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OraLabora
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From Sacrosanctum Concilium:And actually, it was – if I may tell you – a rather bizarre fashion of “concelebration” at best.
As with so much involving the liturgy, this was a reality that the West had lost but that we recovered with the restoration of the liturgy after Vatican II. The Council Fathers specifically directed that there was to be the authentic recovery of concelebration, which had been preserved outside the Western Church.
- Concelebration, whereby the unity of the priesthood is appropriately manifested, has remained in use to this day in the Church both in the east and in the west. For this reason it has seemed good to the Council to extend permission for concelebration to the following cases:
a) on the Thursday of the Lord’s Supper, not only at the Mass of the Chrism, but also at the evening Mass.
b) at Masses during councils, bishops’ conferences, and synods;
c) at the Mass for the blessing of an abbot.
- Also, with permission of the ordinary, to whom it belongs to decide whether concelebration is opportune:
a) at conventual Mass, and at the principle Mass in churches when the needs of the faithful do not require that all priests available should celebrate individually;
(my bold).b) at Masses celebrated at any kind of priests’ meetings, whether the priests be secular clergy or religious.
I thought I would add the reference. Not to derail the thread, but because the necessity of accommodating concelebration in places where it is common, or in fact the norm, is something that needs to be accounted for before enforcing ad orientem celebration of the Mass.
But then the good cardinal foresaw this by adding the comments “where possible” in his statement. This means he recognizes that there are places and circumstances where it will neither be feasible nor desirable.
I should also point out in 2. above “with permission of the ordinary” does not mean the diocesan bishop in the case of a monastery of pontifical right, but in fact with the abbot who is the ordinary in that circumstance. He has the authority to regulate liturgy in his monastery.