Variability in TLM Low Mass
  • a_f_hawkins
    Posts: 3,645
    In order to keep a parallel discussion on the NO free of extraneous comments.
    Because there were no rubrics for the people in TLM, there is actually a greater variety of option especially in a low mass. If you want to have a Jewish operatic tenor sing an Ave Maria over the opening rites of a funeral mass, have at it.
    It was quite possible to experience a Low Mass in which as one priest proceeded to the altar another ascended the pulpit, from which he led recitation of the Rosary throughout the Mass except for a pause at the consecration.
  • Felicia
    Posts: 145
    Thinking back to my childhood, before the NO became the norm, it seems that the priest sometimes omitted the Credo and/or homily if he was short on time. However, FWIW, this was in a chapel on an Air Force base. He might have had to hurry up in order to make the chapel available for the Protestant service the following hour.
  • GambaGamba
    Posts: 652
    A mentor told me of his terror as a boy learning to serve the Mass in the 50s. The pastor insisted that things move as quickly as possible and raced through his parts without regard for the poor little server. So the beginning of the Mass sounded something like

    P. & S. together: IntroiboAdadDeumaltarequilaetificatjuventutemmeam

    JudicaQuiametuDeuses,etDeusdiscernefortitudocausammea:meamquaremerepulisti,etquaretristisincedo,dumaffligitmeinimicus?

  • AbbysmumAbbysmum
    Posts: 134
    P. & S. together: IntroiboAdadDeumaltarequilaetificatjuventutemmeam

    JudicaQuiametuDeuses,etDeusdiscernefortitudocausammea:meamquaremerepulisti,etquaretristisincedo,dumaffligitmeinimicus?


    In all fairness, I hear run-on, fast-as-you-can Masses in English all the time (they do occasionally come up for air!). The difference being that we are fluent in English, so we can follow along.

    It comes back to a point made in the other thread - it's maybe not inherent to the rite as much as it's about the persons involved and their adherence to the norms.
  • AbbysmumAbbysmum
    Posts: 134
    It was quite possible to experience a Low Mass in which as one priest proceeded to the altar another ascended the pulpit, from which he led recitation of the Rosary throughout the Mass except for a pause at the consecration.


    I've heard of that happening. I've seen it on occasion in the NO (not lead by a priest, but rosary-saying by individuals in the pews). Was that a common occurrence? If it was, I can see how those sorts of things would have influenced the dogma of "full and active participation".
  • a_f_hawkins
    Posts: 3,645
    Abbysmum - certainly individuals silently using their rosaries was common, and endorsed by Pius XII (can't be bothered to find reference), I didn't mind if they were not obstructing me. But loud vocal prayer by other priests celebrating their private masses was/is explicitly forbidden, and other loud vocal prayer should have been, a fortiori. I don't recall anything comparable in my parish, but remember lay women starting communal recitation before the priest had got back to the sacristy in other parishes.
    Thanked by 1Abbysmum
  • francis
    Posts: 11,211
    the dogma of "full and active participation"
    i love this!
    (Will most likely use this theological description in the future)
    Thanked by 2Abbysmum tomjaw
  • AbbysmumAbbysmum
    Posts: 134
    @francis

    It very much is a dogma! I have had conversations with priests who will defend "full and active participation" with their dying breaths, but are indifferent on the Real Presence. ::exasperated shrug::
    Thanked by 2francis tomjaw
  • A mentor told me of his terror as a boy learning to serve the Mass in the 50s. The pastor insisted that things move as quickly as possible and raced through his parts without regard for the poor little server. So the beginning of the Mass sounded something like

    P. & S. together: IntroiboAdadDeumaltarequilaetificatjuventutemmeam

    JudicaQuiametuDeuses,etDeusdiscernefortitudocausammea:meamquaremerepulisti,etquaretristisincedo,dumaffligitmeinimicus?

    This types very much still exist in the TLM.

