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Prodigal1984
Guest
It isn’t like a criticism, it is just objectively factual. I didn’t mean to make it come off as if I’m criticizing here.
I think there’s a simple explanation. Up until the Reformation the liturgies were similar; England had the Sarum Rite, but otherwise similar. Then the Anglicans split off, and we took two different paths. It’s kind of like in Quebec, when populated by the French, our language kind of got frozen in time due to isolation while European French evolved.Thats because the former Anglican liturgy looks more Catholic than the Ordinary Catholic liturgy.
I’m not gonna criticize the Church here; but what is up with that!?
Good way to learn something is with timed repetition, but you know that already.It wears thin after about, oh, day 2. The only good thing about it is that you usually have the antiphons down pat by the last day… if you manage to last that long.
Do you mean “why wasn’t the Visitation on June 17?” As in, the nativity of JB is the octave echo of the visitation, not vice versa?if the Nativity of John the Baptist is June 24, why did the calendar have the Visitation as July 2?
Good question. The facile answer: “it’s complicated”. However that didn’t satisfy me so I dug up my 1953 Breviarum Monasticum from my library. The answer is: when does an Octave not last 8 days? When it’s the Octave of St. John the Baptist. Both the June 24th and June 29th octaves were known as “common octaves” back in '53. That’s almost the lowest level. Even lower was the “simple octave”. FWIW this was the classification I can discern:Maybe you would know because you seem to be somewhat informed on this.
Prior to 1955 how was it even possible for some of these octaves to have existed? For example the Octaves of the Nativity of St. John the Baptist and Ss. Peter and Paul. They are on the 24th and 29th of June respectively and of the same rank in octaves so wouldn’t they be overlapping each other? Which one would you do? Or was there some system where you would do a little bit of both?
A few interesting footnotes, which I will try to summarize briefly:The Easter season lasts 50 days beginning with the Easter Vigil and ending with Pentecost. This is attested by the ancient and universal tradition of the Church, which has always celebrated the 7 weeks of Easter as though it were a single day that ends with the feast of Pentecost. For this reason, the octave of Pentecost which was added to the fifty days of Easter in the sixth century, has been abolished. However, the days from Ascension to Pentecost with their appropriate texts are used as a time of expectation of the Holy Spirit.
Mgr. Bugnini does admit the issue caused controversy and confusion, in a footnote.To the question “whether it is agreed that Pentecost Sunday should be restored to its original character as the end of Easter through suppression of its octave”, the Pian commission replied at its meeting of February 14 1950 (my bold) by opting for suppression…
In answering this, we should keep in mind that Paul VI was sostituto when the vote was taken, abp of Milan when it was not suppressed. This was one of the most important positions in the Vatican, the gatekeeper who determined who would see the Pope and when documents were ready to sign. There was some disagreement between Pius and Paul in between; I doubt that it was about the pentecost octave, but that could have been a symptom of the disagreement.Pope Pius XII simplified the calendar with a decree dated 23 March 1955: only the octaves of Christmas, Easter and Pentecost were kept, octaves that differed from the others in not repeating the same liturgy daily.
Wikipedia sv Octave(liturgy)