Tuesday, 28 February 2012

Lenten Liturgical Note

Text taken from The Saint Andrew Daily Missal

Lent comprises two parts, the first of which commences on Ash Wednesday, which is called in the Liturgy "the beginning of the Holy Forty Days", and ends on Passion Sunday.

The second part consists of the "Great Fortnight" known as Passiontide.

Reckoning four Sundays in Lent, together with Passion Sunday and Palm Sunday, we find thirty-six Fasting Days, to which have been added the four days immediately preceding the First Sunday, in order to reach the number forty, "which originated with the Law and the Prophets and was hallowed by Christ Himself. (Hymn at Matins. Moses, representing the Law, and Elias, the Prophets, only approached Almighty God on Sinai and Horeb (respectively) after purifying themselves by a Fast of forty days.)

The Mass for Ash Wednesday, although under a different name, existed already in the Gregorian Sacramentary.

Durham Cathedral

Each Mass in Lent has its own Station

The term "Station" has been borrowed from the Roman Army because the Christians, enrolled in the Army of Christ, were accustomed to meet at the same hours that the Roman soldiers changed guard at their "Stations".

This is the origin of the terms Terce, Sext and None given to the Divine Office said at the third, sixth and ninth hours. In Lent, Mass was celebrated after None, which was said about three o'clock. Vespers were then sung, after which the Fast was broken. From this, came the present custom in Churches where the Divine Office is sung, of saying Vespers before Lunch (before noon), during Lent. [This copy of The Saint Andrew Daily Missal is dated 1945.]

As a matter of history in the course of the year, the Pope used to celebrate Solemn Mass in one after another of the great Basilicas, the twenty-five Parish Churches of Rome, and in certain other Sanctuaries, surrounded by all his Clergy and by his people. This was called: "Making The Station". This name, which we still find in the Missal, reminds us that Rome is the centre of Christian worship and stands to us for a Liturgy more than 1,200 years old and formerly carried out with the greatest solemnity.

The twenty-five Parish Churches of Rome, which already existed in the 5th-Century, were called "Titles" (Tituli) and the Parish Priests of Rome who served them bore the name of "Cardinals" (incardinati), which means "attached to these Churches". It is for this reason, that in our time, each Cardinal, is still "Titular" of one of these Sanctuaries.

Rievaulx Abbey

Lent, when each day's Mass carries the Indulgences attached to its particular "Station", is one of the most ancient of the Liturgical Seasons and the most important in the whole year.

The Temporal Cycle, which is devoted to the contemplation of the Mysteries of Christ, is brought to bear daily upon the faithful, while at other Seasons it is more frequently the Feasts of Saints which are kept on the days of the week. And, since the whole Christian life is summed up in the imitation of Christ, this Season, when the Sanctoral Cycle is least in evidence, is particularly fruitful to our Souls. It is only because of their special importance, that the Church gave a place in the Lenten Liturgy, to the Feasts of the Annunciation (25 March) and of Saint Matthias (24 February).

If, as time went on, there were added to these, other Masses in honour of the Saints, it is, nonetheless, precisely in the spirit of this Season to choose by preference to say or hear the Mass of the Feria; for during Lent, the principal Mass of the Day, be it sung or said, ought to be of the Feria on Feasts of the Greater Double or any lesser rite.

Trier Cathedral

Further, on Feasts of superior rite, i.e., of the First Class or Second Class, such as the Annunciation, Saint Joseph, and Saint Matthias, one Mass of the Feria is said, in addition to the Mass of the Day, in Cathedrals, Collegiate Churches, and Monasteries, in order not to interrupt the preparation for Easter.

Consequently, if we wish to make a good Lent, it is important that we should try to assist daily at that Mass, in which our Mother the Church dictates to us, the thoughts which should occupy our minds during this holy Season.

To show that the spirit of penance of the Septuagesima Season has become still more prominent, the Church not only suppresses the Gloria and the Alleluia, and puts her Priests in violet vestments throughout this Holy Forty Days, but she deprives the Deacon and Sub-Deacon of their Dalmatic and Tunicle, symbols of joy, and silences the organs in the Churches. Accompanying the Chant remains merely tolerated, and ceases after the Gloria on Maundy Thursday. Further, after the Postcommunions, is said a "Prayer Over The People", following the humble cry: "Bow down your heads before God."

Durham Cathedral

In former times, during this Season, the sittings of the Law Courts and all wars were suspended in the Christian commonwealth. It was also a "Closed Time" for marriages and still is in our days, in the sense that, at this time of the year, the Church does not allow the Solemn Blessing to be given to the bridal pair.

In the ages when faith was at its strongest, the Church exhorted married couples to practise continence throughout the whole period of this "Solemn Fast".

"Behold, now is the acceptable time: Behold, now is the day of salvation. Let us commend ourselves in much patience, in frequent fastings, by the armour of justice of the power of God. Let us exhibit ourselves as the ministers of God in much patience, in many fastings" (Response at Matins for the First Sunday of Lent).

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