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[[File:Austria_-_Heiligenkreuz_Abbey_-_1570.jpg|right|thumb|The [[Cardican religious foundations|white monks]] of Metthews Priory in choir singing Vespers.]]The '''Cardican Rite''' comprise the form and administration of the liturgies, rites and ceremonies of the [[Church of Nortend]]. There are three principle liturgical books—the Book of Masses (''Liber Missarum''), the Book of Offices (''Liber Officiorum'') and the Book of Rites (''Liber Rituum'') —which are used along with St. Edmund's Bible (''Biblia Sacra Sancti Edmundi'') and the Book of Chaunts (''Liber Cantuum'').
{{GNCN|The Nortish Rite|B_Boys_03.jpg|Divine Service according to the Nortish Rite is often sung with quire.}}
The '''Nortish Rite''' constitutes the public worship, liturgy and ceremonies of Divine Service according to the Use of the [[Church of Nortend]] in [[Great Nortend]]. Divine Service in the form of the Daily Prayer, Holy Communion and other Manual Services that is undertaken under the authority and jurisdiction of the Church of Nortend are require by law to follow the form set in ''The Book of Divine Service according to the Reformed Use of the Church of Nortend'' or the other books issued by the [[Monarchy of Great Nortend|Crown]] under the [[Monarchy of Great Nortend#Great Seal|Great Seal of the Realm]], which are used along with the Frympell translation of the Holy Bible.  


==History==
==History==
[[File:GNCompline.png|thumb|right|250px|Part of the modern liturgy of Compline as seen in a pocket Complinary book.]]The liturgy of the [[Church of Nortend]] is a descendent of the uses of the Roman Rite which prevailed in [[Great Nortend]] since the Christianisation of the country. This liturgy comprised of the masses, daily offices of Vigils (midnight prayer), Mattins (dawn prayer, also known as Lauds), Prime (morning prayer), Terce (late morning prayer), Sext (noon prayer), None (afternoon prayer), Vespers (evening prayer) and Compline (retiring prayer), as well as the forms for occasional sacraments, offices and ceremonies.
[[File:GNMiers.png|thumb|right|200px|Cardinal Miers, Archbishop of Lendert, undertook a reform of the Church's liturgy.]]
The Divine Service of the [[Church of Nortend]] is a descendent of the uses of the Roman Rite which has prevailed in [[Great Nortend]] since the Christianisation of the country.  


After the [[Church of Nortend#Great Schism|Great Schism]] in 1615 which marked the separation of the Church of Nortend from the Church of Rome, the Church became factionalised, with the Frumpellites desiring wholesale reform of the liturgy in line with Lutheran practices whilst the Akeepians supported a decidedly more minimalist simplification. the canon ''Quia solliciti'' was promulgated by Henry V in 1711 in order to appease both factions.
In mediæval times, the major liturgical uses through Nortend were the uses of [[Chepingstow]] and Sulthey, which influenced the secular and monastic uses respectively. Divine Service was almost wholly in Latin and comprised of the Mass, as well as daily hours of prayer—Vigils, Mattins, Prime, Tierce, Sext, Nones, Vespers and Compline, as well as the rites and ceremonies for occasional offices such as baptisms, confirmations, marriages and funerals.  


The canon prescribed the use of the Book of Masses and the Book of Offices which had been published earlier in 1709 and 1710 respectively in all churches and chapels in Great Nortend, including [[Cardican religious foundations|regular foundations]]. The new liturgy emphasised the reading of scripture over the repetition of psalms and selected sentences, with the aim of reading through the entire Bible once a year. However, the texts remained sung in Latin, though the lessons, chapters could be said in English.
The Reformation of Alexander I involved, ''inter alia'', the rejection of the authority of Rome; however, this did not immediately end the use of pre-Reformation liturgies. The Latin uses continued in general use through the archbishopric of Cardinal Frympell, who aligned himself as only a moderate Lutheran reformer. The installation of Cardinal George Miers as Archbishop of Lendert hastened liturgical reform towards a more evangelical or reformed Divine Service.


==Daily Services==
===Henfoot Commission===
On most days, there are four public services chaunted in every parish church in the country. These are Mattins (~7 a. m.), Tierce/Sext/Nones (~11 a. m.), High Mass (~11·30 p. m.) and Vespers (~5 p. m.). Compline (~9 p. m.) is not always chaunted publicly daily. On Sundays, it is common for people to go to Mass and either Mattins or Vespers, returning home in between. Apart from the high mass (''missa alta''), there may also be several low masses (''missa bassa'') earlier in the day.
[[File:GNJohnEarle.jpg|thumb|right|200px|Sir Charles de Henfoot was Master of the Commission charged with producing an English service.]]
Sir Charles de Henfoot, the Provost of the Chapel Royal, was appointed by Cardinal Miers to be Master for a „Commission for the Divine Service” to undertake the task of reforming the liturgical books. Though the Chapel Royal was distinctly „high church”, Henfoot himself was considered more soundly Lutheran in theology, and thus an acceptable person to take charge of the process.


