enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Canonical digits - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canonical_digits

    Canonical digits, also referred to as liturgical digits, are a posture or bodily attitude of prayer used during the celebration of the rite of the Holy Mass. This gesture is performed by any Catholic priest after consecration and before ablutions, standing and joining his thumb and index finger in a circle, and holding the other fingers ...

  3. Ordo Lectionum Missae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ordo_Lectionum_Missae

    The development of the Ordo Lectionum Missae was a response to the liturgical reforms initiated by the Second Vatican Council (1962-1965), with the aim of promoting active participation of the laity in the Mass. Prior to the council, the Roman Catholic Church adhered to a one-year cycle of readings, incorporating a limited selection of passages.

  4. Reader (liturgy) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reader_(liturgy)

    The tonsuring of readers in a seminary by a Russian Orthodox bishop. The readers being ordained are wearing the short phelon (in white). In the Eastern Orthodox Church and in the Eastern Catholic Churches of Byzantine tradition, the reader (in Greek, Ἀναγνώστης Anagnostis; in Church Slavonic, чтец chtets) is the second highest of the minor orders of clergy.

  5. Christian liturgy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christian_liturgy

    The Tridentine Mass (1570–1969), the 1962 version of which is still permitted as an extraordinary form of the Roman Rite as confirmed by Summorum Pontificum it is the same rite as the current Mass of Paul VI, just the older version; The Mass of Paul VI, since 1970 the ordinary form of the Roman Rite (1970–present)

  6. Liturgical books of the Roman Rite - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liturgical_books_of_the...

    At that time he did not repeat at the altar the parts that were chanted by the ministers or choir, as became the custom in the period of the Tridentine Mass Thus Sacramentaries contain no Readings, Introits, Graduals, Communion Antiphons and the like, but only the Collects, the Eucharistic Prayer with its Prefaces, all that is strictly the ...

  7. Gospel (liturgy) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gospel_(liturgy)

    The Gospel in Christian liturgy refers to a reading from the Gospels used during various religious services, including Mass or Divine Liturgy . In many Christian churches, all present stand when a passage from one of the Gospels is read publicly, and sit when a passage from a different part of the Bible is read.

  8. Mass of Paul VI - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mass_of_Paul_VI

    The Mass of Paul VI, also known as the Ordinary Form or Novus Ordo, [1] is the most commonly used liturgy in the Catholic Church.It was promulgated by Pope Paul VI in 1969 and its liturgical books were published in 1970; those books were then revised in 1975, they were revised again by Pope John Paul II in 2000, and a third revision was published in 2002.

  9. Elevation (liturgy) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elevation_(liturgy)

    A more ancient elevation of Host and Chalice occurs in the Mass of the Roman Rite while the priest speaks the concluding doxology of the Eucharistic Prayer: Per ipsum et cum ipso et in ipso est tibi Deo Patri omnipotenti in unitate Spiritus Sancti omnis honor et gloria per omnia saecula saeculorum (Through him, and with him, and in him, O God ...