I had thought that the push towards uniform congregational practice at Mass was a fruit of the latter years of Pope Pius XII, in parallel with the start of the serious reordering of the Liturgy. Read this, for example:
Method of Hearing Mass
Well.
The Mass. says Père Lacordaire,
is an act too sublime and holy for us to occupy ourselves with anything other
than what the priest says and does. It is not the time for pious reading or
private devotions. These latter cut us off from the priest, and keep the mind
away from the end and object of the Holy Sacrifice.
The Mass is more than an
ordinary prayer. It is a sacrifice, that is to say, a social act accomplished by
the priest in the name of a body of people of whom he is the interpreter and
representative. The offering is made in the name of all those who are assisting.
They should therefore associate themselves with it. Several times the priest reminds
them of this: at the Orate fratres, when he says "Pray,
brethren, that my sacrifice and yours may be acceptable to God the Father Almighty";
at the Memento of the Living: "Be mindful of Thy servants, for whom we
offer, or who offer this sacrifice to Thee". Likewise we find in the
greater part of the prayers it is the plural and not the singular person which
is used. The priest does not in fact say "I pray" or "I beseech"
but "we pray" and "we beseech" ( quaesumus, petimus, rogamus
).
To participate in a real
way in the Holy Sacrifice, the faithful should not be present simply as
spectators, indifferent or distracted, but they should unite their intention
with that of the priest who is offering.
The simplest and most
commendable method which will be facilitated by the explanations contained in
this Roman Missal, consists in associating oneself with the liturgical rites,
prayers and chant of the, Mass.
The faithful follow in their
Missals, at the same time as the priest at the altar is saying, the prayers of
the Ordinary of the Mass, and those which are proper to the office of the day. These
latter are the Introit, Collects, Epistle, Gospel, Offertory, Secret, Preface,
Communion and Postcommunion. These are the ancient liturgical prayers, so
beautiful and expressive, and in every way incomparably superior to the modern productions
that they must assuredly be preferred to any of them. There is no necessity, however,
to pay such close attention to one's book that one would scruple to raise one’s
eyes to watch the movements of the celebrant at the altar; the faithful who would
so act would create a sort of breach between themselves and the priest who
offers the sacrifice in their names; they would be reading their Mass, but not
following it.
It is much to be desired
that all the faithful wherever possible should join in the singing of the chant
of the Church, being careful to avoid such faults as are liable to be committed
when numbers are singing together, as for instance singing loudly or drawling
the melody. The singing of hymns is permitted at Low Masses but forbidden at
High Masses. The Church demands that these hymns should be as much as possible
in keeping with the sacrifice and the feast of the day. The Church does not
approve of there being singing without a break, and forbids any voice to be
raised during the most solemn part of the Mass, namely, at the Consecration.
The two characteristics of the reformers attitude to lay participation at Mass were, first, that nobody should pray anything other than the Mass: the ordinary and the propers of the particular Mass being celebrated; and second, that they should do so in unison.
The surprise to me is that this is written in a layman's hand missal which received its Nihil Obstat and Imprimatur in 1938, which means that the seeds which would grow into the crop which the reformers would reap were planted a lot earlier than I had realised.
There is another clue that the changes were being realised much earlier: in hand missals of the nineteenth century, there are extensive instructions to allow somebody attending Mass to work out what the propers for any day will be, and in the period before Pius X began the 20th Century's deep changes to the Calendar, working this out was complicated: not impossible for the average person-that's why the instructions were printed at the start of the missal; but complicated.
By the time of the 1938 Missal, laypeople are told that the rubrics are far too complicated to explain and that every Catholic should obtain a copy of the diocesan almanac for the year to find out what feasts were being celebrated. This is the first step on a path which would leak to clerical ownership of the calendar and sacred time and, consequently, the right to change it.
You would only need to be sixty to have been alive when today was the Sunday within the Octave of the Ascension; many young people today will not remember a time when the Ascension wasn't celebrated on a Sunday. I know which I prefer.
.
8 comments:
You write:
"I know which I prefer."
So do I, the same as you.
Mind you, outside the anglosphere, it is still celebrated on Thursday.even in secular France, Ascension Thursday is a public holiday (as is the Assumption and All Saints)
John
May I join the throng of preferers?
In those parts, most , of evermoresecular Spain where the regional chlochmerles keep no longer the day as a public holiday, the church has followed suit.Corpus christi, sameylikey.
God forgive me, I used to think myself no small beans for getting to mass on a holy day of obligation , bright and early, let alone serving.
People will climb everest becuase its there , and there's more here than Everest. The catholic culture part helped one along - yeah , it kept us clanny.
Interesting post - becuase that WAS the prevattwo mindset - Dialogue mass was still daring, but the idea we got - I couldn't read until a month or two before my first communion!that you must follow in your missal sounds SO like your source but the patronizing condescencion - from as far back as I can remember , so, 1955-57 first communion catequesis in three diifferent parishes 2 convents, 2 bogstandard catholic state schools- attitude to the phalanx of rosary sayers at mass is something I picked up unquestioningly - we were told to be charitable about it.
It was the mass , It DIDn't matter, honestly, but as you say , seeds.....
So many of your posts lead and lag with Fr hunwick - curious.
"So many of your posts lead and lag with Fr hunwick - curious."
I think we might be on the same calendar.
So you might be , but there's a refreshing number of affinities of outlook , and perspective,unshared elsewhere, calendar or no , as far as Ive seen.
It's an interesting timezone ...
Leave Patrick Trauton out of it.
Here in Portland in Oregon, the last archbishop signed off on 'a policy' that has us all everyone and everywhere standing from the end of the prex eucharistica until the last communicant returns to her pew, instead of kneeling from the pax onward and/or sitting (unless one approaches for Holy Communion, of course), then rising for the postcommunio and blessing. Something to do with 'being respectful' of all the communicants and the ritual of the distribution of Holy Communion. It is ridiculous and, what's worse, a ridiculous innovation. They cannot help themselves, the professional liturgists-- certainly this came from offices in DC and wherever else professional liturgists meet in their conventicles. Am hoping that Mons Sample (our new archbishop) will address this but I can only imagine how much... nonsense he has on his plate. (I kneel when I have been wont to, as do a few others, thanks very much. To his credit, the pastor has never mentioned anything about such awful disobedience to policy.)
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