S
Spyridon
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Because they’re using the pre-1955 Holy Week rites.Can anyone else help?
Because they’re using the pre-1955 Holy Week rites.Can anyone else help?
www.beautysoancient.com
Yes, I have heard that the Institute of Christ the King has used the Mass of the Presanctified in the past, and an indult from the Pontifical Commission Ecclesia Dei was formally given for this year.communion is not offered to the laity on Good Friday in keeping with centuries of tradition.
No, this is not a peculiar practice of the Institute of Christ the King. It would have been observed in every Roman Rite Parish until 1955.Is this a peculiar practice of the ICKSP?
I think what @Brandon_Cal wanted to know is if using the pre-1955 Holy Week liturgies today is exclusive to the ICRSS, not if it was the only entity ever to use them.No, this is not a peculiar practice of the Institute of Christ the King. It would have been observed in every Roman Rite Parish until 1955.
I dunno. There were a lot of people at the Office of the Pre-Sanctified on Good Friday. I guess the real test will be how many come next year, although the folks who affiliate themselves with the ICRSS in this Archdiocese tend not to attend liturgical services anywhere else so even that isn’t necessarily an indication.No Communion on Good Friday? That’s going to be about as popular as Amish Pizza. :cowboy_hat_face:
Its the traditional practice, I’m sure its popular with folks who like to abide by tradition- although maybe not with you.No Communion on Good Friday? That’s going to be about as popular as Amish Pizza
No, the pre-1955 Holy Week was also used by the FSSP (Priestly Fraternity of St. Peter), Monastere Saint-Benoit (a small monastery in southern France), as well as the Institute of Christ the King.I think what @Brandon_Cal wanted to know is if using the pre-1955 Holy Week liturgies today is exclusive to the ICRSS, not if it was the only entity ever to use them.