T
Thomas48
Guest
Hello dear friends, last Sunday I got the chance to visit the Co-Cathedral of the Sacred Heart in Houston which is a Latin Catholic Cathedral. As an Eastern Catholic this was my first ever Holy Mass celebrated in a Latin Rite Cathedral. It was a very beautiful experience but I noticed a few differences as well as customs I had never seen before at my local Latin Rite parish. It should be noted that this was a regular 5 P.M Sunday Mass at the cathedral, it was not a feast day or a day of special obligation.
The first thing that I noticed was the change in music/vocals/instrumentation, my local Latin parishes are very modern and use the whole guitar-youth-tune with very live and loud liturgical music. I have never minded this but I noticed that the cathedral had an exceptionally traditional setup in regards to liturgical music. The Holy Mass was accompanied by only the organ and the liturgical hymns were chanted more than sung. Is this the norm for a diocese’ cathedral? It was very interesting to hear the hymns chanted in such a manner, it was unfamiliar but highly divine. I had goosebumps at many parts of the Holy Mass
.
The second major difference I noticed was the tradition of incensing. My local Latin parishes seldom to almost never seem to use incense but the use of incense was very prominent at the cathedral. The incensing tradition here was like I had never seen before in any Latin church. I remember I was very intrigued when I saw the cathedrals priest swing the thurible in a circle (thrice or twice, I cant remember) around the host when it was being consecrated and the same for the wine. There were also numerous other parts of the celebration when the deacon incensed, in example during the apostles creed.
Is it the norm for cathedrals to be considerably more traditional than local parishes? Whatever the case, I found my experience to be very moving and I had a very divine feeling during and after the Holy Mass.
P.S: The priest accidentally gave me two pieces of the host, he noticed but told me to continue on, is this okay?
The first thing that I noticed was the change in music/vocals/instrumentation, my local Latin parishes are very modern and use the whole guitar-youth-tune with very live and loud liturgical music. I have never minded this but I noticed that the cathedral had an exceptionally traditional setup in regards to liturgical music. The Holy Mass was accompanied by only the organ and the liturgical hymns were chanted more than sung. Is this the norm for a diocese’ cathedral? It was very interesting to hear the hymns chanted in such a manner, it was unfamiliar but highly divine. I had goosebumps at many parts of the Holy Mass
The second major difference I noticed was the tradition of incensing. My local Latin parishes seldom to almost never seem to use incense but the use of incense was very prominent at the cathedral. The incensing tradition here was like I had never seen before in any Latin church. I remember I was very intrigued when I saw the cathedrals priest swing the thurible in a circle (thrice or twice, I cant remember) around the host when it was being consecrated and the same for the wine. There were also numerous other parts of the celebration when the deacon incensed, in example during the apostles creed.
Is it the norm for cathedrals to be considerably more traditional than local parishes? Whatever the case, I found my experience to be very moving and I had a very divine feeling during and after the Holy Mass.
P.S: The priest accidentally gave me two pieces of the host, he noticed but told me to continue on, is this okay?