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Edmundus1581
Guest
I agree entirely.For anyone to say anything before the Gospel Acclamation is sung is, to me, breaking the holy silence after the second reading.
I agree entirely.For anyone to say anything before the Gospel Acclamation is sung is, to me, breaking the holy silence after the second reading.
I have the same reaction to gestures to start singing the response to the Psalm. I even saw it every day for two weeks at Morning and Evening Prayer while taking a liturgy course. We’re all involved in liturgy in our parishes, do we really need a wide gesture and big smile to know when to sing the response?In all due respect, tell that cantor to “stop, we all know when to stand.” It’s the norm week after week after week…
Neither is correct.Thank you,
In parishes around my place, we generally tell the congregation to stand up/rise just before singing the gospel acclamation. (Otherwise some people would sit and there would be some confusion whether to sit or stand for a few people).
My concern is about how to word it.
Are both of them liturgically correct ?.
- Kindly rise for the Gospel.
- Kindly rise for the Gospel acclamation.
Better yet, if the deacon is present, he calls “The doors! the doors! Wisdom, be attentive.”–which is first a call to get the unbelievers out and watch the doors (not done for several centuries), and then, if the tone of St. Basil is taken in account, “Shut up and listen!”In my Byzantine parish:
Priest : Wisdom! Let us stand and listen to the reading of the holy Gospel according to St. XXXX
Response: Glory be to you o Lord, glory be to You
Priest: Let us be attentive