D
davidosb
Guest
Greetings,
This morning as I was leaving the church after Mass, I was told that I had made a small error in my reading of the epistle (from I John.) Apparently it’s no longer the norm to affix the “Saint” to the author’s name when introducing the reading. I was told I should have said what was written in the lectionary, that is, “A reading from the First Letter of John”, and not added the term “Saint”.
I was sure I had actually seen the word “Saint” printed in the lectionary, and went to the sacristy to check. Sure enough, “A reading from the First Letter of Saint John” was spelled out, clear as day. However when I turned the page to the day’s Gospel, I saw “A reading from the Holy Gospel according to John”, without the saint.
I have two questions:
a) Why the discrepancy between epistle and gospel? Was John a saint when he wrote/collected his epistles, but not his gospel?
b) What is the reasoning behind the church’s decision to remove the term “Saint” from these introductions? The only possible argument I’ve heard is that, in the cases where an epistle or gospel might possibly have been more of a collection of the writings of two or more Christians than a work by a single evangelist, it’s best not to refer to the “author” as Saint, since this might somehow be unfair to those other authors/compilers… I dunno, in my opinion that sounds pretty weak.
Thanks in advance.
-David
This morning as I was leaving the church after Mass, I was told that I had made a small error in my reading of the epistle (from I John.) Apparently it’s no longer the norm to affix the “Saint” to the author’s name when introducing the reading. I was told I should have said what was written in the lectionary, that is, “A reading from the First Letter of John”, and not added the term “Saint”.
I was sure I had actually seen the word “Saint” printed in the lectionary, and went to the sacristy to check. Sure enough, “A reading from the First Letter of Saint John” was spelled out, clear as day. However when I turned the page to the day’s Gospel, I saw “A reading from the Holy Gospel according to John”, without the saint.
I have two questions:
a) Why the discrepancy between epistle and gospel? Was John a saint when he wrote/collected his epistles, but not his gospel?
b) What is the reasoning behind the church’s decision to remove the term “Saint” from these introductions? The only possible argument I’ve heard is that, in the cases where an epistle or gospel might possibly have been more of a collection of the writings of two or more Christians than a work by a single evangelist, it’s best not to refer to the “author” as Saint, since this might somehow be unfair to those other authors/compilers… I dunno, in my opinion that sounds pretty weak.
Thanks in advance.
-David