Pick up that missalette! (If, y’know, you want to.) [Akin]

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jimmyakin.com/wp-content/uploads/baby-missalette-300x244.jpgRichard Becker, who describes himself as a “God-haunted lunatic,” has an entertaining rant against the use of missalettes at Mass.

Being a God-haunted lunatic myself, allow me to counter-rant in the same spirit.

In his piece, Becker poses a number of arguments against using missalettes at Mass. Let’s take a look at them:

1) The Argument from Van Morrison

Becker’s first argument compares going to Mass to going to a Van Morrison concert, which Becker indicates would be an incredibly thrilling experience for him.

I don’t know Van Morrison’s music myself, but fair enough. De gustibus non est disputandum.

Becker then asks whether, upon going to such a concert, he would Google the lyrics and read along with the stage performance. He says:

Noooo, of course not! I’d soak it all in – a total immersion, listening to and watching a great songwriter give voice to his own compositions, himself, in person! They’re songs I mostly know already by heart anyway, but even if I didn’t, why would I waste that exquisite privilege by reading along?

That’s what I think of when I go to church and see folks with their noses in the missalettes – those little booklets in the pew that contain all the readings and parts of the Mass. Worse still is when their eyes are glued to iPhones or other gadgets as they follow along on apps while the lector drones on pointlessly up front.

Allow me to draw your attention to some of Becker’s key words: “They’re songs I mostly know already by heart anyway.”

That’s a relevant difference. Most people at Mass don’t mostly know the scripture readings by heart anyway.

And far from diminishing the experience, for many members of the congregation, reading along enhances their experience of the readings.

That’s. Why. They. Do. It.


That’s also why people, including me, sometimes Google song lyrics. I don’t know if Becker ever does that, but I do. It’s one of the ways that I help avoid mondegreens.

So I don’t have a problem if people use missalettes at Mass—or, for that matter, their electronic equivalent.

On the other hand, if someone prefers not to use one, that’s fine, too.

And, if I may ask, why should Becker be dismayed by looking around at other people at Mass and seeing if and what they’re reading? On his theory, shouldn’t his attention be focused the lector, to drink in every detail of his proclamation of the readings?

At a Van Morrison concert, wouldn’t he be watching the stage performance and not the other members of the audience?

2) The Argument from College

Becker’s second argument also involves an analogy:

It’s like every college student’s worst nightmare: A professor that flashes one PowerPoint slide after another, reading them word for word. Then, as if to purposely add insult to injury, he’ll sometimes pass out lecture notes with the slides already on them. Torture.

As a college student, I had far worse nightmares than that, but I’ll acknowledge that I’d be annoyed if a professor did nothing more than read slides for 60 or 90 minutes.

That’s not what we’re talking about here.

The readings are short, and there are no more than three, max.

It’s more like when you are in a lecture and the professor stops to read an important passage word-for-word.

When that happens, students often turn to it in their textbooks and read it along with him, and they’re unlikely to mind if he reads three short passages from slides during the course of an overall lecture. (I’d also love it for the professor to pass out his own lecture notes!)

3) The Argument from the GIRM

Becker then mounts an argument based on the General Instruction of the Roman Missal or GIRM:

“The readings from the Word of God are to be listened to reverently by everyone,” the General Instruction explains, “for they are an element of the greatest importance in the Liturgy.” Catch that? Listened to, not scanned, not perused. In the liturgy, the Word of God is meant to be uttered and received.

This argument is of particular interest to me, as the Church’s liturgical law is a subject I happen to know something about.

Unfortunately, the argument does not work because it places too much emphasis on the phrased “listened to,” as if it excludes simultaneous reading.

It doesn’t.

Consider this parallel, also from the GIRM:

The Christian faithful who come together as one in expectation of the Lord’s coming are instructed by the Apostle Paul to sing together Psalms, hymns, and spiritual canticles (cf. Col 3: 16) [GIRM 39].

This does not mean that we shouldn’t simultaneously read the lyrics of the hymns we sing at Mass. It would be overtaxing the text to say that hymns should be sung, “not scanned, not perused.”

Or consider what the GIRM says about the priest saying the Collect (the opening prayer at Mass, which varies from day to day):

Next the Priest calls upon the people to pray and everybody, together with the Priest, observes a brief silence so that they may become aware of being in God’s presence and may call to mind their intentions. Then the Priest pronounces the prayer usually called the “Collect” and through which the character of the celebration finds expression [GIRM 54].

