R
RPRPsych
Guest
Dear Traditional CAFers (especially those who lived before the introduction of the Ordinary Form),
In a novel I’m reading, one of the main characters, who’s undergoing formation for the priesthood (he later becomes a very good and orthodox priest, so it’s not a Catholic-bashing novel) complains that “in the New Mass, we have to give a full-length sermon, whereas before, we just needed to expound a little on the Scripture readings.” Is this true? Were sermons shorter and more succinct pre-liturgical reform?
NOTE: just the facts, please. I’m not trying to start a fire-fight here, I’m asking out of genuine curiosity and ignorance, as I was born well after Paul VI promulgated the Novus Ordo Missae, and it’s all I know (and love)
In a novel I’m reading, one of the main characters, who’s undergoing formation for the priesthood (he later becomes a very good and orthodox priest, so it’s not a Catholic-bashing novel) complains that “in the New Mass, we have to give a full-length sermon, whereas before, we just needed to expound a little on the Scripture readings.” Is this true? Were sermons shorter and more succinct pre-liturgical reform?
NOTE: just the facts, please. I’m not trying to start a fire-fight here, I’m asking out of genuine curiosity and ignorance, as I was born well after Paul VI promulgated the Novus Ordo Missae, and it’s all I know (and love)