B
bkovacs
Guest
Maybe we can do away completely with the NO Mass and replace it with the Sarum Mass, which was used in English speaking countries before the Reformation.
valleadurni.blogspot.com/
valleadurni.blogspot.com/
By “English Speaking Countries” you mean Britain…Maybe we can do away completely with the NO Mass and replace it with the Sarum Mass, which was used in English speaking countries before the Reformation.
valleadurni.blogspot.com/
I am sailing right past the consultation and invention remarks to get to the heart of my objection: we already have the Tridentine Mass which has been in continuous celebration in essentially the same form well before it was codified. If you want to be a little crazy and go for the Traditional Ambrosian rite, that has continuity and has been celebrated non-stop for centuries, as has the Domincan and Carmelite rites…Simple Sinner,
Isn’t it preferable for a number of reasons? Not ambiguous in its catholicity, can’t be celebrated ad populum, isn’t 40 years old, is organic, wasn’t invented in consultation with Protestant ministers, isn’t a mix of weird antiquarianism with novel liturgics, etc. etc. etc. (etc. etc. etc. etc. etc.)?
Hi, I saw this post, and I wanted to add my two cents. I hope I’m not being rudeSimple Sinner,
Isn’t it preferable for a number of reasons? Not ambiguous in its catholicity, can’t be celebrated ad populum, isn’t 40 years old, is organic, wasn’t invented in consultation with Protestant ministers, isn’t a mix of weird antiquarianism with novel liturgics, etc. etc. etc. (etc. etc. etc. etc. etc.)?
The Anglican Use of the Roman Rite comes from the Anglican Book of Common Prayer.How is the Sarum Mass different from the Anglican-Use Mass? (I’m a convert from Anglicanism and grew up with the 1928 Common Book of Prayer so I’d love to see one of those on this Left Coast!)
Actually the Sarum Use spread throughout England, particularly in the south. It became the dominant Rite until the English Reformation.The Sarum rite was a use of the the Diocese of Salisbury and was not used throughout England. It was the use of one diocese and, being a use of Latin rite, would have little meaning to many Catholics, most of whom do not even know of its very limited and local existence 500+ years ago.
In other words, it was never a widespread English custom, though some late 20th century Anglicans did use it to justify a variety of innovations.