Has anyone ever seen a Novus Ordo in Latin, ad orientum?

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Well I THINK i saw an Ad orienturm Novus Ordo when I was at the Vatician for WYD in 2000, If i remember it was celebrated on one of the side altars with a certian group that was there and their priest was to do mass at St. Peters but on one of the Side Altars.

also… check this blog post out… It contains a single picture of a novus ordo in english but ad orientum

stlouiscatholic.blogspot.com/2007/06/images-from-icrsp-ordinations.html
 
Well I THINK i saw an Ad orienturm Novus Ordo when I was at the Vatician for WYD in 2000, If i remember it was celebrated on one of the side altars with a certian group that was there and their priest was to do mass at St. Peters but on one of the Side Altars.

also… check this blog post out… It contains a single picture of a novus ordo in english but ad orientum

stlouiscatholic.blogspot.com/2007/06/images-from-icrsp-ordinations.html
Christopher, that is not a Novus Ordo, but the old form of the Latin Mass at recent ordinations of men of the Institute of Christ the King Sovereign Priest by Archbishop Burke at the Cathedral there in St. Louis. Of particular interest here:

The ceremony on June 15th, at the Cathedral Basilica of St. Louis will mark the first time that priests of the Institute of Christ the King are ordained in the United States.

You are right in that it is very beautiful.
 
Here are directories for NO Latin Masses in North America and in England. Approximately half of them are ad orientem, but unfortunately the directories do not specify which.

The English directory grades the Masses A/B/C depending on whether they are all Latin/partially/English with Latin musical accompaniment.
 
The Brompton Oratory (a wonderful church) here in London has all of its Masses ad-orientem, some of them Latin, and a few are the traditional Mass.

The school I went to had NO ad-orientem, Latin, great music, lots of incesnse, Roman chasubles… but it’s never the same.

[Edited by Moderator]
 
Christopher, that is not a Novus Ordo, but the old form of the Latin Mass at recent ordinations of men of the Institute of Christ the King Sovereign Priest by Archbishop Burke at the Cathedral there in St. Louis. Of particular interest here:

**The ceremony on June 15th, at the Cathedral Basilica of St. Louis will mark the first time that priests of the Institute of Christ the King are ordained in the United States.**You are right in that it is very beautiful.
You’re looking at the wrong pictures. More towards the bottom there is a picture of an ad orienatam NO that took place at daily Mass the day after the ordinations. 👍

The caption says:

I almost forgot! I had a sighting yesterday of that often talked of, but rarely seen, ad orientem novus ordo Mass! The daily noon Mass at the Cathedral was celebrated by Fr. Thomas Keller, a priest of the Archdiocese who is a friend to the Oratory. Well, the Ordination Mass was already set up, so the parishioners got a treat. Some looked puzzled, but it was edifying to experience. I took one picture to prove it happened.
🙂
 
You’re looking at the wrong pictures. More towards the bottom there is a picture of an ad orienatam NO that took place at daily Mass the day after the ordinations. 👍

The caption says:

I almost forgot! I had a sighting yesterday of that often talked of, but rarely seen, ad orientem novus ordo Mass! The daily noon Mass at the Cathedral was celebrated by Fr. Thomas Keller, a priest of the Archdiocese who is a friend to the Oratory. Well, the Ordination Mass was already set up, so the parishioners got a treat. Some looked puzzled, but it was edifying to experience. I took one picture to prove it happened.
🙂
Thanks for clarifying. 😃
 
I never seen a NOM in Latin and ad orientum.
I prefer the Tridentine rite (pre-1962 version)!

Pax
Instaurare Omnia In Christo
 
I don’t think there’s every been one *entirely *in Latin - as that would be contrary to the form of the Novus Ordo - but I have participated in a Mass celebrated with Latin used in various parts and with the Bishop facing ad orientum. It was at Mother Angelica’s Shrine in Irondale, AL and it was an absolutely powerful Mass. The icing on the cake were the cloistered nuns chanting throughout. It was remarkable.
I have participated in the Mass at Mother’s Shrine a couple of times myself, you are right it is very beautiful. I have also been to the TLM numerous times, I think the NO, as it is celebrated at Mother’s Shrine is just a s beautiful as the TLM.
 
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