At the ordinary High Mass (i.e. by one Priest) [the Gradual] is chanted immediately after the Oration (or Orations) preceding the Epistle.
I don't think the inaudible epistle should be considered an abuse, since there's ambiguity in the rubrics, which direct the priest to read the epistle at Low Mass aloud in an intelligible voice and also direct him to say quietly the words said aloud in Low Mass except the communion of the faithful and the final blessing.However, in the Missa Cantata, the Priest may choose to read the Epistle at the altar during which time the choir begins to sing the chants appointed.
General Rubrics:
511. In a low Mass the following are said aloud:
... e) ... the epistle....
513. In a solemn Mass the celebrant:
... c) says aloud the formulas at the communion of the faithful and the words of the blessing at the end of the Mass;
... e) says quietly the other words which are said aloud in a low Mass....
514. In sung Masses, that is, those sung without sacred ministers, the celebrant must observe what has been said in the preceding section, and he must sing the parts proper to the sacred ministers. The epistle may be sung by a lector. If it is not sung by a lector, it will be satisfactory for the celebrant to read it without chant; the celebrant may, however, sing the epistle in the usual way.
Ritus servandus:
VI. 1. Having said the Orations, the Celebrant, with his hands placed on the book or on the Altar, so that the palms touch the book, or (if he prefers) holding the book, reads the Epistle in an intelligible voice....
8. In sung Masses the Epistle may be sung by a minister; otherwise, it suffices that it be read by the Celebrant, who however, may sing it in the usual manner.
I think the entire practice of silent recitation of the Epistle and Gospel by the celebrant is absurd: it is a late insertion into the Western rites (foisted upon the Dominicans in the 16th century, for instance). The idea that the practice could have reached a point where the celebrant could have believed it appropriate to recite the epistle sotto voce in the absence of a subdeacon or lector shows such a distorted view of the liturgy that reform of one kind or another was inevitable.
For similar reasons, I get very uncomfortable when the possibility of using pre-1962 rubrics for Mass is mooted, along with reprints of earlier missals. A balanced critique of the reforms between 1900 and 1962 would be far more constructive
Scribatur Em~o Patriarchae Lisbonensi ad mentem. Et mens est : Quod quum Missa cantetur sine Ministris et nullus sit Clericus inserviens qui superpelliceo indutus Epistolam decantet iuxta Rubricas, satius erit quod ipsa Epistola legatur sine cantu ab ipso Celebrante : nunquam vero in Ecclesiis Monialium decantetur ab una ex ipsis. (S.R.C. 3350, Apr. 23, 1875)
Quod si non cantetur a lectore, satius erit quod legatur sine cantu ab ipso celebrante, qui tamen potest Epistolam more solito cantare. (514)
The ad libitum epistle tone is widely used but can't by any means be said to be "ordinarily required of the subdeacon." Recto tono (vox aequaliter) with interrogative inflections is the normal tone given in the liturgical books. Surely this is cantare, not legatur sine cantu?In Missis cantatis Epistola a ministrante cani potest; secus sufficit ut legatur a celebrante, qui tamen potest Epistolam more solito canere. (VI.8)
To participate in the discussions on Catholic church music, sign in or register as a forum member, The forum is a project of the Church Music Association of America.