I take my copy of the monthly publication, Magnificat, which has the readings for every day.
There is a fashion abroad now in the Church that the Word (scripture readings) are to be “proclaimed” – which means that people should listen and not read along. I find this idiotic. Is the Word less proclaimed because I follow in my missalette? What if I am hard of hearing, or what if my English isn’t all that good and I need the written back-up. (Rant over).
I have 14 Bibles at home, including Latin, Greek and Hebrew Bibles.
Hello, mercygate! I understand your “rant” over the recent emphasis on
listening, rather than
"following" the readings, as the Word is orally proclaimed. This is one of those topics which gets a 50/50 split in the circles I run with.
I now listen more than follow, but have already “peaked” at the Scriptures earlier. That makes the listening more fulfilling.
What we could **all **agree on, I believe, is that for the past 1900 years as near as we can research, (even back to Justin Martyr’s wonderful description of the mass in 140 AD) the Liturgy of the Word as celebrated in the Mass has
never taken the form of this:
“… Now, let us all silently read the Scriptures given us for this day, as we meditate upon them for the next 4 minutes.”
but rather has
always taken the form of a r
eal live person coming forward and
orally proclaiming:
“… A reading from the Book of the Prophet Isaiah…”,
or
“… A reading from the First Letter of St Paul to the Corinthians…”
In other words, the Word of God is
truly, literally “Living” in the Church’s Liturgy, because human mouths are
literally proclaiming it in every single mass, every single day, in every single country on Earth (I’m not sure about Mars or Venus).
OK, I’m through ranting about that, I feel better now… thanks!
God Bless Us All!