There are no rubrics in the Missal of St John XXIII in relation to the people (apart from those in relation to the renewal of baptismal promises at the reformed Easter Vigil).
There is a certain tension, potentially, between following along with the priest’s texts with recollection and devotion, and singing Mass Ordinary (especially at the Sanctus and Agnus Dei).
Here it might be helpful to take a longer view of things. Following the priest's prayers word-for-word in a parallel Latin-vernacular hand missal was presented as the preferred way of assisting at Mass for only a relatively brief period in Church history, and printed vernacular translations of the Mass weren't generally permitted until as late as 1897 (!). Let us recall also the older terminology to hear Mass. But how can one hear prayers that are said inaudibly by the priest?There is a certain tension, potentially, between following along with the priest’s texts with recollection and devotion, and singing Mass Ordinary (especially at the Sanctus and Agnus Dei)...
helping people to understand when their singing could (should?) take precedence over silent participation by reading the liturgical texts.
More than that, I think there's a prevalent idea that the Mass consists fundamentally in what the priest does and says; that everything beyond a private Low Mass without a server is essentially superfluous; and that the sung Proper, Ordinary, and everything else are just background music for what the priest says and does.There is in some places a perception that it is the role of the priest and sacred ministers to ‘say’ the Mass, of the choir to ‘sing’ the Mass and of the congregation otherwise to ‘pray’ the Mass.
Perhaps the hand missal movement had the unintended side effect of prioritising liturgical forms that ran sequentially (ie. Low Mass etc) rather than simultaneously....
Perhaps, in that sense, the hand missal movement sowed some of the seeds of the destruction of the Roman Rite?
An attitude that popes have been contesting at least since 1903.More than that, I think there's a prevalent idea that the Mass consists fundamentally in what the priest does and says; that everything beyond a private Low Mass without a server is essentially superfluous; and that the sung Proper, Ordinary, and everything else are just background music for what the priest says and does.
The relevant legislation for the 1962 Missal was De musica sacra ... Sep 3 1958 part of which isThere are no rubrics in the Missal of St John XXIII in relation to the people (apart from those in relation to the renewal of baptismal promises at the reformed Easter Vigil).
From the English translation here: https://adoremus.org/1958/09/instruction-on-sacred-music/26b) Secondly, the congregation can sing the parts of the Ordinary of the Mass: Kyrie, eleison; Gloria in excelsis Deo; Credo; Sanctus-Benedictus; Agnus Dei. Every effort must be made that the faithful learn to sing these parts, particularly according to the simpler Gregorian melodies. But if they are unable to sing all these parts, there is no reason why they cannot sing the easier ones: Kyrie, eleison; Sanctus-Benedictus; Agnus Dei; the choir, then, can sing the Gloria, and Credo.
Recommended Chants
In connection with this, the following Gregorian melodies, because of their simplicity, should be learned by the faithful throughout the world: the Kyrie, eleison; Sanctus-Benedictus; Agnus Dei of Mass XVI from the Roman Gradual; the Gloria in excelsis Deo, and Ite, missa est-Deo gratias of Mass XV; and either Credo I or Credo III. In this way it will be possible to achieve that most highly desirable goal of having the Christian faithful throughout the world manifest their common faith by active participation in the holy Sacrifice of the Mass, and by common and joyful song (Musicæ sacræ disciplina: AAS 48 [1956] 16).
The effect of hand missals is to intellectualize and linearize one's perception of the Mass, and to introduce the notion that "praying the Mass" means interacting with the content of any specific day. Certainly meditating on the Scripture reading is a good thing. But it's not the only way to pray at Mass.
What makes all of this even weirder to me is that the net effect is the 'Lutheran Mass' - ie. thundering the Kyrie, Gloria and Creed - with the Sanctus and Agnus omitted!
It has always seemed bizarre to me that the Introit has, in effect, ended up in conflict with the Prayers at the Foot of the Altar, with people following along devoutly with the latter, as though the former was some kind of distraction. It seems all the more bizarre to me when put in the light of Fortescue's characterisation of Low Mass as a kind of compressed High Mass.
When the sacred ministers arrived at the foot of the altar and began the preparatory prayers, I distinctly recall Fr. Hughes [Hugh] Barbour, O. Praem., who was sitting at the edge of the monastic choir pew closest to the people, turn to face the congregation and motion for us to remain standing while they continued chanting the Introit even as the sacred ministers had arrived at the foot of the altar and begun the preparatory prayers. We were somewhat confused but complied nonetheless.
I'm reminded of this passage from Fr. Bryan Houghton's Unwanted Priest: The Autobiography of a Latin Mass Exile:the hush that falls over the church in some places would make it feel almost indecent to sing the Sanctus
I don't want to belittle the genuine piety expressed in those words, but respectfully, there is much we can say—"Sanctus, Sanctus, Sanctus," for starters.God became incarnate to redeem us on the Cross. But at the Last Supper he left his body and blood under the appearance of bread and wine as the guarantee of our redemption. That is what the Mass is: the true presence of Jesus Christ, body, blood, soul and divinity, under the appearance of bread and wine. Before such an act there is nothing you can do or say. You can only remain silent.