===Calendar===
The Commission presented preliminary draughts for its orders for {{wp|Mass|masses}} and the {{wp|Canonical hours|hours}} in both Latin and English according to the text and style of Frympell’s Bible; however, it was met with little enthusiasm from both the Frympellite and the Akeepian clergy, the former complaining of its retention of the confusing and repetitive mediæval monastic pattern of seven long hours unsuitable for public worship and the latter rejecting the more Protestant theology of the mass being a mere remembrance. Edmund, counselled by the [[Lord High Treasurer of Great Nortend|Lord Treasurer]] the Count of Cardenbridge, wrote to Henfoot expressly requiring that the „existing and customary reverence or worship duly paid at the celebration of the Mass should continue to the extent that it is edifying and conformable to Holy Writ”.
The Church of Nortend follows the {{wp|Gregorian calendar}}, having been introduced in 1582 prior to the [[Church of Nortend#Great Schism|Great Schism]] in 1614. The liturgy is structured around the ecclesiastical Calendar, which is an interlaced set of cycles of varying lengths. The fixed cycle begins on {{wp|Michaelmas}} every year and specifies the dates of the immovable feasts such as Christmas Day, Lady Day and St. John's Day, which also define the [[Civil year of Great Nortend|civil calendar]] terms used in Great Nortend. The moveable Paschal cycle changes annually based on the {{wp|computus|computation}} of Easter, setting the dates for Lent, Good Friday, Easter Day, Whitsunday, Ascension, Trinity &c. The weekly cycle also affects the liturgy as it changes depending on which day of the week it may be.


Thus, the Church recognises  separate liturgical seasons throughout the year.
The Commission returned to its 1706 draught Book of Hours and drew up a simplified reworking thereof for the hours, producing an English Book of Hours in 1708. This cut down the number of hours to four — Mattins, Prime, Vespers and Compline — whilst following a ''lectio continuo'' pattern of continuous reading though the whole Old and New Testaments, Psalter and Proverbs. The mediæval anthems, responsories and hymns remained; however, they were simplified, both in melody and in their placement through the year.
* Advent, beginning on the sixth Sunday before Christmas or the Sunday after Martinmas Day (11th of November)
* Christmastide, beginning on Christmas Day (25th of December)
:* Ordinary Time, beginning on Epiphany Day (6th of January)
* Septuagesima, beginning on the ninth Sunday before Easter Day
* Lent, beginning on the sixth Sunday before Easter Day (''Dominica Invocavit'')
* Eastertide, beginning on Easter Day
:* Ordinary Time, beginning on Whitsunday, fifty days after Easter Day


====Fasting====
For the mass, the Commission reworked its replacement for the {{wp|Roman Canon}}, more explicitly returning to a sacramental view towards the Holy Eucharist, adapting much of the old Roman Canon. This revised English Book of Masses, presented to the bishops in 1710, it also enjoined once again customary acts of bowing, although it continued to prohibit the reservation of the Host for „gazing-upon, carrying-about or uplifting”. Frympellites refused to authorise the Book unless the elevations of the host and chalice at their consecrations were forbidden, and a rubric was inserted to the same effect.  
Fasting in the Church of Nortend. On fasts, no meat is allowed (fish is not considered meat), but oil, eggs, dairy and animal fat is allowed. Generally, meals are limited to one meal after sunset and two collations during the day.  


Ordinary Fridays through the year, the rogation days, the nine ember days, and the vigils of several feast days including Christmas, Epiphany, Easter and Whitsunday are fasts. Advent and Lent are the two major fasting seasons, which serve as preparation to the festal seasons of Christmastide and Eastertide. The Advent fast has fasts on every Wednesday and Friday. The Lenten fast lasts for all 40 days of Lent, including Sundays, as well as for the two days thereafter on Good Friday and Holy Saturday as mentioned above. On the Sundays of Lent, and on the feast of the Annunciation, when it falls within Lent, there are no restrictions on the amount of food and the time it is taken; however, abstinence from meat is still required.
The Henfoot liturgy, in its Latin form, was finally approved by Parliament in 1711, and the English and Latin Book of Services authorised by Edmund through the canon ''Quia solliciti''<ref>„Whereas our well-beloved servants ... moved by the holy fear of God and need for unity in our Church ...” </ref>. At the same time, the English book was declared to be the only ones to be used in Divine Service. The Latin service was not to be used except for study or in private.


Canon law also requires that people wishing to take communion fast from Compline the night before. No meal may be taken except for a 'mass collation' (for the term breakfast would be inappropriate) which is a light meal without bread, meat, alcohol or blood, which must be taken at least one hour before receiving. A traditional mass collation consists of an omelet with herbs and mushrumps.
==Mass==
[[File:Altar_in_the_Chapel_-_geograph.org.uk_-_1605831.jpg|thumb|right|250px|The Holy Communion is consecrated at the altar during the mass.]]
Missal which was produced in 1710, adopted much of the medivæal order of the mass. Other than the rendering into English, the changes wrought simplified the complex rubrics and changeable elements of the mass throughout the church year on different occasions.  


==Book of Masses==
The letters missive in 1756 from the then Lord Archbishop of Sulthey, Cardinal Condard, ordered that from henceforth all communicants would receive in both kinds when receiving the Holy Communion, having received under one kind hitherto. The mediæval custom of only receiving four times a year (once a term, at Christmas, Easter, Whitsun and Michaelmas) however still remained.
[[File:Brass_Eagle,_St_Mary's_Church,_Cavendish,_Suffolk_-_geograph.org.uk_-_661825.jpg|thumb|right|250px|The Gospel is proclaimed from a lectern in the quire, which usually in in the form of a brass eagle.]]The Book of Masses, in Latin the ''Liber Missarum'', which was published in 1709 and mandated in 1711, did not greatly alter the structure of the mass, which retained its overall pre-Schism form. The changes it brought were aimed at simplifying the highly complex rubrics and changeable elements of the mass throughout the church year and on different occasions. It also provided the first official English translation of the Latin texts, printed side-by-side with the newly revised Vulgate.


The letters missive in 1856 by the then Lord Archbishop of Sulthey, Cardinal Condard, brought the only major change to the mass since the mediæval period with the instruction that from henceforth all communicants would receive by intinction whereever possible, having received under one kind hitherto.
===Forms===
The mass may be celebrated as either a high mass or a low mass. A high mass may also be a solemn high mass if the priest is assisted at the altar by both a deacon and a subdeacon (nowadays a role taken by the clerk). At a simple high mass, the priest is holpen at the high altar without deacon and subdeacon but with two clerks in albes in lieu. Whereas a high mass is chaunted through, a low mass is read plainly without tone, and only one clerk in surplice helps the priest.
 