    There’s also the opposite where both the priest and the choir drag out high Masses by being ridiculously slow leaving so much space between responses (5+ seconds in a relatively small fully carpeted church) that you’re not sure if the choir forgot to respond/isn’t sure how to respond and waiting on the congregation, and moving at a snails pace that the natural rhythm and cadence of the Mass doesn’t exist, which is particularly frustrating for visitors who have that rhythm and cadence ingrained into them.
    Thanked by 2WGS a_f_hawkins
  • Liam
    Posts: 5,503
    P. & S. together: IntroiboAdadDeumaltarequilaetificatjuventutemmeam

    JudicaQuiametuDeuses,etDeusdiscernefortitudocausammea:meamquaremerepulisti,etquaretristisincedo,dumaffligitmeinimicus?


    Sotto voce,
    it's much easier to recite on not only on the exhale but also on the inhale, i.e., continuously.
  • a_f_hawkins
    Posts: 3,645
    Question arising on another thread: Is this true?
    Mass attendance was understood as fulfilling an obligation, rather than a participation in the liturgy.
    In the parish of St Joseph, Hanwell, then in Middlesex now Greater London it was usual for many of the men to spend the whole Mass standing outside the church unable to see or hear anything of the proceedings as the church was not large enough. This was the church in which I was baptised and in whose school I received my elementary education (1944-49), though we lived in the neighbouring parish, St Benedict's Ealing. My father would occasionally take me to Mass there when visiting relatives. My father had received his secondary education in junior seminary. It was definitely understood that one could fulfill the obligation in this way. There was a suggestion that you should be able to see someone who could see through the open doors so that you could kneel for the consecration.
    Also see my comment at the top of the thread, based on observation in a church in central Dublin.
    [EDIT]And, francis, I also served a monastic missa privata weekly from 1952 to 1963 (Fridays}, and enjoyed collectively chanting the Ordinary at school Masses (Thursdays). The Sunday experience was totally different.
  • tomjaw
    Posts: 2,921
    Well we do have an obligation to hear (attend) Mass, although some modern clergy imply it is now only optional.

    So I go to fulfil my obligation to hear Mass, and the Church is full and so I stand outside, am I in some way not participating in the Mass as much as someone inside the Church?
    If say I am behind a pillar, or at the back and not very tall, if I cannot see the sanctuary is my participation less.
    If participation is measured on being able to see the Liturgy to participate, the problem is with that style of Liturgy not with the person.
    In circus if you can't see the clowns you are being deprived of the entertainment, this should not also be true of the Liturgy.
    Thanked by 1francis
  • Elmar
    Posts: 516
    Maybe this depends on how much someone tends to be distracted by these circumstances from inner participation at the liturgy and thereby profiting from the spirital fruit that emerges rom it. Speaking for myself, I doubt that I could keep any long-term spiritual relation to the mysteries if I 'fulfilled' my Sunday obligation in this way on a regular basis. I guess that this holds for quite some other people as well.
  • Liam
    Posts: 5,503
    So I go to fulfil my obligation to hear Mass, and the Church is full and so I stand outside, am I in some way not participating in the Mass as much as someone inside the Church?


    This Q reminds me of the Dominican vs Jesuit approach to smoking during prayer:

    Dominican to confessor: "Is it OK to smoke during prayer?"
    Confessor: "Generally no - unless, for example, an urgent reason for the briefest of prayer arose after you had started smoking."

    Jesuit to confessor: "Is it OK to pray during smoking?"
    Confessor: "Of course, unless you make a habit of it!"

