or kneel, as above.
encountered singing the Salve Regina as part of the Leonine Prayers after Low Mass?
my question is about chanting the Salve instead of saying the "Hail Holy Queen." I've known of one FSSP priest who did that after Low Mass
maybe this is only a modernist complaint driven by rationalist arguments
Yes.
then it would seem logical to conclude that it is less than ideal for any of the texts that are meant to be heard by the congregation (or even said/sung by them) to be obscured in any way,
at worst Medieval extremism
All correct. It's easy to fast when you're asleep! If I'm not mistaken, the old rule before evening Masses were allowed was that, with a few exceptions, Mass could not begin more than an hour before dawn or an hour after midday, and Holy Communion would normally not be distributed outside those times except to the sick, who weren't obliged to fast. The principle was that the Blessed Sacrament was the first food you consumed on a given day.The fast was from midnight to whenever Mass occurred, not a 12 hour fast. At the time, most Masses were in the morning, so it wasn't an issue. As Mass scheduling started to occur later in the day (I was told WW II was a factor), the practicality of the midnight fast became questionable and it was changed to a 3 hour fast during the pontificate of Pius XII.
NO!!! The sung Gloria is the actual Gloria of the Mass; it is not just a sort of devotional entertainment for the congregation. It is the recited Gloria of the celebrant that is the duplication, not the other way around—a Low Mass practice assimilated into High Mass and later codified. Same for the Creed.The Credo and Gloria have already been said by the priest. This singing of these is given to the choir as an extra devotion for the people to listen to.
The fast was from midnight to whenever Mass occurred
zombies participating silently in the pews
Lengthy fasts before communion...are the types of things that caused the old mass to go nearly extinct.
The Trads are setting themselves up for another backlash that may even be worse next time. YMMV
And this does't apply equally to the novus ordo? I mean the reality, not the ideal. Some of us find beauty and meaning in the silent canon, music so difficult only a choir can sing it, and lengthy (i.e. more than 15 minutes before the beginning of Mass) fasts before communion. To each his own, I suppose. I second dad29's point about the numbers. It's a demonstrable fact that the new rite was imposed from above, not at all in response to the desires of a majority of the faithful. It went "nearly extinct" because it was forbidden and suppressed and people were made to think they would go to hell for supporting "renegade" priests who continued to offer it—not because people weren't participating. I don't think sitting for part of the Gloria or Credo is going to endanger the future of the TLM. It has survived much worse.zombies participating silently in the pews
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