There may be a few exceptions (I'm not sure), but hands extended means the celebrant is praying on behalf of the people, hands joined means he is praying with them or for himself or his private intentions. I think that's how the use of the orans posture by the laity got started in the new rite, like, "We're all praying together and the priest has his hands extended, so let's extend ours too." In the 1962 Missal, when the faithful recite the Paternoster with the priest on Good Friday, the rubrics direct him to join his hands.Is there a way of distinguishing between the prayers of the sacred ministers that are theirs alone and proper to them in a private manner and the prayers that they recite on behalf of all present?
Historically, I expect the exception was to continue the Canon without the Sanctus having concluded.
so seeing that the advent of polyphony is 200 years before Trent, that’s not nothing!It’s abundantly clear that you don’t agree with an approach whereby the Sanctus could wait for the Canon. I strongly disagree with your characterisation of this as a “NO” characteristic; it was clearly thus until Trent (or at least until the advent of polyphony).
I mean you characterize it as “bizarre” (so it’s funny that you’re now defensive about this). Anyway, you just assume (like most everyone does) that it’s because the low Mass infiltrated the high Mass, but there’s an easier explanation: celebrants wanted to also recite the prayers (we tend to forget that even in the best of circumstances with the least elaborate music the priests are often elderly, at least the bishops…). In any case, since no one bothered to put their motivations in writing, we’re left guessing.I’m not sure what you mean by ‘editorialising’
To my mind, it is all as incongruous with what is going on at that point as, in the 1954 Easter Vigil, the deacon telling us all that ‘this is the night’ at 10 o’clock in the morning.
Not even a little press of the thank button. You know, that goes a long way.
And I’m angry that you chose to harp on what was probably the only yes or no question in this thread to go off on unrelated tangents where you are entirely wrong
Frankly, that would be because I'm not especially thankful for your commentary. I've not found it helpful.
Is considering whether or not the priest should wait on the ordinaries to finish really something to get this upset about?
MatthewRoth - Can you point to any indication of the duplication in the earliest printed edition?such duplication being introduced only in 1570 would be inherently out of character with the reform, which was meant to be in keeping with the earliest printed edition of the Missale Romanum.
In the East, is it customary for the priest to duplicate texts that are sung by someone else? I don't think so, but I might be mistaken. Are those texts even printed in the Euchologion (or its non-Byzantine equivalent)? Isn't it more of a Sacramentary than a Missal?I accept that both the Eastern and Western Rites have significant ritual overlaps, and perhaps in ways that appear contradictory on the surface. I am not sure that duplications introduced in the 16th century are as defensible as separate sets of prayers going on simultaneously.
Jungmann cites several Carolingian-era decrees directing the priest himself to sing the Sanctus before continuing with the Canon.It’s abundantly clear that you don’t agree with an approach whereby the Sanctus could wait for the Canon. I strongly disagree with your characterisation of this as a “NO” characteristic; it was clearly thus until Trent (or at least until the advent of polyphony).
I am under the impression that nobody in 2025 has permission from Rome to use pre-55 liturgical books for the Roman rite. What superiors and local bishops allow or at least tolerate is another matter.Anyway the Pontifical Commission Ecclesia Dei is dead and buried, and all of the movement is away from 1965 and the Novus Ordo to the pre-Pius XII rite. Thank God.
I am under the impression that nobody in 2025 has permission from Rome to use pre-55 liturgical books for the Roman rite. What superiors and local bishops allow or at least tolerate is another matter.
Fortescue's characterisation of the Tridentine reforms as the establishment of a uniform usage of the Roman Rite is probably correct, but I would suggest it is more correct in relation to texts and less correct in relation to rubrics.
Rubric from a Dominican Missal printed at Lubeck in 1502.
(Bodleian Laud Misc. 283.)
De missis priuatis.
...
meliusque vt epistolam relinquat sacerdoti dicendam . quam quod ipse dicat cum non est in aliquo sacrorum ordinum constitutus
That apparently envisages that where the server is in minor orders, (rather than the small boy which was not uncommon either then or when I was that boy in the 1950s) the lector/exorcist/... should read the epistle and the priest should not duplicate it.better to leave the epistle to be said by the priest . than to say it himself when he is not ordained in any of the sacred orders
This is also a little-discussed issue in the development of Gregorian chant. We know that a pronunciation reform was introduced under Charlemagne by Alcuin, who used the very conservative spelling pronunciation he had learned in Britain. Before that time, it's possible that the liturgy throughout the Romance language area was essentially read and sung in the vernacular, from Latin books, intelligible even to the illiterate and young children, which would make the lack of notated chant manuscripts from the period unsurprising even if neumes had already been invented. Jungmann again:the incipient Romance vernaculars grew more distant from the Latin of Late Antiquity
This 813 synod is the Council of Tours and is considered "the first official recognition of an early French language distinct from Latin" (Wikipedia).it was the duty of the preacher... above all to find, by his own efforts, the proper medium between the language of the people and the pretensions of the more highly educated. And even when the homilies of the Fathers were read, they had to be rendered more or less freely in the language of the people. The Carolingian Reform-Synods of 813 expressly demanded the translation of the homilies in rusticam Romanam linguam aut Theotiscam quo facilius cuncti possint intelligere quce dicuntur.
Really?What we now know as the "Missal" was of course a series of separate books.
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