Catch that? The priest is to “pronounce” the Collect. It doesn’t say he should simultaneously read it, scan it, or peruse it. There’s nothing here about him reading from a written text.

4) The Alter Christus Argument

Becker then says:

Here’s more from the General Instruction: “When the Sacred Scriptures are read in the Church, God himself speaks to his people, and Christ, present in his word, proclaims the Gospel.”

The lector thus becomes another alter Christus, parallel to the priest who will confect the Eucharist and give us Jesus to eat. Dei Verbum makes this parallel quite explicit by insisting that in the Mass, the Church “unceasingly receives and offers to the faithful the bread of life from the table both of God’s word and of Christ’s body.”

So the lector’s job really is a vital one, but we treat it as if it were purely functional – a task that is required by the rubrics, yet largely irrelevant since we have the text so readily available, usually right there in the pew. “A reading from the First Letter of…,” the lector begins, which ought to put us on the edge of our seats. It’s Christ himself, after all, announcing his Word – the Logos, his very divine Self, enunciated for us, for me!

And yet, what’s our typical response? “Ho-hum (yawn), maybe I’ll grab the missalette and read along.”

I’d be rather cautious in saying that the lector “becomes another alter Christus, parallel to the priest.” I’m not familiar with this language being used in Church documents.

While there may be an element of truth here, if pressed to far, this analogy could flatten the sense in which the priest is uniquely an alter Christus.

Nevertheless, lectors—like all ministers at Mass—have an important role, though I question the characterization of people’s typical response as a ho-hum one.

My suspicion is that most people don’t read the missalette at all (though I could be wrong, because my attention is focused on the readings at this point).

To the extent that some of them do use the missalette, my interpretation would be that they are so engaged in the readings that they want to get as much out of them as possible and so they are following along in a way that they find helps them do this.

5) The Argument from Protestant Services


Becker argues:

When we’re at Mass, however, we should skip the missalette altogether lest we fall into what is essentially a Protestant approach to the Liturgy of the Word. In keeping with the Reformation precept that everyone should interpret the Bible for himself, many Protestants bring their own Bibles to church and read along as the Scriptures are read. It’s as if they’re checking up on the reader’s accuracy and precision – almost like rabbis peering over the shoulder of a young boy reading the Torah at his bar mitzvah. But if we’re reading, we’re not really listening, and the Liturgy of the Word becomes just another cerebral exercise instead of an incarnated, holistic epiphany.

“If we’re reading, we’re not really listening”? What? Sure we are! For many, that’s augmented listening.

I don’t know what Becker’s religious background is, but I used to be a Protestant, and I’m very familiar with the way many Protestant services are—essentially—Bible studies with hymns.

That’s not remotely what’s going on when Catholics read along using a missalette.

They’re not scrupulously checking up on the reader’s accuracy or precision or trying to test whatever interpretation against what the Scriptures actually say.

There is a difference between reading along so that you can get visual reinforcement of what you are hearing and taking a sola scriptura, “I’m going to interpret this for myself” approach.

6) The Argument from the Annunciation

Becker argues:

Sacred Scripture was meant to be received aurally in the liturgy, in the same way that classic iconography depicts the Blessed Mother receiving the Word of via a dove entering her ear. In fact, we call that blessed event the Annunciation because it was St. Gabriel’s “announcement” that itself realized the miracle of Jesus’ virginal conception. “Come and gaze upon this marvelous feat,” St. Athanasius attests, “the woman conceives through the hearing of her ears!” We’re called to do the same during the readings at Mass: To imitate Our Lady in receiving the Lord through hearing a proclamation, much as her cousin Elizabeth “received” an encounter with Jesus the moment she heard Mary’s greeting at the Visitation.

It’s true that Sacred Scripture is meant to be received aurally in the liturgy, but that does not mean it can’t also be receive visually.

This is a false either/or, whereas the Catholic approach is more frequently both/and.

That’s why there are missalettes in the Church in the first place, and why people have used daily missals at Mass for centuries: Because it helps some people to receive it both ways.

The appeal to the Annunciation does not disprove this. If it proved anything, it would prove too much. Why should the analogy be restricted to the liturgy? Why shouldn’t it be applied to every experience?

Bottom line: It’s hard to take exceptional events (like the Annunciation) and make universal rules from them.

A Role for Missalettes?

