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Music in a Vernacular Catholic Liturgy

Proceedings of the Royal Musical Association, 1964
We are all accustomed to regard the music for the Latin rites of the Catholic Church as a glorious part (for at least seven centuries the main part) of the heritage of Western music. So of course, it is. But if its development be examined from the pastoral aspect, if we ask how far this music has assisted the majority of worshippers in understanding ...
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The Deuterocanonical Books in Contemporary Catholic Liturgy

Interpretation: A Journal of Bible and Theology, 2018
This essay considers the recent reception and use of the deuterocanonical books in contemporary Catholic liturgy, drawing on Tobit 12, Esther 14 (Esther C), and Sirach 3 to illustrate the ways these texts function as Scripture in the teaching of the church and in liturgical contexts.
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English in the Roman Catholic liturgy 1969–2002

World Englishes, 2013
ABSTRACTIn 1963 the Vatican in Rome, as part of the Second Vatican Council, authorized vernacular languages to be used in Catholic liturgies around the world. For English speaking countries, a commission was formed to translate the Latin into English for the Mass as well as for all of the various rites such as baptism, anointing of the sick, marriage ...
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Is the Catholic Liturgy Playful? Engaging with Romano Guardini.

SSRN Electronic Journal, 2012
It is easy to imagine one of the “New Atheists” describing the Catholic liturgy as “play” with no “purpose.” Yet these very terms were used by the respected liturgist, Romano Guardini, in the chapter “The Playfulness of the Liturgy” of his book The Spirit of the Liturgy.
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Confessing Sin, Proclaiming Reconciliation in Contemporary U.S. Catholic Liturgy

Liturgy, 2019
While to this day in American culture the predominant image of sacramental reconciliation in Roman Catholicism is the individual penitent kneeling in a dark booth, recounting one’s sins through a s...
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Dresden 1719–1732: Catholic Music and Liturgy

2000
Abstract The Saxon Jesuits described 2 September 1719, the date of the entry of the newly-wed Electoral Prince and Princess into Dresden, as ‘an absolutely golden day for us Catholics here, indeed for the whole world’.1 The relatively discreet Jesuit mission to Saxony, with its small, devout, but mainly ‘plebeian’ congregation, was ...
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Toward the Paschal Mystery: The Evolving Roman Catholic Funeral Liturgy

Liturgy, 2017
Mourners attending a Roman Catholic funeral in the 1950s would have remarked, if they thought about it at all, on the tone of the celebration: the black vestments, the Latin chants, especially the ...
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