Notre Dame de Rouen. The façade of the Gothic Church in France. Photographer: Hippo1947. Licence: SHUTTERSTOCK.

Wednesday 22 May 2019

Compendium Of The Reforms Of The Roman Breviary, 1568 - 1961.


The Text in this Article, by GREGORY DIPIPPO, is taken from, and can be read in full at,
NEW LITURGICAL MOVEMENT
Please NOTE: The Text in this Article is Copyright (c) Gregory DiPippo, 2009.
Reproduced by permission.


A Page from the Psalter of The Aberdeen Breviary of 1509.
From the Copy in The National Library of Scotland.
Photo: 26 February 2008.
Source: The National Library of Scotland.
Author: Andrew Myllar, Walter Chepman.
(Wikimedia Commons)


By Gregory DiPippo, for publication on the New Liturgical Movement.
Part 3.1: 1529 versus 1568.

The Breviary, reformed in the wake of The Council of Trent, was promulgated by the authority of Pope Saint Pius V in 1568, and is for this reason often referred to as The Pian Breviary. The history of how and why the Tridentine reform came about is not the subject of this particular Article; those who wish to read about such matters in greater detail should consult the interesting book of Msgr. Pierre Batiffol, The History of The Roman Breviary (Translated from the French by Atwell Baylay; Longmans, Green and Co., London, 1912). My concern here is simply to compare The Breviary of 1568 with its immediate predecessor, The Breviary of The Roman Curia of 1529, and explain the changes made by The Pian reform.

The 1568 reform is, unsurprisingly, a very conservative reform indeed in almost every respect. In comparing the two Breviaries, one sees immediately that nearly the entire body of material which has proper musical notation, namely, the Invitatories, Hymns, Antiphons, and Responsories, has been carried over from the earlier Breviary into The Pian Breviary. The same holds true for most of the Chapters, Versicles and Prayers, parts which have no proper notation.

The exceptions are mostly instances where the entire Office of a particularly Feast Day has been replaced with a different Office. Such is the case on The Feast of The Holy Trinity, where a 13th- Century Office, "Sedenti super solium" (named for its first Antiphon), is replaced with the much earlier Office, "Gloria tibi Trinitas". In the case of The Visitation, the Proper Office, granted to the whole of The Western Church in 1389 by Pope Urban VI, was suppressed; in its place, the Office of Our Lady’s Nativity was to be said, replacing the word "Nativitas" with "Visitatio", and with Proper Readings at Matins. However, a new Office, with many new Propers, was soon granted for this Feast by Pope Clement VIII (1592-1605).



Mary Stuart's (Mary, Queen of Scots) personal Breviary,
which she took with her to the scaffold, is preserved
Inscriptions in her own hand may be seen in the margins.
This File: 16 October 2005.
User: Voyager
(Wikimedia Commons)


A number of minor adjustments are made, but few genuinely notable changes. The unusually lengthy Psalmody of Sunday Prime is redistributed though the days of the week, the first time the distribution of The Psalms was changed since the days of Pope Saint Gregory the Great. In The Preces of Lauds, Psalm 50, which is already said at the beginning of The Hour, is replaced in The Pian Breviary by Psalm 129; The Preces of Terce, Sext, and None are reduced to a new form which retains only the very end of The Preces of Lauds.

The obligation to recite The Little Office of Our Lady, The Office of The Dead, and The Gradual, and Penitential Psalms, is mitigated, although not to the prejudice of Local Customs. The rubrics throughout are made much shorter and infinitely clearer; for example, the bizarrely complicated rubric of The 1529 Breviary, which governs the end of Advent, and which occupies three-and-a-half pages, is reduced to a mere twenty lines. A new general rubric, succinct and well-organised, is placed at the beginning of the book; in the original Edition of 1568, it occupies only seven pages.

There are a few significant changes made to The Calendar of Saints. Perhaps most noteworthy is the suppression of The Presentation of The Virgin (21 November), and The Feasts of both Saint Anne and Saint Joachim; this was done because the history of The Virgin’s parents and Her early life is not recorded in The Canonical Gospels, but, rather, in the apocryphal Proto-Evangelium of Saint James (Saint Anne was a favourite target of Luther’s scorn.) However, the devotion to them was so strong among Catholics that Saint Anne’s Feast was swiftly restored by Saint Pius V’s successor, Gregory XIII, in 1584, The Presentation by Sixtus V the following year, and Saint Joachim by Gregory XV in 1622.


A few other Saints whose written lives were known to be at best untrustworthy, such as Saint Juliana of Nicomedia (16 February) and Saint Leonard of Noblac (6 November), were also removed, but the great majority of the popular Saints of The Mediaeval Church remain in their Traditional places. One Octave, of The Feast of The Visitation, was suppressed, although it continued to be observed on many Local Calendars.

Many Saints, however, are knocked down a grade or two in The Tridentine Breviary, greatly reducing the number of Saints’ Offices of Nine Readings; certain other Saints of the "unreliable" category, such as Saint Barbara, were reduced to mere Commemorations. One notable change is made to the Celebration of the lowest grade of Feast, the "Simplex" [Editor: "Simple"]; in The Mediaeval Breviaries, the Single Nocturn of such a Feast had the Nine Psalms from the appropriate Common Office of a Saint, but, in The Pian Breviary, the Ferial Nocturn of Twelve Psalms is now said. The Psalmody of "Semi-Duplex" [Editor: "Semi-Double"] and "Duplex" [Editor: "Double"] Feasts is not changed.


14th-Century York Breviary.

A change is made to the manner of keeping Vigils in The Office, conforming The Breviary more closely to The Missal. A Vigil is the day before a Major Feast, on which a Mass of Penitential Character (in Purple Vestments, without "Gloria in excelsis" or "Alleluia") is Celebrated after None, in preparation for The Feast, itself. In The Roman Use before Trent , most such Vigils, e.g. that of The Assumption, consisted solely of a Mass between None and First Vespers, and had no presence in The Office. In The Pian Breviary, Vigils are given a Full Office, occupying the whole of The Liturgical Day from Matins to None. The Office is mostly that of The Feria; however, a Homily on the Gospel of The Vigil Mass is read in place of The Scripture Lessons at Matins. The Ferial Preces are said at all Hours, and The Prayer of The Vigil Mass is said at Lauds, Terce, Sext and None. Although rare elsewhere, this was a common custom in Germany, even before Trent.

The one aspect of The Breviary, which is extensively changed in The Pian reform, is the Corpus of Readings at Matins, which is almost completely re-worked from beginning to end.

[To be continued in Part 3.2.]

To read previous instalments in this Series, see: Compendium of the Reforms of the Roman Breviary, 1568-1961.

The Text in this Article, by GREGORY DIPIPPO, is taken from, and can be read in full at,
NEW LITURGICAL MOVEMENT

Please NOTE: The Text in this Article is Copyright (c) Gregory DiPippo, 2009.

Reproduced by permission.

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