    Which is an example of why situational context is relevant. The common (historical) practice of men habitually staying outside church in certain cultures is not the same as an acute situation one finds oneself in through no fault of one's own.
    Thanked by 2CHGiffen tomjaw
  • I'm not sure what the story means for these purposes. The inside of the Church was at capacity, so there were men outside, some of whom presumably gave up their seats for women and elders. Yes, standing outside could not have been highly participatory, but they're outside because the mass is crammed.
    Thanked by 1tomjaw
  • francis
    Posts: 11,211
    I doubt that I could keep any long-term spiritual relation to the mysteries if I 'fulfilled' my Sunday obligation in this way on a regular basis. I guess that this holds for quite some other people as well.
    Perhaps you should get there extra early so you can sit in the first pew! (however, I have not seen a church with standing room only for many years... with exception)
    Thanked by 1tomjaw
  • FSSPmusic
    Posts: 446
    I'm not sure what the story means for these purposes. The inside of the Church was at capacity...
    Well, a lot of those men standing outside the church were smoking throughout Mass. I put that in purple, but I think it's accurate. Were they smoking while fulfilling their Sunday obligation, or fulfilling their Sunday obligation while smoking? I understand there are places in Latin America where it is the "custom" of the men to stand outside the church regardless of how much room is available inside, so don't chalk it up to deferential treatment for women and elders.
  • Sorry I meant Hawkins's story, not the smoking joke. I'm just not sure what it says about participation and obligation. Note that he said it was because the church was not large enough.
  • a_f_hawkins
    Posts: 3,645
    What it says about participation depends on your answer to @tomjaw's question
    the Church is full and so I stand outside, am I in some way not participating in the Mass as much as someone inside the Church?
    Clearly, clear at least to me, as an embodied person the way in which my body/hearing/vision are engaged, i.e. my perception, has an effect including a psychological effect.
    Trent session XXII ...
    Chapter V On the Ceremonies and Rites of the Mass
    And whereas such is the nature of man, that, without external helps, he cannot be easily upraised to the meditation of divine things; on this account has holy Mother Church instituted certain rites, to wit that certain things be pronounced in the mass in a softened, and others in a raised tone. She has likewise made use of ceremonies, such as mystic benedictions, lights, fumigations of incense, vestments, and many other things of this kind, derived from an apostolical discipline and tradition, whereby both the majesty of so great a sacrifice might be recommended, and the minds of the faithful be excited, by these visible signs of religion and piety, to the contemplation of those most sublime things which lie hidden in this sacrifice.
    Thanked by 1Roborgelmeister
  • Well clearly standing outside is barely participating, but it would be barely participating in a Novus Ordo too (if the churches were ever that packed). I figure it purports to tell something about participation and obligation in the old days, but I still can't tell what that is, because the church was full of people with their body/hearing/vision engaged and this was overflow.
  • AbbysmumAbbysmum
    Posts: 134
    I've been thinking about this thread a lot. We are frequently SRO on a regular Sunday for 1 to 2 of the four weekend Masses, to the point that there's been discussion about adding an additional Mass if this trend continues. We've had a lot of growth in recent years due to both immigration and conversion.

    So, modern fire codes are really strict, in that we're not supposed to allow people standing in the aisles and at the back/in the vestibule. Standing outside isn't an option during the winter (I'm in a cold part of Canada lol). We have an old building, ~120ish years old. Like many parishes, we both additional Masses with overflow for Christmas and Easter, where we set up seating in the adjacent hall (the hall and main church are physically attached), and run a livestream feed onto a huge TV so they can see and hear what's going on. Communion ministers are assigned, and they bring Communion to them. There's also talk of simply adding overflow to the regular Sunday Mass, which is almost always SRO out on a weekly basis.

    I've always wondered if that's enough. To go to church, but not be physically even in the same room as what's taking place.
  • PaxMelodious
    Posts: 476
    I've always wondered if that's enough. To go to church, but not be physically even in the same room as what's taking place.


    How is that any different to someone watching a livestream from their own house, or from another location

    I'm sure there's a document saying that the latter doesn't count, even though it may be done if there are no other options
  • Reval
    Posts: 197
    To me it seems that watching from an overflow location is different than watching a livestream in that:
    1. Presumably the overflow room would have the chance to receive communion
    2. The congregation made an effort to show up