Becker does see some role for missalettes. He writes:

And the missalettes? Should we ditch them outright? I wouldn’t go that far, for there are circumstances when they do come in handy – and are even necessary. For instance, those who are hearing impaired have to rely on missalettes when there are no sign language interpreters or amplification devices available. Plus, let’s face it, sometimes it’s not easy to understand certain lectors, even if you want to.

I’m glad that Becker acknowledges that there is a legitimate role for missalettes, though I wouldn’t restrict it to uncommon cases like people who need a sign-language interpreter or when a lector is so bad at his job that he can’t be understood (in which case, he shouldn’t be lectoring; one of the requirements for the job is being able to read well in public).

The fact is that a lot of people find their experience of the readings augmented if they read along, and if this will help them more deeply assimilate God’s word, I say, more power to them! Read away!

On the other hand, if someone feels he’ll get more out of the readings simply by listening, more power to him, too!

It is more important that the people have a deeper experience of God’s word in the liturgy. How this happens is a secondary matter.

The fact that the Church has received the practice of the laity using missalettes or daily missals in Mass conveys an implicit blessing of the practice.

The fact that the Church has not mandated their use implies a blessing on the practice of simply listening as well.

De Gustibus Non Est Disputandum

Some years ago, I had a realization: It was very easy for me to read my personal preferences onto Catholic practice.

If I didn’t find something helpful to me, or otherwise to my taste, I wanted to suppose that it was somehow contrary to Catholic practice, or at least to the way Catholics *should *practice their faith.

I realized that I shouldn’t do this. As St. Paul wrote eloquently in 1 Corinthians 12-14, God did not make all Christians the same. The Body is not all one part. We all have different gifts, inclinations, and tastes.

I concluded from this that I need to respect the differences that God willed his people to have, and I should not insist that everyone have my own preferences.

If the Church permits something, that should be enough for me, and I shouldn’t look down my nose at those whose preferences are different than mine.

Subsequently, I have tried to take this principle to heart and internalize it. When I am tempted to go beyond what the Church requires, I try to stop and ponder: Is this really something that the Church has a rule about? Or am I in danger of imposing a pious little legalism of my own?

If I conclude it’s the latter, I resolve to mind my own business, to practice my faith in a way that I find helps me, and to respect those with other preferences.

After all, I should rejoice that they are practicing their faith and trying to grow closer to God, even if their way of doing that is different than mine.

Implications for the Lector?

I’d like to close with a note of encouragement for lectors who may be chagrined at seeing people use missalettes or daily missals. In commenting on how some lectors are difficult to understand, Becker writes:

I know for myself that if I’m up front reading, and I see folks reaching for their missalettes, I automatically assume that I’m doing a lousy job – that my “proclamation” is not “audible and intelligible” as the Catechism says it should be.

Still, I probably shouldn’t be so hard on myself, because I know that many of us grab the missalette and open it up out of habit, regardless of how good the lector is.

I agree that Becker is being too hard on himself. I’d encourage him to take a positive and charitable view if he happens to see people using missalettes when he reads.

It isn’t that he’s doing a bad job. It’s that they want to get even more out of the readings, and this is a way that they have determined they can do that.

Good for them!

And good for Becker for his service to the Church as a lector!

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jimmyakin.com/wp-content/uploads/baby-missalette-300x244.jpgRichard Becker, who describes himself as a “God-haunted lunatic,” has an entertaining rant against the use of missalettes at Mass.

Being a God-haunted lunatic myself, allow me to counter-rant in the same spirit.

In his piece, Becker poses a number of arguments against using missalettes at Mass. Let’s take a look at them:

1) The Argument from Van Morrison

Becker’s first argument compares going to Mass to going to a Van Morrison concert, which Becker indicates would be an incredibly thrilling experience for him.

I don’t know Van Morrison’s music myself, but fair enough. De gustibus non est disputandum.

Becker then asks whether, upon going to such a concert, he would Google the lyrics and read along with the stage performance. He says:

Noooo, of course not! I’d soak it all in – a total immersion, listening to and watching a great songwriter give voice to his own compositions, himself, in person! They’re songs I mostly know already by heart anyway, but even if I didn’t, why would I waste that exquisite privilege by reading along?

That’s what I think of when I go to church and see folks with their noses in the missalettes – those little booklets in the pew that contain all the readings and parts of the Mass. Worse still is when their eyes are glued to iPhones or other gadgets as they follow along on apps while the lector drones on pointlessly up front.