In most churches, a high mass is celebrated at noon on Sundays and festivals, and at least a low mass on other days. Before the high mass, other low masses may be said by other priests. A „morrow mass” in the early morning after Mattins is common. On Christmas Day, there are two high masses — the „Mass ''in gallicantu''” after Mattins at the early morning and the „Mass ''in die''” after Prime at noon. There are no masses of any kind on Black Saturday or Good Friday. There is a Vigil Mass on Easter Even after first Vespers, followed by the Easter Mass proper at noon.
 
===Order of the Mass===
Before the mass begins, the priest, deacon and clerk vest, saying appropriate prayers. The daily high mass occurs around noon. A procession and Asperges often occurs after the office and before the High Mass on Sundays and festivals.  


Usually a High Mass is celebrated daily or regularly in every church around noon. Before the High Mass, other Low Masses may be said by other priests. On Christmas Day, there are three High Masses—the Angels' Mass after Vespers, the Shepherds' Mass after Mattins and the Christ's Mass after Tierce. There are also two Easter Masses—the Vigil Mass after Vespers and the Paschal Mass after Tierce.
====Antecommunion====
[[File:GNGospel.jpg|thumb|right|250px|The Gospel lectern is often in the form of an eagle.]]
The antecommunion service is the former half of a mass before the ceremonies pertaining to the consecration are done.  


===Forms===
The Office anthem is chaunted as the ministres and quire go to the chancel and make their private prayers, all standing. It consists of an anthem, a psalm verse, the ''Gloria Patri'' followed by the anthem again. The ''Kyrie eleison'' is then begun. The ''Kyrie'' is always troped, except on fairs during Adventtide and Lententide. The hymn ''Gloria'' then follows. The Collects are then prayed, kneeling. Up to seven collects may be bidden, although usually only three.<ref>Of the day, for the King, and for some other cause.</ref>
There are two principal forms of the mass—the high mass and the low mass. A high mass may also be a solemn high mass if the priest is assisted at the altar by a deacon and subdeacon (nowadays a role taken by the clerk). At simple high masses, the priest is assisted at the altar without deacon and subdeacon but with two or more clerks. Whereas the high mass is chaunted in plain chaunt, a low mass is chaunted or read without tone, with only one clerk assisting.
 
On festivals or solemn days, the readings begin with the Prophecy or Lesson, the former from the Old Testament or Revelations, and the latter from the Acts or the martyrology of a saint. The Responsory follows.
 
The Epistle is then chaunted by the clerk, followed by the Alleluya or Tract. A Sequence hymn then follows on most festivals. The Gospel is then chaunted by the deacon, all standing. The ''{{wp|Credo}}'', chaunted by all, follows on festival days. The Sermon is then said if one is to be said. The Bidding concludes the Antecommunion, when the people are commanded to bid their prayers for various causes.
 
====Communion====
The communion service is the latter half of a mass. It begins with the Offertory anthem wherein the bread and wine are offered to the altar. Here follows several prayers including the Secrets corresponding to the Collects. The people also offer their own oblations, such as money or alms.
 
After the Offertory, there is a Confession before the Preface is said, concluding with the ''{{wp|Sanctus}}'' and ''Benedictus'', all standing. This leads directly into the Canon, which forms the prayer for the consecration of the bread and wine to the Body and Blood of Christ. The Canon is in three or five parts — the Prayer for the Church Militant ending with a Prayer of Oblation, the Prayer of Sacring, and the Prayer for the Church Expectant beginning with another Prayer of Oblation. The Canon is never sung, mostly spoken in „plain steven”, or ordinary voice, while the Prayer of Sacring is bidden „in close”, ''i. e.'' in a low voice. There is no elevation of the host or chalice upon their consecration, but the sacring bell is rung inviting all to bow and make their worship.


===Structure of the Mass===
After the ''Pater noster'' is chaunted by all and the Fraction, the host and chalice are shewn to the people as the ''{{wp|Agnus Dei}}'' is begun. The Priest meanwhile gives the ''Pax'' to the Deacon and thence to the Clerk, saying „Peace be alway with you”. After the ''Agnus Dei'', the Priest receives the Eucharist himself and then gives it to the Deacon, the Clerk and the Quire. Then the Priest and Deacon give the Eucharist to the communicants at the rood screen, who receive by intinction on the tongue, the houseling clothes placed underneath the chin.
Before the mass begins, the Priest, Deacon and Clerk vest, saying appropriate prayers. The daily High Mass occurs around noon immediately after the office of Tierce, Sext or Nones, depending on the day. The ceremony of Asperges often occurs after the office and before the High Mass on Sundays. It is preceded by the Exorcism of Salt and Water.
====Antecommunion Liturgy====
The antecommunion liturgy, also known as the Mass of the Catechumens, forms the first half of a mass focussed on scripture. It begins with the Introit antiphon which is chaunted as the ministres process to the chancel. This is followed by the ''Kyrie eleison'', which is troped with different texts interspersed with the refrain of ''Kyrie eleison'' and ''Christe eleison''.  


The ''Gloria in excelsis Deo'' is then chaunted on Sundays outside of Advent, Septuagesima, Lent and Passiontide and on all ''festa duplices''. It is troped only with ''Spiritus et alme'' on feasts of the Virgin Mary. The Collect of the Day is then said.  
The Thanksgivings are bidden after the Ablutions are completed, while the Postcommunion anthem is chaunted. This is followed by the Dismissal and Blessing.


