U
Usige
Guest
Just curious how common it is for parishes to divvy up the passion narrative into more than three parts?
At several parishes near me it seems that the narrative is broken into 5 or 6 parts, plus has the congregation doing some of the Gospel also. An example might be like the following:
Deacon - Narrator
Priest - Jesus
Reader A - Simon Peter/disciples
Reader B - Pilate
Reader C - Soldiers, Unrepentant Thief
Reader D - Good Thief, centurion
Congregation - Crowds
The booklets we get often have what I can only describe as stage directions (People (angrily): Crucify him! Crucify him!). It often takes on the tone of a dramatic reading almost like a radio play.
The way it’s often done here seems to deviate from what was lain out in Paschales Solemnitatis, so was curious how common it was throughout the rest of the Catholic world.
[PS - before someone says it; it is one of the reasons I often join my wife at an EF celebration for Palm Sunday]
At several parishes near me it seems that the narrative is broken into 5 or 6 parts, plus has the congregation doing some of the Gospel also. An example might be like the following:
Deacon - Narrator
Priest - Jesus
Reader A - Simon Peter/disciples
Reader B - Pilate
Reader C - Soldiers, Unrepentant Thief
Reader D - Good Thief, centurion
Congregation - Crowds
The booklets we get often have what I can only describe as stage directions (People (angrily): Crucify him! Crucify him!). It often takes on the tone of a dramatic reading almost like a radio play.
The way it’s often done here seems to deviate from what was lain out in Paschales Solemnitatis, so was curious how common it was throughout the rest of the Catholic world.
[PS - before someone says it; it is one of the reasons I often join my wife at an EF celebration for Palm Sunday]