Allow me to draw your attention to some of Becker’s key words: “They’re songs I mostly know already by heart anyway.”

That’s a relevant difference. Most people at Mass don’t mostly know the scripture readings by heart anyway.

And far from diminishing the experience, for many members of the congregation, reading along enhances their experience of the readings.

That’s. Why. They. Do. It.


That’s also why people, including me, sometimes Google song lyrics. I don’t know if Becker ever does that, but I do. It’s one of the ways that I help avoid mondegreens.

So I don’t have a problem if people use missalettes at Mass—or, for that matter, their electronic equivalent…[snip]…
Several other points. Not only is the lecturer sometimes hard to hear or understand but so is the priest in his various readings. Also, it is easier to understand what is read than what is heard ( for me anyway ), at least reading gives me two senses with which to absorb the readings.

And I wish all the readings of the priest were actually in the Misselette. The priest often uses readings I can’t find and usually his reading is so muted that I can’t hear the readings.

Linus2nd
 
We have a large, older, church and an older congregation; thus, sadly many cannot hear the readings, let-alone the Gospel and for new converts we encourage the use of the missalette to help them become familiar with the order of and rubrics of the Mass. 🙂
 
My mind wanders but if I have a booklet, I use Word Among Us, I am able to concentrate without being distracted.

As far as readers go, we have noticed a tendency in the readers to read so slowly that what they are reading is lost. Thank goodness I can read it. They pause after ever third word instead of reading for thought content.
So it goes like this:

Brothers and sisters: (Pause) Faith is (Pause)The realization (Pause)of what is hoped for (Pause)and evidence of things(Pause) not seen.(Pause) Because of it (Pause) the ancients (Pause) were well attested (Pause)

The periods and commas are ignored. I am not exaggerating.
 
@Catholic Opinion…I could only get through two of your huge paragraphs…:ouch:

I do agree with you that the missalette should be used. There are many distractions at Mass while the readings are proclaimed. Children crying, microphone too soft, lector not clear or leaving out an important word or two.
If you miss something, by reading along you can just re-read those lines & understand much better by using sight along with sound. Two senses are better than one!

My parish spent $45,000 on 2 big screens for the responses…but are not allowed to project the readings because of copyright laws. The missalettes have been removed, so I’m attending Mass at a neighboring parish where they still have them.
 
If a Protestant is allowed to have an opinion on this matter:

I don’t think “missalettes” are a very good idea either - but not because it’s bad to read during Mass. Rather, it’s because it’s a “missalette” and not a “missal”. It strikes me as rather poor taste to print the Sacred Liturgy on cheap paperback booklets that get tossed in the rubbish dump every month. Why not have an actual hardcover missal, containing all the readings one would ever need, that could be used month after month and year after year? If Protestants can afford decent-quality pew Bibles, Catholics should be able to afford decent-quality pew missals.
 
If a Protestant is allowed to have an opinion on this matter:

I don’t think “missalettes” are a very good idea either - but not because it’s bad to read during Mass. Rather, it’s because it’s a “missalette” and not a “missal”. It strikes me as rather poor taste to print the Sacred Liturgy on cheap paperback booklets that get tossed in the rubbish dump every month. Why not have an actual hardcover missal, containing all the readings one would ever need, that could be used month after month and year after year? If Protestants can afford decent-quality pew Bibles, Catholics should be able to afford decent-quality pew missals.
Bran,
You most certainly are allowed to have an opinion on the matter… welcome.
Many Catholic Churches do use such a “missal” as you describe with all of the yearly cycles therein; however, many find it more convenient to have the text for the season pulled from the large book and placed in the proper order for the Mass.

Out of curiosity, I must ask though, have you picked up the “missalette” from the pew of a Catholic Church and read thru the content and compared that to the “Gather”/“missal” that is normally sitting right beside it? :confused:
 
Out of curiosity, I must ask though, have you picked up the “missalette” from the pew of a Catholic Church and read thru the content and compared that to the “Gather”/“missal” that is normally sitting right beside it? :confused:
I’m not quite sure what you mean. I don’t remember ever seeing both a missal and a missalette in a Catholic church.
 
This is a good blog.

I agree that all too often, Catholics (and Protestants) tend to impose their own personal preferences and call these The Best Way. We simply can’t do this. We can do it for ourselves, but not insist that others follow The Best Way, which is really Our Way.

