V
valient_Lucy
Guest
Everyone should read The Stripping of the Altars, which is a book about the Catholic religion in England before the Reformation, and the changes made after it. In the Middle Ages, people went to Mass to adore the Blessed Sacrament. The high point of the Mass for the layman was the elevation of the Host at the Mass. In fact, it was a commonly held belief that anyone who saw the Host would not die that day.
One of the funniest aspects of this devotion was the fact that the priests were careful to stagger the start time of Masses at the various altars around larger churches. (In larger churches, there would be side altars so that a number of priests could say Mass at the same time.) The priests were careful to stagger the elevation of the Host, because frequently, upon hearing the Sanctus bells signaling the impending consecration, the laity would stampede around the church, so that they could witness multiple elevations in one day. What can I say? Mass in the Middle Ages was a lot more fun.
Some of the wealthier people in those days did have books, but they used them in the same manner they would have used holy medals, statues, paintings, relics, etc. The lay people also focused on the power of blessed objects to ward off evil and cure diseases. (Apparently, it was believed that drinking holy water would cure hemerrhoids.
) The lay people did know about their faith; if you read the Medieval Miracle Plays that were performed by the guilds every Corpus Christi, you realize the people actually learned a lot about their faith. But they didn’t learn it through books, and they also had a different perspective about various aspects of the faith. So, would they have understood the prayers at the Mass? No, probably not to a great extent. Did that bother them? Probably not.
As a writer said, “When I fly, I don’t need to know everything the pilot is doing to know that he’s keeping us in the air and getting us to our destination.”
One of the funniest aspects of this devotion was the fact that the priests were careful to stagger the start time of Masses at the various altars around larger churches. (In larger churches, there would be side altars so that a number of priests could say Mass at the same time.) The priests were careful to stagger the elevation of the Host, because frequently, upon hearing the Sanctus bells signaling the impending consecration, the laity would stampede around the church, so that they could witness multiple elevations in one day. What can I say? Mass in the Middle Ages was a lot more fun.
Some of the wealthier people in those days did have books, but they used them in the same manner they would have used holy medals, statues, paintings, relics, etc. The lay people also focused on the power of blessed objects to ward off evil and cure diseases. (Apparently, it was believed that drinking holy water would cure hemerrhoids.
As a writer said, “When I fly, I don’t need to know everything the pilot is doing to know that he’s keeping us in the air and getting us to our destination.”