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Phillip_Rolfes
Guest
My bad. Serves me right for trying to do too many things at once. 
FYI - as I posted above, the Religious Family of the Incarnate Word accepts priests/monks/brothers/nuns/sisters from both the East and West. They celebrate whichever rite they are part of⌠so many of their houses celebrate multiple Rites, depending on who is praying the Mass/Divine LiturgyTo my knowledge, there are no bi-ritual communities.
I could be wrong, but I think only one priest from that order is bi-ritual.Apostolates â The Contemplatives of Saint Joseph Monastic Order
The contemplatives of St Joseph celebrate the Extraordinary Form Mass, the Ordinary Form Mass, and the Byzantine Divine Liturgy.
Thank you!
Monastic clergy usually wear black cassocks, secular clergy (shorthand is âwhiteâ clergy) can wear a number of colors (confusingly including black). For married clerics gray and blue and black are most common, maroon and beige are less common.As a tangential comment - we have both inner and outer cassocks; and the inner is always worn under our liturgical vestments. Outer cassocks are used for services other than Divine Liturgy, and things like wakes and burials, etc.
There areâour former administrator was from such a Franciscan community.To my knowledge, there are no bi-ritual communities.
When I took my priest for the KofC Fourth Degree, some yahoo tried to take him aside, claiming that his grey cassock was for deacons.The Pink Sisters explained in their newsletter that the grey color of the cassock was reflective of the fact that he could celebrate both Eastern and Latin rites.
As others have mentioned, communities cannot be bi-ritual, but they can be made up of individuals who have bi-ritual faculties. The Contemplatives of St.joseph in San Fransico is comprised of men who are canonically Latin and men who are canonically Byzantine. Their particular situation is unique because the Russian Catholic parish in San Francisco is under the care of the Latin Rite bishop.To my knowledge, there are no bi-ritual communities.
At one point, apparently some of the FSSP priests wanted to say both the EF and the OF, and the head of their fraternity said no. Rome said that they could not be forbidden to say the OF.From what I know of the FSSPs, they almost always celebrate the Extraordinary Form. However, they do sometimes concelebrate Mass with other clergy (for example, at Chrism Masses) and when they do, they follow the form being celebratedâalmost always the Ordinary Form. While some Traditionalists criticize them for this, the FSSPs have defended this practice, saying that it is reflective of their membership in and communion with the universal Church.
From what I understand (though I could be mistaken) it wasnât so much that the FSSP priests wanted to say both, but that the bishops in some dioceses were asking them to do both. Some bishops were even asking them to offer the 1965 mass in English.At one point, apparently some of the FSSP priests wanted to say both the EF and the OF, and the head of their fraternity said no. Rome said that they could not be forbidden to say the OF.
The matter was something I âstumbledâ upon as I donât follow the order; and it was long enough ago that I donât recall whether it came form a bishop or one or more of the priests. The order/fraternal society apparently was of the opinion that the priests were not to say the OF, and Rome flat nixed that.From what I understand (though I could be mistaken) it wasnât so much that the FSSP priests wanted to say both, but that the bishops in some dioceses were asking them to do both. Some bishops were even asking them to offer the 1965 mass in English.
Again, I donât follow them. Their website indicates they have parishes in the US and in Canada (and I presume elsewhere). It is entirely possible they could be in a situation where they need to serve both those preferring the EF, and those preferring the OF, depending on whether they have an official parish, or they serve a larger community drawing from other parishes.But this was before Summorum Pontificum . Ever since summorum pontificum , their order has really started to grow, and I think most of this has gone away.
They have their use inside the Latin Rite. What Bi-Rituality tends to refer to is that someone is able to celebrate Rite of different Sui Iuris Church (so for example, Latin Rite Priests celebrating any Latin Rite at all would not count as Bi-Ritual- be it Ordinariate Use, Dominican Use, EF, OF, Zaire Use, Ambrosian Rite etc etc).Dominicans do have their own rite which they do still celebrate at least occasionally.
As I mentioned in the very same post you partially quoted⌠I was being facetious!They have their use inside the Latin Rite. What Bi-Rituality tends to refer to isâŚ