The feast of Christ the King is a Double of the First Class. The liturgical colour of the feast is white. This year it is also the twenty-second Sunday after Pentecost and the fifth Sunday of October. The feast of the Apostles SS Simon and Jude is transferred to Monday although their Vigil was celebrated on Saturday.
At Vespers yesterday afternoon the antiphons Pacificus etc were sung with psalms 109, 110, 111, 112 & 116. The Office hymn was Te saeculorum Principem. After the collect of the feast a commemoration was sung of the Sunday with the antiphon Tua est potentia for the Saturday before the fifth Sunday of October and the collect for the twenty-second Sunday after Pentecost. At Compline the Dominical psalms were sung and Te lucis was sung with the Doxology Jesu tibi sit gloria, Qui sceptra mundi temperas, Cum Patre et almo Spiritu, In sempiterna saecula.
At Mattins the invitatory is Jesum Christum, Regem regum Venite adoremus. In the first nocturn the lessons are taken from St. Paul's Epistle to the Colossians. In the second nocturn the lessons are taken from Pius XI's encyclical Quas primas. In the third nocturn the homily on St. John's Gospel is taken from the writings of St. Augustine. The ninth lesson is the homily appointed for the twenty-second Sunday after Pentecost, from St. Hiliary on St. Matthew. (The reading of the Gospel and first lesson suffice to fulfill the obligation). The Te Deum is sung. At Lauds the antiphons Suscitabit etc are sung with the Sunday psalms. The Office hymn is Vexilla Christus inclyta. After the collect of the feast a commemoration is sung of the Sunday.
At Prime and the Hours the antiphons Suscitabit etc are sung with the festal psalms (at Prime Pss. 53, 118i & 118ii). The Doxology Jesu tibi sit gloria etc is sung with the hymns of the Hours. At Prime the versicle in the short responsory is Qui primatum in omnibus tenes and the lectio brevis In ipso.
Mass is sung after Terce. The Gloria is sung, the second collect is of the Sunday, the Creed is sung. The preface is proper to the feast and the last Gospel is that of the Sunday.
At Vespers all is sung as yesterday at first Vespers except the versicle & response and the antiphon on the Magnificat which are proper to second Vespers. After the collect of the feast a commemoration is sung of the Sunday, of the following feast of the Apostles SS Simon and Jude and of the Sunday.
In the 'liturgical books of 1962' the Vigil of SS Simon and Jude has been abolished. At Vespers there was no commemoration of the Sunday. There is no proper Doxology for Te lucis. At Mattins in the third nocturn, the third psalm (Ps. 88) gets stripped of over half its verses. Verses Tu vero repulisti... to Benedictus Dominus in aeternam, fiat, fiat, 39 - 53, are omitted. The former eighth lesson is split into two to provide an eighth and ninth lesson as the homily of the Sunday is omitted as a ninth lesson as the ninth lesson is not of the Sunday. At Lauds there is no commemoration sung of the Sunday. At Prime and the Hours the Doxology for the feast is omitted. At Prime the lectio brevis is of the season. At Mass there is no commemoration of the Sunday and the last Gospel is In principio. At Vespers there is no commemoration of the Sunday nor of SS Simon and Jude. The feast of SS Simon and Jude (except where it is I Class) is entirely omitted this year. May the prayers of the Holy Apostles SS Simon and Jude aid us in the excoriation of '62ism.
So this means that a feast of two Apostles is simply omitted under the 1962 rubrics? Madness!
ReplyDeleteYes and Yes!
ReplyDeleteIs it not odd that just 14 years after Divino Afflatu the Pope issues a decree instating a feast fixed on Sunday? I thought one of St. Pius X's goals was to eliminate a perceived lack of green Sundays (which Dom Gueranger called "monotonous"). Some Sundays, either fixed feasts or octaves superseded the Sunday Mass. An old Missal I have indicated the 3rd Sunday of September could be used for celebration of the Seven Dolors of the BVM. St. Pius X changes this, fixing feasts and ranking octaves only to have his successor fix a feast to a Sunday.
ReplyDeleteHad the occasion to speak with a fellow cleric who uses the 1962 missal. In bidding a good evening, he spoke of Monday being a ferial day. "What", I said, "about SS. Simon and Jude?" His response: "I forgot you didn't use the '62 missal". May the Holy Apostles, indeed, come to the aid of Holy Mother Church!
ReplyDeleteThe Rad Trad,
ReplyDeleteIndeed. Another example would be the feast of the Holy Family. The principle of continuity in contradiction is always present in the twentieth century reforms.
+DM,
Indeed, grim!