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Guest
I have recently learned that during the masses held during the Second Vatican Council, the majority of them were held as “dialogue masses.”
From America, November 3, 1962:
“In Rome and within the Council itself, one had ample evidence before the discussions ever opened that the Church had already begun to “update” its liturgy. As Fr. Frederick R. McManus, former head of the American Liturgical Conference and a consultant to the Council, remarked in an authoritative background story for the NC News Service, the many Sunday evening Masses throughout the Eternal City testify to what has been slowly growing in recent years. He pointed also to the fact that the daily Mass opening each general session of the Council is a “dialogue” Mass. In other words, the congregation of bishops and others in attendance respond in unison and, in some places, pray along with the celebrant, who offers the Holy Sacrifice facing the people.”
From America, November 24, 1962:
"Council Fathers who wish to speak must present their names three days in advance. At the beginning of each day’s meeting—after Mass, which has become by custom a dialogue Mass—the names of the day’s speakers are read out in the order in which they are to address the Council. "
Here’s an image from around the time:
http://conciliaria.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/08/cover.jpg
It seems to me very likely that this form of worship, which was still a TLM, established in the bishops an appreciation for the communal response which is now found in the Ordinary Form of the mass today. From a bulletin report that followed the council’s 11th general meeting (October 31, 1962):
"It reported that although the Fathers said the dialogue Mass ought to be promoted, “it was noted that the faithful should not be deprived of those moments of recollection which favor personal piety.”
The dialogue mass was not a form widely practiced in the U.S., but was common in Europe.
From America, November 3, 1962:
“In Rome and within the Council itself, one had ample evidence before the discussions ever opened that the Church had already begun to “update” its liturgy. As Fr. Frederick R. McManus, former head of the American Liturgical Conference and a consultant to the Council, remarked in an authoritative background story for the NC News Service, the many Sunday evening Masses throughout the Eternal City testify to what has been slowly growing in recent years. He pointed also to the fact that the daily Mass opening each general session of the Council is a “dialogue” Mass. In other words, the congregation of bishops and others in attendance respond in unison and, in some places, pray along with the celebrant, who offers the Holy Sacrifice facing the people.”
From America, November 24, 1962:
"Council Fathers who wish to speak must present their names three days in advance. At the beginning of each day’s meeting—after Mass, which has become by custom a dialogue Mass—the names of the day’s speakers are read out in the order in which they are to address the Council. "
Here’s an image from around the time:
http://conciliaria.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/08/cover.jpg
It seems to me very likely that this form of worship, which was still a TLM, established in the bishops an appreciation for the communal response which is now found in the Ordinary Form of the mass today. From a bulletin report that followed the council’s 11th general meeting (October 31, 1962):
"It reported that although the Fathers said the dialogue Mass ought to be promoted, “it was noted that the faithful should not be deprived of those moments of recollection which favor personal piety.”
The dialogue mass was not a form widely practiced in the U.S., but was common in Europe.