CatholicCrusade said:
::comes in without reading through the thread::
The Traditional Latin Mass is to last “in perpetuity” (Quo Primum). No Priest needs an indult to say the Mass of All Times
::walks out quietly::
*Quo Primum Tempore *hardly establishes any such thing the canonical limitations and historical reality of the development of the Roman Missal belies such a fallacious interpretation.
Changes to the Roman Missal brought about by
Cum Sanctissimum (1604 Clement VIII)
1570 Roman Missal: Rubric directing the celebrant upon entering the church to kneel and recite a verse from Ps. 65:
Introibo in domum tuam; in holocaustis reddam tibi vota mea, quae distinxerunt labia mea, before reciting the further antiphon,
Ne reminiscaris, and the five psalms in preparation for Mass.
1604 Roman Missal: First antiphon suppressed (omitted).
1570 Roman Missal: The prayer of St. Ambrose,
Summe Sacerdos, is not divided into parts.
1604 Roman Missal: The Summe Sacerdos is divided into sections for various days of the week.
1570 Roman Missal: The general rubrics are not numbered. Within the general rubrics there is no mention of ringing a bell, incense or torchbearers.
1604 Roman Missal: The general rubrics are numbered. Ringing a bell, incense and torchbearers are included in the rubrics along with additions such as RG XX describing the preparation required for the altar.
1570 Roman Missal: After the Confiteor the words “all sins” appear in the absolution rite. (
Misereatur…omnibus peccatis; Indulgentiam …omnium peccatorum)
1604 Roman Missal: The words “all sins” do not appear in Clement VIII’s Missal.
1570 Roman Missal: At High Mass the verse
Dirigatur Domine … is to be said by the celebrant while he incenses the altar before saying the Introit and again when the altar is incensed during the Offertory.
1604 Roman Missal: This rubric is suppressed in the Missal of Clement VIII.
1570 Roman Missal: The Kings name is mentioned in the Canon.
1604 Roman Missal: This rubric suppressed.
1570 Roman Missal: The words “As often as you do these things…,” (
Haec quotiescumque) are said while the celebrant elevates the chalice.
1604 Roman Missal: The rubrics order the above words to be said after the elevation instead of during.
1570 Roman Missal: At the end of High Mass, the celebrant is directed to impart three blessings not one: one at the epistle corner, one in the center, and one at the gospel corner of the altar. (“
In missa solemnia… ter benedicat populo, primo a cornu Epistolae dicens, Pater, secundo ante medium altaris dicens, Et Filius, tertio a cornu Evangelii dicens, Et Spiritus Sanctus…”)
1604 Roman Missal: This rubric suppressed and triple blessings reserved for prelates.
Source: Paul Cavendish, in an article for Altar No. 1, 1994 “The Tridentine Mass”. Cites
Missale Romanum, Paris, 1572, British Library Catalogue 1475.bb. 15;
Pontificale Romanum, Venice, 1572, British Library Catalogue C132.h.50.