Tis_Bearself
Patron
Can some Catholic please enlighten me on how the Lessons and Carols service, which is done in some churches just before the Midnight Mass or vigil Mass on Christmas Eve, and in other churches at some other time during Advent, became a “thing” for Catholics, especially in USA?
My understanding of “Lessons and Carols” is that it was developed by an Anglican clergyman at Kings College, Cambridge, after WWI, for performance by a boys choir, and became a big tradition in UK with the BBC broadcasting it each year. All the time I was growing up as a Catholic in the US Midwest, I never heard of “Lessons and Carols”.
Now, it seems like in the East Coast dioceses, every other Catholic church (as well as many Protestant churches) are all having a “Lessons and Carols” service. I went to one last year and didn’t really know what it was supposed to be. I may go again this year to the one at the Cathedral, but I’m wondering how this Anglican tradition became a big Catholic tradition in USA?
Any explanation would be helpful.
My understanding of “Lessons and Carols” is that it was developed by an Anglican clergyman at Kings College, Cambridge, after WWI, for performance by a boys choir, and became a big tradition in UK with the BBC broadcasting it each year. All the time I was growing up as a Catholic in the US Midwest, I never heard of “Lessons and Carols”.
Now, it seems like in the East Coast dioceses, every other Catholic church (as well as many Protestant churches) are all having a “Lessons and Carols” service. I went to one last year and didn’t really know what it was supposed to be. I may go again this year to the one at the Cathedral, but I’m wondering how this Anglican tradition became a big Catholic tradition in USA?
Any explanation would be helpful.