On certain days, there is a Prophecy from the Old Testament (or Revelations on Good Friday and the Acts during Eastertide) which is chaunted by a lector on the south (epistle) side of the church. The Gradual responsory then or otherwise follows, except during Eastertide. The Clerk then chaunts the Epistle also facing south on the epistle side. After the Epistle, the Alleluia responsory is sung, which is replaced by the Tract during Advent, Septuagesima, Lent and Passiontide. At some masses, a metrical Sequence hymn is also sung. The Gospel is then chaunted by the Deacon on the north (gospel) side.
===Proper of the Mass===
{| class="wikitable zebra mw-collapsible mw-collapsed" style="{{float right}}"
|+ class="nowrap" | Proper ''Kyrie''s for Tides
|-
! Festivals
! Fairs
! Tide
|-
| Cunctipotens ||Kyrie altissime||Michaelmastide
|-
|O Rex clemens||Te Christe Rex||Crispintide
|-
|Kyrie, salve||—|| Adventtide
|-
|Kyrie magnæ Deus||Dominator Deus ||Christmastide
|-
|Rex sempiterne||Kyrie Rex immense||Epiphanytide
|-
|Clemens Rector||Summe Deus||Shrovetide
|-
|Deus Genitor alme|| —||Lententide
|-
|Lux et origo||Rector cosmi pie ||Eastertide
|-
|Kyrie Rex celse||Firmator sancte ||Whitsuntide
|-
|Orbis factor||Kyrie Genitor ||Midsummertide
|-
|Conditor Kyrie||Pater excelse||Samsontide
|-
|Kyrie Rex genitor ||Stelliferi Conditor||Austintide
|-
|}
The changeable Introit, Grail, Alleluya, Tract, Offertory and Communion anthems and Sequences are included in the Gradual, whilst the Prophecies, Epistles, Gospels and Collects are contained in the Lectionary. The ''Kyrie'',<ref>Note that the ''Kyrie'' at high masses are usually troped.</ref> ''Gloria'', ''Credo'', ''Sanctus'', ''Agnus Dei'' and other fixed chaunts are contained in the Kyriale.


[[File:Messe_mit_Wandlungskerze_Beuron.jpg|thumb|right|250px|The elevation of the host and chalice after consecration at a low mass.]]Afterwards, the ''Credo'' is chaunted whenever the ''Gloria'' is chaunted. After the Credo, a Sermon or Homily may be said, followed by the bidding prayers.
==Hours==
[[File:GNCompline.jpg|thumb|250px|right|Monks and minchens say the hours daily at the many [[Cardican religious foundations|religious houses]] through Great Nortend.]]
[[File:GnCompline.jpg|thumb|right|250px|At Vespers, candles and lamps are lit during the chaunting of the Lucernary.]]
According to the revised Breviary published in 1708, there are two daily greater hours of Mattins and Vespers, as well as the five lesser hours of Prime, Tierce, Sext, Nones and Compline, which are not usually observed except by monks and minchens. Clerks in holy orders, professed monks, minchens and nuns are required to pray Mattins and Vespers daily, preferably sung in quire but at the least privately. Before each hour, the ''Pater noster'' and ''Ave Maria'' are said silently. In many places a „Paternoster” bell is rung before Mattins and Vespers as a reminder for the people to make their devotions.


====Communion Liturgy====
===Order of the Hours===
The communion liturgy, also known as the Mass of the Faithful, is the latter half of a mass focussed on the Eucharist. It begins with the Offertory wherein the bread and wine are offered to the priest who says several prayers including the Secret. The congregation also here offer their own oblations, such as money or alms. During this time the Offertory responsory is chaunted.  
When sung in the church, the ministers dress in their quire habit. Mattins can be said any time in the morning while Vespers can be said any time in the evening. At monasteries, ideally Mattins is said at dawn, Prime between 6 and 9, Tierce between 9 and 12, Sext between 12 and 3, Nones between 3 and 6, Vespers at dusk and Compline before bed.


After the Offertory, Preface of the day concluding with the ''Sanctus''. This leads directly into the Canon, which forms the 'rule' for the consecration of the bread and wine to effect the holy mystery of the Eucharist. Upon consecration, the host and chalice are raised for the congregation to see.  
Mattins begins with ''Domine labia mea'' followed by ''Deus in adjutorium''. These are followed by the ''Gloria Patri'' and then ''Alleluya''. Then follows the ''Venite exultemus'' at Mattins or ''Domine clamavi'' at Vespers with their anthems. Then a hymn appointed is sung, followed by three or four psalms according to the day of the month. Then at Mattins and Vespers only there are three lessons, each followed by a responsory. On fairs, all three lessons are taken from Scripture, which is read in order. On festivals, the final lesson is usually taken from a History or Homily of the saint, of the day or on the lessons. Then follows the canticle ''Benedictus'' at Mattins and ''Magnificat'' at Vespers with their anthems. Then the hour ends with the ''Preces'', which consist of a three-fold ''Kyrie'', the ''Pater noster'' and versicles, collects, remembrances and prayers.


After the fraction of the Host, the ''Agnus Dei'' is chaunted. The Priest then gives the ''Pax'' to the Deacon and thence to the Clerk, who delivers it to the Choir and thence to the people at the rood screen, usually via a ''pacitorium''. Usually only those receiving communion may receive the ''Pax'', assembling along the rood screen. Whilst the ''Pax'' is being given to the people, the Priest receives the Eucharist and then distributes it to the Deacon, the Clerk and the Choir. The Priest and Deacon distribute the Eucharist to the communicants at the rood screen, who take by intinction. During this time, the Communion antiphon is chaunted.
The Order of Mattins for the First Sunday after Michaelmas, 1st October, 2023 is given as an example below of the structure of the greater hours.