    I agree that it wouldn't be ideal, but hopefully it would be a temporary situation.
    It seems like a good problem to have! I've been to a Mass like that (TLM in Alabama) and the overflow room was at a 90 -degree angle to the main nave, with large doors that were open, so we could at least see some of the sanctuary (if memory serves).
    Thanked by 1Abbysmum
  • FSSPmusic
    Posts: 446
    According to Jone,
    one's presence must be such that one may be reckoned among the attendants at divine service and that one be able to follow the Mass at least in its principal parts. Wherefore, one satisfies his Sunday obligation by being present in church even if he cannot see the priest; so, too, if one is in the sacristy or close to the church, provided always that he is able to follow the main parts of the Mass. — Whoever is more than sixty feet distant from the church can no longer hear Mass even if he is still able to follow the priest at the altar, e.g., by means of a radio. An exception is allowed in the case where he is united to the church by a large crowd of people. (Moral Theology, 1962 edition)
    So yes, watching on a screen in an overflow space (or a jumbotron at a stadium Mass for that matter) is different from watching a livestream where one isn't united to the church or altar as part of a large crowd. The opportunity to receive Holy Communion is not necessary to fulfill the Sunday obligation.
  • AbbysmumAbbysmum
    Posts: 134
    How is that any different to someone watching a livestream from their own house, or from another location

    I'm sure there's a document saying that the latter doesn't count, even though it may be done if there are no other options


    At the beginning of the Covid pandemic, when churches and everything else were shut down (the rules were quite strict where I live), our bishop gave a general dispensation so that TV Masses "counted". That went on for the better part of 2 years before we were all required to physically go back.

    To me it seems that watching from an overflow location is different than watching a livestream in that:
    1. Presumably the overflow room would have the chance to receive communion
    2. The congregation made an effort to show up


    That would be my assumption too, but I was unsure.
    Thanked by 1CHGiffen
  • Liam
    Posts: 5,503
    If you have an overflow hall or space, I would strongly recommend that another Mass should also be celebrated there, on a time lag, if another priest is or can be available to handle that. That would have traditionally be how thing were handled in upper and lower churches.
  • BTW, the reception of Holy Communion during mass was almost unknown until the post WWII era. A friend of mine, in his 70s, recently attended a high mass with me. He's been away from the church for more than 50 years. He opined that back in the day, very few went to communion during the mass. This is how churches could schedule masses every 45 minutes all Sunday morning long. As one priest told me, he was taught in seminary that the mass should be one half hour "from sacristy to sacristy." This is something that might be thought advantageous if brevity is the foremost objective.
  • a_f_hawkins
    Posts: 3,645
    Roborgelmeister - very true, to the point where I have had people argue, falsely, that it was not allowed. I recall being surprised in the mid 50s when a parishioner presented herself at 11 o'clock Sunday Solemn Mass. In fact the Council of Trent desired frequent communion (Session XXII ch 6)
    The sacred and holy synod would wish indeed that, at each mass, the faithful who are present should communicate, not only in spiritual desire, but also by the sacramental participation of the Eucharist, that thereby a more abundant fruit of this most holy sacrifice might be derived unto them: nevertheless ...
    Thanked by 2Liam Roborgelmeister
  • Liam
    Posts: 5,503
    And Pope St Pius X promulgated Sacra Tridentina in 1905 to move that decree forward into more effective practice.
    Thanked by 1a_f_hawkins
  • Chaswjd
    Posts: 301
    Yo follow up on the very first post, this was the funeral mass for John F. Kennedy, the very first Catholic U.S. President. It was a low mass with music over the top. If this was the best that was done at the time . . .
    https://youtu.be/gDsLZvo4kDw?si=DhU7liDOFDPou2pO
  • Liam
    Posts: 5,503
    Two months later, Boston (uncharacteristically, in the context of liturgical musical practice of the period) did better:

    https://praytellblog.com/index.php/2013/11/22/music-at-john-f-kennedys-funeral/

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6UxyEDjkYjI

    https://www.amazon.com/Mozart-Requiem/dp/B00CU55HLA/
    Thanked by 1Chant_Supremacist
  • trentonjconn
    Posts: 785
    Cushing's Latin and Cushing's voice...are something else...
  • Liam
    Posts: 5,503
    Yea, verily. An ecclesiastical fog horn worthy of Boston Light (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boston_Light).