Ok, can anyone explain what is ‘the Extraordinary Form’ of the Mass? I know it gets discussed here, but I don’t know what it means in practicality. Is it any different from the usual mass on Sunday’s/during the week?
Thanking you in advance.
It is the Mass according to the 1962 Roman Missal, in latin.
It is sometimes misused to refer to the Mass according to the Dominican Missal (also in Latin). But properly, that isn’t the EF, since the EF is the 1962 Roman Missal.
The Ordinary Form is the 1969 missal, and its translations, and the two minor revisions of it since.
In both the EF and Dominican Masses, there is one epistle, and the gospel; there is no routine reading from the prophets (tho’ certain feasts do so). The priest usually stands facing the same direction as the people, except when reading to them, blessing them, or instructing them.
There are fewer options for the celebrant than in the Ordinary Form. The rubrics are much stricter. Translations are not used, except for the Dalmatian missal. (Tho’ most parishioners’ handmissals include translations.) There’s only one standard Eucharistic Prayer. Concelebration is not allowed, per se, except for a pontifical high mass.
There are 4 distinct types of mass under the EF: The Pontifical High Mass, the Solemn High Mass, the Sung Mass, and the Low Mass. A 5th is a minor variation on the low mass - and that’s the private low mass without the faithful. They differ in the rubrics, and in exactly which prayers are taken during the introit, prayers of thanksgiving, and dismissal.