C
Cor_ad_Cor
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Please let us know what the next experience is like. It almost sounds as if you weren’t there for a Mass but some other liturgy or function. (Not saying that is the case, just…odd.)
I don’t know if there is a requirement for the homily to reflect on the readings, or this is just something that many priests choose to do because the readings provide some obvious talking points.In my home parish the homily is a reflection on the readings
This to me is very odd.Re readings being omitted, the Gospel is always read, but rarely all the others (1st reading from OT, psalm, 2nd reading from NT). I particularly like it when the readings from Holy Scripture are dropped but then they do massive long (i guess) bidding prayers that last 20 minutes, so I lose track and can’t follow. It happened so regularly that hearing all the readings was the exception rather than the norm. In several parishes. Not all. But not unusual either by any means.
you must attend a very militant parishmissiles are in the back of the narthex on tables
It happened to me several times while travelling that I went to mass on a Saturday evening thinking it was a Sunday Mass, but it turned out it was a Saturday (weekday) Mass, so with everything, including readings, much reduced with respect to Sunday Mass.You are right, looked on the wrong day in my diary. A day ahead of myself. Though it is the 22nd where I am now but wasn’t yesterday when I posted. Agreed I have not yet attended a Mass where the readings where omitted.
Yeah, me too. I’ve heard that the homily is supposed to explain the readings, and usually they do, but like you said some of them give a quick mention (if any) to the readings and then go off on some other pressing topic. Our homily at the Saturday vigil last weekend was an anti-abortion homily because it’s March for Life week here. Nothing wrong with that but it was not really connected to the day’s readings. I’ve also heard homilies that were pleas for funds from some group, or a reading and discussion of the bishop’s letter on some major clergy sexual abuse issue. Again I don’t mind these but the readings for the day were not connected.I don’t know if there is a requirement for the homily to reflect on the readings, or this is just something that many priests choose to do because the readings provide some obvious talking points.
I’ve heard many homilies that started off with some pro-forma reference to the readings but then went off on a total tangent to cover a totally different topic. This may be especially relevent if a particular topic is of exceptional relevance at that particular moment, and the priest considers it necessary to talk about it. For example the abortion vote in Ireland.
At Holy Mass in the UK, it’s really the norm to say the confiteor, as well as other prayers in the penitential rite, every time, I’m not aware of it ever being omitted. So I really thought it was part and parcel. (Quote).
Wait, wait, are you saying that the Confiteor is said every time as well as the other forms of the Penitential Rite in the parishes you go to? I am also in the UK and have never come across that. Perhaps you just phrased it awkwardly.
As Tis and others have said, the Confiteor is only one of several options. It isn’t a case of saying it as well as the other forms.
Sure, go again to see if that was a fluke or maybe you missed something.I think I will go to mass there again to pay more attention
Well, yes and no.I’ve heard that the homily is supposed to explain the readings
I have attended Mass with several priests who usually discuss the saint of the day at daily Mass. It makes sense because the priest is appearing in the vestment colors appropriate to the particular Saint (red for a martyr, white for a confessor) and sometimes even uses the readings for the saint’s day rather than the scheduled weekday readings. Even where they don’t use the readings for the saint’s day, the priests usually find some way to relate the life of the saint to one of the daily readings.One of the priests at my parish usually talks about the saint of the day (daily Mass).
Nonetheless, it would be an innovative solution for bad homilies! :crazy_face:And no missiles at mass…my phone keeps “correcting” my typing to change mass booklets into bombs.