I attended a Catholic Answers Family Conference several years ago, and one of the speakers, a priest, said that Catholics SHOULD bring their Bibles to Mass and read them along with the readings and take notes.

I don’t do it anymore, but I often regret not having my own Bible with me. I enjoy taking notes in my Bible from the good homilies. Very helpful throughout the rest of my life.

What works really well for me is going through the daily readings from the Bible each day and then having them ready to read for Mass along with the reader/priest. Often the Bible has commentary, which can enhance the readings I hear at Mass if I’ve read them in advance. Also, I use the Revised translation rather than the NAB, so reading my preferred translation along with the official translation (NAB) helps add more dimension to the readings.

But I forget to do this, and I feel badly about it. I should get back to it–reading the Bible daily is such Basic Christianity, and the Catholic Church provides an organized syllabus for daily Bible readings. I’m only hurting myself to ignore my Bible 😦
 
Our church is going through a phase, short lived I hope, where the readers seem to think they are performing Shakespeare or reading to a group of children at the local library. I absolutely dislike this style and wish the Pastor or Liturgist would stop it since it very often injects the readers’ interpretation into the reading by vocal stress and or tonal changes.

I also have some difficulty hearing what is being read due to hearing problems, the hearing aids do not always make things clearer, just louder.

I read my missal to ensure I get exactly what was written without the nuances of the reader.
 
Our church is going through a phase, short lived I hope, where the readers seem to think they are performing Shakespeare or reading to a group of children at the local library. I absolutely dislike this style and wish the Pastor or Liturgist would stop it since it very often injects the readers’ interpretation into the reading by vocal stress and or tonal changes.
Many parishes provide their readers with “*Workbook for Lectors, Gospel Readers, and Proclaimers of the Word”, *a great aid in understanding the readings and pronouncing the unfamiliar words properly. That workbook also tells readers what words to stress in any given reading.

As for speaking too slowly, every single readers’ workshop I’ve ever attended stressed that we should speak slowly; some simply carry that too far. My natural speech pattern is quite rapid and low (a result of years of being told by my parents that I was speaking too loudly). Our mic system is good but I’ve always been concerned that I won’t be clear enough. It put my mind at ease when one day a woman who normally sits in the last pew made a point of telling me that she always hears me OK.
 
Incidentally “De Gustibus Non Est Disputandum” was something a female coworker used to email me a lot. Literally it’s “there is no dispute concerning tastes/preferences” but I always translated it to myself as “we can like different things without arguing about them.”

That said, whether you read along with a missal, a side-by side (if you’re attending a non-English Mass), or not at all, you’re not going to get much out of it if you’re not interested. How to stimulate interest is probably where the focus should be IMO. Seems as if the best teachers are the ones who use visuals, such as chalkboards, illustrations to make their point. Christ Himself drew in the sand. Bishop Sheen used to use a chalk board with illustrations to make his points. I’m sure there are many others. I understand much of this can’t be done in the Mass itself so better this interest be nurtured and developed beforehand somehow.
 
There is also the fact, sad to say for those of us living through such, that there are still parishes where the priest ad libs the Eucharistic prayers, skips the creed and any (yes, any) penitential rite, picks and chooses readings according to whim, etc. Of course, we’re told “don’t bother with the front part of the SONGBOOK and just be active participants”. But if I must attend, I’m sorry, but I am NOT going to just let myself ‘go with the flow’. I’ll pray the missing prayers (and pray the botched ones as they should be), either before or after Mass, and thank the Lord there’s a missalette there to enable me to do so.
 
I have no concern about what my fellow parishioners do, and I assume the missallettes are there for a reason. I personally like to read the readings and gospel in advance and, when at Mass, close my eyes and listen.

Of course (with my approach), there’s always the misapprehension that I’m sleeping. 😉
 
I have no concern about what my fellow parishioners do, and I assume the missallettes are there for a reason. I personally like to read the readings and gospel in advance and, when at Mass, close my eyes and listen.

Of course (with my approach), there’s always the misapprehension that I’m sleeping. 😉
I do the same.

I follow Mass along in the Missal simply so that I won’t accidentally revert to old responses. Let’s face it, even after 3 years and a few months I still cannot recite the Creed & Gloria correctly without the text in front of me. But the missal gets put down for the readings. Might get picked up for the Psalm if the refrain is too long to pick up on the first go round.
 
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