After Communion follow several prayers including the postcommunion collect, followed by the Dismissal and concluded with the blessing.
<blockquote>
''Minister.'' O Lord, open thou my lips.<br>
''Answer.'' And my mouth shall shew forth thy praise.<br>
''Minister.'' O God, make speed to save me.<br>
''Answer.'' O Lord, make haste to help me.<br>
''Minister.'' Glory be to the Father, and to the Son, and to the Holy Ghost.<br>
''Answer.'' As it was in the beginning, is now and ever shall be, world without end. Amen.<br>


==Book of Offices==
''Invitatory.'' God open your hearts in his law and commandments, and send you peace.<Br>
According to the revised Book of Offices, in Latin the ''Liber Officiorum'', was published in 1710 and prescribed in 1711, the the daily cycle of prayer contains six services called offices. These offices bear the names of Mattins, Tierce, Sext, Nones, Vespers and Compline.  
''Venite.'' O come, let us sing unto the Lord ... (Ps. xcv)<br>


The liturgical day begins and ends at midnight. A ''festum simplex'' begins at Mattins and ends after Vespers. A ''festum semiduplex'' or ''duplex'' begins at the Vespers preceding and ends after Compline. During every liturgical day, the Book of Offices orders Mattins, Vespers and Compline to be sung, as well as only one of Tierce, Sext or Nones. On all ''festa'', Tierce is sung. On ''feriæ'', Sext is sung. On fasts, Nones is sung.  
''Psalm.'' Blessed is the man ... (Ps. i)<br>
''Psalm.'' Why do the heathen rage ... (Ps. ii)<br>
''Psalm.'' Lord how are they increased ... (Ps. iii)<br>
''Psalm.'' Hear me when I call ... (Ps. iv)<br>


Unlike masses, the offices of the Daily Offices may be led by a deacon, clerk or even a layman in the absence of a priest. Priests and religious (monks, nuns, brothers and sisters) are required to pray the Daily Office every day, usually in common choir but at least privately.
''Hymn.'' Father we praise thee ...<br>


===The Ordinary===
''Lesson.'' And it happened that ... (I Macc. i) <br>
[[File:Aberdeen Breviary. Psalter.jpg|right|250px|thumb|The beginning of the former Breviary before the Book of Offices was promulgated. Shewn is the beginning of Mattins.]]
''Responsory.'' God open your hearts in his law and commandments ...<br>
The structures of each of the offices according to the Ordinary in the Book of Offices are very similar. Before each office, the ''Pater noster'' and ''Ave Maria'' are said, often in the form of the ''{{wp|Angelus}}''. The office properly begins with the chaunting of the supplicatory versicles ''Deus in adjutorium'', followed by the ''Gloria Patri'' and then the ''Alleluia''. From Septuagesima Sunday to Easter Day, the ''Alleluia'' is replaced with the ''Laus tibi Domine''.  
''Lesson.'' Perhaps the glory of war ... (Ambr. I Officiis Mini. xl) <br>
''Responsory.'' Our enemies are gathered together ...<br>
''Lesson.'' In the mean time ... (Luke xii)<br>
''Responsory.'' Thine is the power and thine the kingdom ... <br>


Then follows the changeable portion of the office which consists of the hymn, the psalmody of three psalms, the lessons or chapter with passage, the responsory, versic and the canticle. These change according to the office and also according to the day. The psalms and canticle have proper antiphons. In the major offices, each of the three psalms has its own antiphon. In the minor hours, all three psalms are sung with a single antiphon.
''Anthem.'' The Lord said unto the sick of the palsy, Son, be of good cheer, thy sins be forgiven thee.<br>
''Benedictus.'' Blessed be the Lord God of Israel ... (Luke i)


Each office similarly ends with the preces, which usually consists of the ''Kyrie'', followed by the ''Pater noster'', and the versicles, followed by the collects, remembrances, prayers and the concluding blessing which changes according to the office. An anthem may be freely chosen to be sung after the collects.
''Minister.'' The Lord be with you. <br>
''Answer.'' And with thy spirit.<br>
''Minister.'' Let us pray. Lord have mercy upon us.<br>
''Answer.'' Christ have mercy upon us.<br>
''Minister.'' Lord have mercy upon us. Father our ... and lead us not into temptation.<br>
''Answer.'' But deliver us from evil. Amen.<br>


====Mattins====
''Minister.'' O Lord, shew thy mercy upon us.<br>
Mattins is the longest office in the day and is one of the major offices. It should be said around sunrise in the morning, but is acceptable any time before 9 a. m. It is most commonly sung at 7 a. m. It differs from the other Offices insofar as before the supplicatory versicles, the opening versicles ''Domine labia mea'' are chaunted. Furthermore, before the hymn, the ''Venite'' is sung, begun and ended with its own antiphon known as the invitatory. Of the three psalms sung at Mattins, the last 'psalm' is a combination of the Laudate psalms, Psalms 148, 149 and 150, sung together under one antiphon and one ''Gloria Patri''.  
''Answer.'' And grant us thy salvation.<br>
''Minister.'' O Lord, save the King.<br>
''Answer.'' And hear us when we call upon thee.<br>
''Minister.'' Clothe thy ministers with righteousness.<br>
''Answer.'' And make thy saints joyful.<br>
''Minister.''O Lord, save thy people.<br>
''Answer.'' And bless thine inheritance.<Br>
''Minister.''O Lord, hear my prayer.<br>
''Answer.'' And let my cry come unto thee.<br>


After the psalmody follow the lessons, each lesson ending with a sung responsory. Every grouping of three lessons is termed a nocturn, deriving from the ancient practice of chaunting Mattins during the night-time. At the start of each nocturn, the ''Jube'' is said, and at the end, a versicle and response. On ''feriæ'', ''festa simplices'' and minor ''festa semiduplices'', there is only one nocturn and thus are of 'three lessons'. On major ''festa semiduplices'' and all ''festa duplices'', there are three nocturns of 'nine lessons'.
''Collect.'' O God, forasmuch as without thee ... <br>
''Answer.'' Amen.<br>
''Collect.'' O almighty God, who hast safely brought us ... <br>
''Answer.'' Amen.<br>


On ''festa semiduplices'' and ''duplices'' outside of Advent, Septuagesima, Lent and Passiontide except Childermas, the hymn ''Te Deum'' is sung. Lastly the canticle ''Benedictus'' is sung, before concluding with the preces.
''Anthem.'' Well done, good and faithful servant; thou hast been faithful over a few things, I will make thee ruler over many things, saith the Lord.<br>
''Prayer.'' Almighty God, who by thy servant Remigius ...<Br>
''Answer.'' Amen.


