Divine Worship: The Missal
Divine Worship: The Missal[1] (DWM) is the missal containing the newest expression of the Roman Rite eucharistic liturgy of the Roman Catholic Church. It is used in the parishes and other communities of the personal ordinariates for former Anglicans.
History
Along with the ordination of married former Episcopal and Anglican priests, the Pastoral Provision of 1980 permitted the establishment of Anglican Use parishes in the United States and created a special missal called the Book of Divine Worship using liturgical elements from the Anglican tradition.
The apostolic constitution Anglicanorum Coetibus issued by Pope Benedict XVI on 4 November 2009[2] dramatically expanded this concept and created three personal ordinariates, one in England, Scotland and Wales, one in the United States and Canada, and one in Australia.
Anglicanorum Coetibus specifically authorized the creation of liturgical forms for the personal ordinariate, and Divine Worship: The Missal gives expression to and preserves for Catholic worship the Anglican liturgical tradition and patrimony, understood as that which has nourished the Catholic faith throughout the history of the Anglican tradition and prompted aspirations towards ecclesial unity.[3]
Divine Worship: The Missal was developed by the interdicasterial commission Anglicanae Traditiones of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith and the Congregation for Divine Worship and the Discipline of the Sacraments to be the liturgy for all Ordinariate parishes worldwide. Advisers to the commission included Archbishop Joseph Augustine Di Noia, Msgr. Steven J. Lopes, Msgr. Andrew Burnham, Auxiliary Bishop Peter J. Elliott, Archbishop Salvatore J. Cordileone, Fr. Uwe Michael Lang, Dr. Hans-Jürgen Feulner, Dr. Clinton A. Brand, Fr. Andrew Menke, and Msgr. Peter Wilkinson.[4]
On 29 November 2015, Advent Sunday, the new missal went into use. The Book of Divine Worship was retired on 1 January 2016.
Contents
Divine Worship: The Missal opens with the decree of the Congregation for Divine Worship and the Discipline of the Sacraments authorizing the publication of the missal. These are followed by proclamations from the Ordinaries of each of the three Personal Ordinariates specifically authorizing its use. It then contains a complete copy of The General Instruction of the Roman Missal (GIRM) and the Divine Worship Rubrical Directory which provides instructions on how the Divine Worship Liturgy differs from the Roman Rite (of which it is an expression). The Calendar of the Church Year used in the Personal Ordinariates comes next, followed by the propers for the portions of the Church Year including Advent, Epiphany, Pre-Lent, Lent, Passiontide, Holy Week, Eastertide, Trinitytide, and Feasts of the Lord. The Order of Mass appears at this point, followed by the Propers of Saints and Holy Days, the Commons for various purposes, several appendices, and prayers for before and after mass.
Mass
For each Mass, the Proper of the Mass includes the appointed Introit, Collect, Gradual, Alleluia or Tract, Offertory, and Communion. The Epistle and Gospel readings for Sunday are to be taken from the Revised Roman Missal, specifically the RSV-2CE. Divine Worship: The Missal preserves such features and elements that are representative of the historic Anglican Books of Common Prayer and Anglican Missals, in conformity with Catholic doctrinal and liturgical norms, and is therefore at once distinctively and traditionally Anglican in character, linguistic register, and structure, while also being clearly and recognizably an expression of the Roman Rite.[5]
The Ordinary of the Mass is very much the same as in the Ordinary Form of the Roman Rite but uses the familiar traditional language of the Book of Common Prayer, with translations of the Kyrie eleison, Gloria in excelsis, Credo, Sanctus - Benedictus, and Agnus Dei conforming to that linguistic register. The Missal contains two Canons. The Roman Canon from the present Roman Rite Mass, in a new Elizabethan English translation, is the normative Eucharistic Prayer of Divine Worship: The Missal. The alternative Eucharistic Prayer, which corresponds to the Eucharistic Prayer II of the Roman Missal is provided for masses on weekdays, for masses with children, and other masses where pastoral needs suggest it.
Use
Public liturgical celebration according to Divine Worship is restricted to the personal ordinariates established under the apostolic constitution Anglicanorum coetibus. Any priest incardinated in these ordinariates may also celebrate the Mass according to Divine Worship outside the parishes of the ordinariate when celebrating Mass without a congregation, or publicly with the permission of the rector or pastor of the corresponding church or parish.[6]
In cases of pastoral necessity or in the absence of a priest incardinated in an ordinariate, any priest incardinated in a diocese or in an institute of consecrated life or society of apostolic life may celebrate the Eucharist according to Divine Worship for members of the ordinariate who request it. Any priest incardinated in a diocese or in an institute of consecrated life or society of apostolic life may concelebrate Mass according to Divine Worship.[7]
See also
References
- ↑ ISBN 978-1-78469-020-5, Catholic Truth Society
- ↑ In the Annuario Pontificio such structures are listed under the heading "Personal Ordinariates" followed, in small print, by "in accordance with the Apostolic Constitution Anglicanorum coetibus, 4 November 2009" (Annuario Pontificio 2012, Libreria Editrice Vaticana 2012 ISBN 978-88-209-8722-0, p. 1034).
- ↑ Divine Worship, p. 120
- ↑ http://ordinariate.net/divine-worship-missal
- ↑ Divine Worship p. 121
- ↑ Divine Worship pp. 121-2.
- ↑ Divine Worship p. 122
External links
- Divine Worship: The Missal online on Scribd
- Order for the Celebration of the Mass according to Divine Worship: The Missal from Saint Gregory the Great Parish in Massachusetts, U.S.A.
- Webpage on the Divine Worship:The Missal from the Personal Ordinariate of the Chair of Saint Peter.
- Flickr album of photos of the printed Divine Worship: The Missal by Fr. James Bradley