O
OraLabora
Guest
That explains it. They chant the Mass and Divine Office according to their website.It is the Abbey of Regina Laudis in Bethlehem, CT
The “Benedictine” way is to sit through the alleluia up until the repetition of the last Alleluia:
Alleluia (schola, everyone except schola sits), alleluia (repeated, everyone except schola sits), psalm or scripture verse sung on same mode as alleluia (everyone except schola sits), last alleluia as the deacon processes with the book of gospels to the ambo: everyone rises.
I really think many of the questions that crop up on these forums come from lack of knowledge. In particular, monastic usages can differ from what one is used to in parishes.
For example most monasteries never had “communion rails” as we know them in parishes, but a cloister fence or grille, with a gate in the middle through which communion is distributed. Before that many monasteries, and indeed churches, had rood screens instead of communion rails, which made the sanctuary all but invisible to the laity; this existed up until the Council of Trent where it was decreed that the laity should be more “involved” in the Mass and be able to see what is going on. Thus was born the “communion rail” which was in fact similar to a cloister barrier, and was mainly to separate the nave from the sanctuary. But even before rood screens, there was a form of communion rail. So what we often think is an abandoning of tradition is just an ebb and flow of some traditions waning and waxing and waning again. The Church is a living Church and the liturgy is a living liturgy, not fossilized to a specific point in time.
I second the question about “subdeacons” in an OF Mass. There are no subdeacons at an OF Mass.