Mattins is colloquially known as mothers' prayer owing to the fact that mothers often attend week-day Mattins with their children before school after their husbands have left for work.
''Prayer.'' O Lord our heavenly father ... <Br>
''Answer.'' Amen. <Br>


====Tierce, Sext and Nones====
''Minister.'' Let us bless the Lord.<br>
These are all minor offices of the day. It should be sung at noon every day, no matter which office is being sung; however, any time after 9 a. m. and before 3 p. m. is acceptable. It is of the common structure with chapter. Depending which office is sung, the passage after the chapter, the responsory, the versicle and the office collect are different. The ''Credo'', ''Confiteor'', ''Misereatur'' and ''Absolutionem'' are included in the preces after the ''Pater noster''.
''Answer.'' Thanks be to God.<br>
''Minister.'' The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ ... <Br>
''Answer.'' Amen. <Br>


The canticle at the minor office changes depending on the day of the week. On Sunday it is ''Benedicite''; on Monday ''Confitebor tibi''; on Tuesdays ''Ego dixi''; on Wednesdays ''Exultavit cor''; on Thursdays ''Cantemus Domino''; on Fridays ''Domine audivi''; and on Saturdays ''Audite cæli''.
</blockquote>


The High Mass of the day, after which no more masses may be celebrated, usually occurs after the singing of the daytime minor office, whichever it may be.
===Proper of the Hours===
The Breviary includes the changeable anthems, responsories and hymns of Mattins and Vespers in the Antiphoner, and the collects, lessons and chapters in the Collectar. These are called the propers. Many festivals and most Sundays have their own propers which replace the ferial propers prescribed for the different tides of the church. The Sunday responsories, anthems and collects are often repeated throughout the week, although during certain tides such as during Adventtide, Lententide and Eastertide, there may be proper anthems for each day.


====Vespers====
==Other Services==
Vespers is the second major office. It should be sung around sunset but any time after 3 p. m. is acceptable. The most common time is at 5 p. m. It is of the common structure with chapter. The canticle is ''Magnificat''. One important variation on Vespers is known as Tenebrae, which replaces the former during the Easter Triduum.
The Book of Services also includes the Manual and Pontifical. The former contains the orders for baptisms, marriages, confessions, unctions, churchings, funerals and various litanies, processions and and ceremonies used by priests, whilst the latter contains the orders for confirmations, ordinations, coronations, consecrations and various blessings and other ceremonies used by bishops.
==Calendar==
The propers and readings for the mass and hours change through the year following the church calendar, which is a set of interlaced cycles. The fixed cycle of the church calendar begins on {{wp|Michaelmas|Michaelmas Day}} every year and specifies the dates of the immovable festivals such as Christmas Day, Lady Day and St. John’s Day, which also define the [[Civil year of Great Nortend|civil calendar]] terms used in Great Nortend. The Church of Nortend follows the {{wp|Gregorian calendar}}, having been introduced in 1582 prior to the [[Church of Nortend#Small Schism|Schism]] in 1614. The moveable Paschal cycle changes annually based on the {{wp|computus|computation}} of Easter, setting the dates for Lent, Good Friday, Easter, Ascension and Whitsun, inter alia.  


====Compline====
Furthermore, the Calendar reckons liturgical days as being festivals or fairs. There are three classes of festivals — double festivals, semidouble festivals and simple festivals. Sunday is always reckoned as being at least a semidouble festival. All days which are not festivals are reckoned as fairs. Some fairs are holy days, although not festal. Some fairs, such as most Fridays, are fasten days, although Sundays in Lent are also reckoned as fasten days. The ordinary liturgical day begins and ends at midnight. Semidouble and double festivals, however, begin at Vespers on its even day. Unlike the rest of Western Christianity, the Church of Nortend does not mark Trinity Sunday.
Compline is the minor office of the night. It should be sung before retiring to bed, usually around 9 p. m. It differs from the other minor offices in that it begins with the versicles ''Converte nos'' before the supplicatory versicles. At every Compline, the psalms are Psalms 4, 91 and 134. The canticle is ''Nunc dimittis''. As at Tierce, Sext and Nones, the ''Credo'', ''Confiteor'', ''Misereatur'' and ''Absolutionem'' are said.


===The Proper===
===Terms and Tides===
The Daily Office changes daily and throughout the year, reflecting the season of the church and also the day-to-day feasts, vigils and commemorations. For example, the festal hymn for Mattins during Advent, sung pricipally on the Sundays of Advent, is ''Verbum supernum prodiens'', whereas the ferial hymn, sung on the weekdays, is ''Vox clara ecce intonat''.
{{See also|Civil year of Great Nortend}}
There are four terms in the church year, roughly corresponding to the civil terms. Each term has three main seasons or „tides”, which determine many of the propers through the year :—
{{columns-list|colwidth=35em|
'''Michaelmas Term'''
* Michaelmastide, beginning on the Sunday after Michaelmas Day
* Crispintide, beginning on the Sunday after Saint Crispin's Day
* Advent, beginning on the sixth Sunday before Christmas Day


