L
lucybeebee
Guest
Why is there no distinction between High Mass and Low Mass in the Novus Ordo? Or is there? In my experience, there does not seem to be any, although the experiences of others could be different.
I think it would be nice if we could know what to expect (like when an EF parish advertises low Mass at 8:00 and sung Mass at 10:30), but I think the problem lies in the very fact pointed out above that while those sorts of terms might *suggest *certain elements to us now there are absolutely no rules about what must happen in order for something to qualify. Whereas before there was a fairly specific separation of the levels of solemnity (eg. at low Mass the priest wasn’t allowed to sing his parts), a priest can now pick and choose the various details he wants to incorporate. So I might show up to something advertised as a solemn Mass with the reasonable expectation that a deacon will be assisting (a deacon was required for solemn Mass before) but the priest doing the advertising might simply mean “a Mass with what I think are lots of fancier options.” Another priest might simply think “well, Mass is always supposed to be solemn, so I just throw that adjective in whenever I mention the Mass, like talking about the Most Holy Eucharist.” Since the terms no longer reflect juridical reality, they very easily lose the distinctions they were meant to convey.I think it would be great if parishes would be able to ‘advertise’ their masses as such so people can know what to expect.
When the Mass of Paul VI was created the liturgical experts working on it used the Low Mass as the typical example of a Mass that most people would have seen. Thus, the Mass of Paul VI corresponds to the normal experience of people in the 50s and early 60s – a low Mass. There is no high Mass (or, for that matter, Missa Cantata or Sung Mass) in the current normal liturgical praxis of the Latin Church.Why is there no distinction between High Mass and Low Mass in the Novus Ordo? Or is there? In my experience, there does not seem to be any, although the experiences of others could be different.
I don’t think anyone would argue that we can’t see any *rough *equivalents of the old distinctions. Where I would differ from you, though, is that I do think we have to recognize that it’s more than just nomenclature - there is no juridical differentiation among Masses, so these categories, in that sense, do not exist. That doesn’t preclude our trying to realize the old categories in how we plan the liturgies of the year, but it does mean that we will not be able to make distinctions we used to be capable of making.I would submit to you that Solemn High Mass does have it equivalent in the NO. It’s just not known by the same nomenclature. 8 am Mass is over in less than 40 minutes. 10 am Mass lasts for an hour or more. How is this different from a low Mass or a Solemn High Mass? Nomenclature?
What you say is certainly true, but we have a deacon at all of our Sunday Masses. And, since we are a cathedral parish, the bishop celebrates Mass with just our rector and deacon w/o a host of altar boys - just the usual number. There is certainly a lot of incense and though I would dearly love to sing an orchestral Mass, the best we have been able to do is brass and tympani. But as far as solemnity goes, it is certainly more than a normal Mass and light-years beyond what one finds in most suburban parishes.I don’t think anyone would argue that we can’t see any *rough *equivalents of the old distinctions. Where I would differ from you, though, is that I do think we have to recognize that it’s more than just nomenclature - there is no juridical differentiation among Masses, so these categories, in that sense, do not exist. That doesn’t preclude our trying to realize the old categories in how we plan the liturgies of the year, but it does mean that we will not be able to make distinctions we used to be capable of making.
(For instance, what now distinguishes a “high Mass”/sung Mass from a solemn Mass? - would we really want to say in today’s situation that a bishop celebrating from the throne with oodles of altar boys, incense, an orchestral Mass setting, etc. could not be called a solemn Mass simply because he didn’t have a deacon assisting?)
(As another remark, toward delineating levels of solemnity: The legal categories before not only allowed us to make the distinctions but also prevented, in some sense, the different forms from being too alike.)
This does not, by the way, mean there is more freedom to change the Mass in all crazy ways or to abuse the Liturgy. By no means!