B
Bran_Stark
Guest
In 1911, Pope Pius X issued a major reform of the liturgy, which included changing the orders of precedence so that celebrations of saints would not overshadow the Sunday office as often as they had.
Whilst browsing Google Books, I came across a article from 1913 discussing this reform. A curious excerpt follows:
Whilst browsing Google Books, I came across a article from 1913 discussing this reform. A curious excerpt follows:
The anomaly does indeed seem jarring to me. But how did this odd situation come about in the first place? Does this mean that if the Nth Sunday after Pentecost was pushed away by the Feast of St. N, the priest would celebrate the first half of the Mass of St. N, preach a sermon about the readings for the Nth Sunday after Pentecost, and then resume the Mass of St. N? And was this required, or only permitted?For the laity at large, as already noted, the most interesting feature in the new programme is the privileged position now accorded to the Office and Mass of the ordinary Sundays of the year. Speaking generally, it may be said that in future the Sunday will only be displaced by feasts of high rank, one practical consequence of which will be that henceforth the epistle and Gospel read to the congregation from the pulpit will rarely be in disagreement with the epistle and Gospel of the Mass read at the altar, an anomaly which in recent years must often have jarred upon those possessing any sense of the liturgical fitness of things.