The Book of Offices provides the texts of the changeable hymns, antiphons, passages, versicles, collects and responsories for each office in the Proper, the music provided in the Book of Chaunts. The antiphons are the most changeable portion especially given there are three antiphons at every office. Most feasts and many Sundays have their own proper antiphons, which replace the antiphons prescribed for the different seasons of the church.
'''Christmas Term'''
* Christmastide, beginning on Christmas Day
* Epiphanytide, beginning on Epiphany Day
* Shrovetide, beginning on the ninth Sunday before Easter


The Proper is divided into the Proper of the Season or ''Temporale'' and the Proper of the Saints or ''Sanctorale''. Generally, every Sunday or significant feast day 'flavours' the hymns, antiphons and responsories of the following week. The Proper also includes the Lectionary, providing the texts from the Old Testament, the New Testament as well as sermons and homilies of the church fathers, bishops and other theologians.
'''Easter Term'''
* Lententide, beginning on the sixth Sunday before Easter
* Eastertide, beginning on Easter Day
* Whitsuntide, beginning on Whitsun Day


==Rites==
'''Summer Term'''
===Baptism===
* Midsummertide, beginning on the Sunday after Saint John's Day
===Matrimony===
* Samsontide, beginning on the Sunday after Saint Samson's Day
===Funeral===
* Austintide, beginning on the Sunday after Saint Augustine's Day
}}


==Music==
==Music==
[[File:GNBOC.png|thumb|right|250px|The title page of the first edition of the Book of Chaunts.]]It is generally the expectation that the services of the liturgy will be sung, or 'chaunted', principally by the priest, attendants and choir. Chaunt is usually accompanied by a pipe or reed organ, except during Lent and Advent. Liturgical texts are chaunted either with the plain chaunt provided in the Book of Chaunts, in Latin the ''Liber Cantuum'', with or without extra organum or faburden, or in composed polyphonic figured chaunts.  
{{See also|Music in Great Nortend#Church music}}
Regular public celebration of divine service is sung, or „chaunted”, in church by the ministres, quire and people. The words of the liturgy are ordinarily chaunted in plainsong and accompanied by pipe or reed organs. During Lententide and Adventtide organs are „muffled” and during the Triduum, they are forbidden to sound completely.
 
Plainsong is sung to the settings of the Book of Chaunts, published in 1730 by the Precentor of [[St Peter's Cathedral, Lendert]] following on the Roman chaunt reforms of the 16th century. Miers and other churchmen inspired by Luther strongly favoured congregational singing, especially of the hymns, sequences, psalms and canticles. Thus, at the expense of modality and melismas, the old Gregorian chaunts were strongly adapted to have a plainsong which could be harmonised in the {{wp|Mensural notation|mensural}} [[Music in Great Nortend|chorale]] style, suitable for the unison singing. The use of newly-written hymns in church has been more controversial, however, and general practice is to limit their use to outside divine service. Books of folk songs and „ghostly songs” are popular.
 
For the anthems and responsories, figured music is sung by quires of trained boy quiristers and singing clerks. These settings are usually in lightly polyphonic harmony with plainsong verses or incipits. Lady masses and lady hours in cathedrals and collegiate churches traditionally are sung with more florid polyphony. Figured music in the form of deschaunt is also often sung to the psalms, canticles, hymns and ordinary also alternatim between the unison plainsong and a deschaunt. Deschaunt settings of the anthems and propers are also sung.
 
==Vestments==
{{See also|Church of Nortend#Clerical dress|label1 = Non-liturgical clerical dress}}
[[File:GNPriest.png|right|thumb|A priest in massing dress — frock, bands, albe, cope, stole and manipell.|200px]]Canon law and the liturgical rubrics order certain vestments to be worn by ministres and clerks in divine service. Most of the vestments worn are of great antiquity, descending from the common dress during the Roman Empire. After the Small Schism, there was controversy over the retention of certain „massing vestments” such as the chasuble, tunic, manipell and stole. These were settled by the Book of Masses, which forbade use of the chasuble and tunic, both of which were replaced by copes, while the stole was replaced by the tippet and the manipell disappeared.
 
* '''Frock''' : The {{wp|cassock|frock}}, or cassock, is an ankle-length coat which may be worn by all clerks. It is properly worn with breeches and stockings, but usually with trousers. The frock is ordinarily black. Cardinals and members of royal foundations wear scarlet frocks in full dress. Bishops who are not cardinals wear violet-blue frocks in full dress. In undress, the frock is black with coloured piping, buttons, cuffs and girdle as appropriate.
* '''Bands''' : Starched linen bands are tied around the standing collar. The collar is a high „Imperial” collar, which is the source of the nickname of „stiff-necks” for clergymen. Pleated and unstarched mourning bands are worn during mourning.
* '''Surplice''': The {{wp|surplice}} is a fully white linen robe worn over the frock during divine service. It has sleeves and may be decorated with linen cuffs or hemstitching.  The length of the surplice for clerks is related to his office, seniority or age.  The surplice is worn girdled high around the waist by the ministres and altar clerks for masses, as an albe.
* '''Tippet''': The {{wp|tippet}} is worn by ministres over the surplice. The tippet is broad and made of silk for graduates and woollen stuff for bachelors and non-graduates. Bishops and dignitaries wear furred silk tippets, also called almices. Mourning tippets of crape are worn during mourning. During masses the tippet is worn crossed by the priest and worn diagonally by the deacon, in the fashion of the stole.
* '''Hood''' : The academic hood is worn in quire dress by graduates if a cope is not worn. It is worn over the tippet. Mourning hoods of black cloth are sometimes worn during mourning.
* '''Cope''' : There are three vestments known as copes :—
:*The {{wp|cope|silken cope}} is worn by ministres at the mass, the greater hours, rites, ceremonies, processions, blessings &c.
:*The {{wp|Cope#Cappa nigra|stuff cope}} is a woollen cloak with hood and cape worn in quire dress over the surplice in cold weather. 
:*The furred cope is worn in choir dress by dignitaries as a juridictional garment which has a furred cloth hood, cape and sometimes train.
* '''Square cap''' : The woollen square cap is worn by ministres during divine service, and also outside when the gown is worn.
* '''Wig''' : The clerical wig is sometimes worn by cardinals, bishops and archdeacons. It has a circular patch in the centre to represent the old tonsure.
* '''Mitre''' : The mitre is worn by bishops, cardinals and other dignitaries on certain occasions. It is otherwise only carried as a symbol of dignity.
 
