New UK Ordinariate Mass with Elements of "Latin Mass"!

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The UK Ordinariate revealed their new mass yesterday which contains elements of the traditional “Latin Mass” such as the Last Gospel and the preparatory Prayers at the Foot of the Altar!!! Click here for more.:extrahappy:
 
They’ve always had the last gospel etc. It’s part of the Anglican rite.
 
Yeah, when I went to the first Anglican Use parish down in San Antonio a few months ago, it seemed a lot like a TLM but in higher English, with a few OF features mixed in (e.g., “the body of Christ”) etc.
 
Yeah, when I went to the first Anglican Use parish down in San Antonio a few months ago, it seemed a lot like a TLM but in higher English, with a few OF features mixed in (e.g., “the body of Christ”) etc.
The Anglican Mass started as an English translation of the old pre-Tridentine Catholic Mass.

Cranmer messed it up some, but it’s largely based on the TLM.

God Bless
 
Some might disagree:
The sermon was preached by Monsignor Andrew Burnham, Assistant to the Ordinary and a member of the special working party set up by Rome which devised the new Use.
In his sermon, Mgr Burnham said: “…Have we, in the Ordinariate, dreamed up our very own ‘hermeneutic of rupture’? Certainly, we have broken away from the Church of England, in which most of us had spent most of our lives. We have broken away too from the trajectory of modern Anglican liturgical revision… But … we have most truly discovered in place of rupture ‘a hermeneutic of continuity’, that is we have found a way of joining together Cranmer’s linguistic brilliance, and feel for translation, with the ancient Canon of the Mass, prayed everywhere in England from the time of St Augustine until the Reformation, that is, a thousand years. And that Canon continues to be prayed throughout the Universal Church. There’s continuity for you.”
ordinariate.org.uk/news
 
Yeah, when I went to the first Anglican Use parish down in San Antonio a few months ago, it seemed a lot like a TLM but in higher English, with a few OF features mixed in (e.g., “the body of Christ”) etc.
It seems those “OF” features (communion formula, English, etc.) were implemented in 1964.
 
He may have been a brilliant linguist, but he was a heretic who destroyed the validity of Anglican orders through his changes.

God Bless
Oh Good,

Let’s start on Anglican Orders again…
 
He may have been a brilliant linguist, but he was a heretic who destroyed the validity of Anglican orders through his changes.

God Bless
That’s why they came back to Rome 😉

But you have to admit (well you don’t have to;)) that the language is beautiful.
 
The Anglican Mass started as an English translation of the old pre-Tridentine Catholic Mass.

Cranmer messed it up some, but it’s largely based on the TLM.

God Bless
You’re correct. That would be the Mass prior to the Council of Trent. But there were many rites in existence at that point, most of those which Pope Pius V abrogated in 1570, including the Anglican version. The Sarum Rite, I believe, survived.
 
They’ve always had the last gospel etc. It’s part of the Anglican rite.
The only Anglican parishes that had the last Gospel and the preparatory prayers were Anglo Catholic parishes.

Also until the Catholic Church changed its liturgy after VII, the Episcopal church also changed its liturgy more in line with the Catholic Church. Also before that time unless a parish was either high church or Anglo Catholic Morning Prayer was the usual service three Sundays and Holy Communion was celebrated at an earlier time. All this changed around the 70’s and it seemed that most of the parishes were more “high church”, meaning the ministers wore chasubles and called Holy Communion the Holy Eucharist, sorta of middle of the road.

I don’t recall ever calling a minister Father until I started attending an Anglo Catholic or High church parish. At least these are my experiences growing up within the Episcopal church. And at least in the parishes I attended that were low church, none of the Rectors referred to themselves as priests, but ministers and everyone I know thought they were Protestant. Calling themselves Catholic was not projected unless one belonged to an Anglo Catholic parish.

It seems that today several denominations prefer to be known as “Catholic”, when years ago the subject never came up.

Yours in the Hearts of Jesus and Mary

Bernadette
 
I am confident that we will return to the Latin Traditional Mass as a more common and popular mass than the Novus Ordo.

I’m sure that when the Warning, the Permanent Miracle and the Great Chastisement come to pass…we will return to the TLM.

I just pray that more and more souls will be brought to God’s grace before this great and terrible event.
 
I wish we would please stop arguing about Cranmer’s heresy. Yes he was a major heretic but that is not the point of this thread.

The point of this thread is that the Anglican Ordinariates, not just in the UK but everywhere, now have a gorgeous liturgy.
 
I wish we would please stop arguing about Cranmer’s heresy. Yes he was a major heretic but that is not the point of this thread.

The point of this thread is that the Anglican Ordinariates, not just in the UK but everywhere, now have a gorgeous liturgy.
The Anglican Use congregation of St. John the Evangelist here in Calgary now uses this revised liturgy as well; they are part of the U.S. Ordinariate.

I’m especially happy that they have the EF-derived Offertory as an option, as is the OF Offertory (e.g. Blessed art thou…)
 
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