Sundays were never resumed, only anticipated or commemorated before Pius X. If any higher feast occurred on a Sunday (outside of the 1st Sunday of Advent and Lent), the Sunday was always commemorated at Matins (with the Gospel sermon being the ninth reading of Matins) and Lauds, with the Antiphon and Collect. There were special rules for anticipated Sundays.
The Saint Lawrence Press is dedicated to the preservation of the classical Roman Liturgy and seeks especially to raise awareness of the process of liturgical reform before the Second Vatican Council. To meet these aims the Saint Lawrence Press publishes an Ordo Recitandi, in Latin, modelled on those produced in Rome in the middle of the last century before the unpleasant,
unfortunate, and damaging, changes of the 1950's and early 1960's.
The Ordo Recitandi contains the necessary information enabling those who wish to celebrate the traditional Divine Office and Mass to identify those variable parts for every day in the Liturgical year.
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3 comments:
Can impeded Sundays be resumed on a semidouble feast? For some reason I thought yes, but Additiones et Variationes I, 6 doesn't mention it.
And what were the rules for resuming Sundays before Pius X?
@Paulus,
Not on a semi-double feast but it can be resumed in a common Octave.
@Paulus,
Sundays were never resumed, only anticipated or commemorated before Pius X. If any higher feast occurred on a Sunday (outside of the 1st Sunday of Advent and Lent), the Sunday was always commemorated at Matins (with the Gospel sermon being the ninth reading of Matins) and Lauds, with the Antiphon and Collect. There were special rules for anticipated Sundays.
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