EG. Mattins/Vespers: All in quire dress (surplice, tippet and hood); officers in cope
Prime/Compline: All in quire dress; officers without cope.
High Mass: The ministres girdle their surplices, cross their tippets and put on the cope.


Plain chaunt in the Cardican tradition is performed in a {{wp|Mensural notation|mensural}} style, following on by the chaunt reforms of the 16th century. Melody, sometimes at the expence of modality, and intelligibility are highly emphasised, and Latin is pronounced according to the {{wp|Traditional English pronunciation of Latin|traditional English pronunciation}}.
====Liturgical colours====
The prescribed colours for silken copes are red, green, white and blue. However, purple, yellow, gold/silver and black, along with their lighter or darker shades, are all permissible are commonly used based on traditional associations. Red is ordered for Sundays, semidouble and simple festivals, double festivals of martyrs, Passiontide and Whitsuntide. Green is ordered for fairs after Michaelmas, Epiphany and Midsummer. White is ordered for other double festivals, Christmastide and Eastertide, and blue during Lententide and Adventtide and All Souls’ Day.


Congregational participation is generally limited to the chaunting of the versicles, acclamations, the hymns, the psalms and the canticles in the offices, and of the fixed ordinary texts in the mass which are simpler than the freely composed proper antiphons and responsories, which are chaunted by admitted choristers.
==References==
{{Reflist}}


{{GNC}}
{{GNC}} [[Category:Religion in Astyria]]

Latest revision as of 09:33, 3 November 2024

The Nortish Rite
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Divine Service according to the Nortish Rite is often sung with quire.
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The Nortish Rite constitutes the public worship, liturgy and ceremonies of Divine Service according to the Use of the Church of Nortend in Great Nortend. Divine Service in the form of the Daily Prayer, Holy Communion and other Manual Services that is undertaken under the authority and jurisdiction of the Church of Nortend are require by law to follow the form set in The Book of Divine Service according to the Reformed Use of the Church of Nortend or the other books issued by the Crown under the Great Seal of the Realm, which are used along with the Frympell translation of the Holy Bible.

History

Cardinal Miers, Archbishop of Lendert, undertook a reform of the Church's liturgy.

The Divine Service of the Church of Nortend is a descendent of the uses of the Roman Rite which has prevailed in Great Nortend since the Christianisation of the country.

In mediæval times, the major liturgical uses through Nortend were the uses of Chepingstow and Sulthey, which influenced the secular and monastic uses respectively. Divine Service was almost wholly in Latin and comprised of the Mass, as well as daily hours of prayer—Vigils, Mattins, Prime, Tierce, Sext, Nones, Vespers and Compline, as well as the rites and ceremonies for occasional offices such as baptisms, confirmations, marriages and funerals.

The Reformation of Alexander I involved, inter alia, the rejection of the authority of Rome; however, this did not immediately end the use of pre-Reformation liturgies. The Latin uses continued in general use through the archbishopric of Cardinal Frympell, who aligned himself as only a moderate Lutheran reformer. The installation of Cardinal George Miers as Archbishop of Lendert hastened liturgical reform towards a more evangelical or reformed Divine Service.

Henfoot Commission

Sir Charles de Henfoot was Master of the Commission charged with producing an English service.

Sir Charles de Henfoot, the Provost of the Chapel Royal, was appointed by Cardinal Miers to be Master for a „Commission for the Divine Service” to undertake the task of reforming the liturgical books. Though the Chapel Royal was distinctly „high church”, Henfoot himself was considered more soundly Lutheran in theology, and thus an acceptable person to take charge of the process.

The Commission presented preliminary draughts for its orders for masses and the hours in both Latin and English according to the text and style of Frympell’s Bible; however, it was met with little enthusiasm from both the Frympellite and the Akeepian clergy, the former complaining of its retention of the confusing and repetitive mediæval monastic pattern of seven long hours unsuitable for public worship and the latter rejecting the more Protestant theology of the mass being a mere remembrance. Edmund, counselled by the Lord Treasurer the Count of Cardenbridge, wrote to Henfoot expressly requiring that the „existing and customary reverence or worship duly paid at the celebration of the Mass should continue to the extent that it is edifying and conformable to Holy Writ”.

The Commission returned to its 1706 draught Book of Hours and drew up a simplified reworking thereof for the hours, producing an English Book of Hours in 1708. This cut down the number of hours to four — Mattins, Prime, Vespers and Compline — whilst following a lectio continuo pattern of continuous reading though the whole Old and New Testaments, Psalter and Proverbs. The mediæval anthems, responsories and hymns remained; however, they were simplified, both in melody and in their placement through the year.

For the mass, the Commission reworked its replacement for the Roman Canon, more explicitly returning to a sacramental view towards the Holy Eucharist, adapting much of the old Roman Canon. This revised English Book of Masses, presented to the bishops in 1710, it also enjoined once again customary acts of bowing, although it continued to prohibit the reservation of the Host for „gazing-upon, carrying-about or uplifting”. Frympellites refused to authorise the Book unless the elevations of the host and chalice at their consecrations were forbidden, and a rubric was inserted to the same effect.

The Henfoot liturgy, in its Latin form, was finally approved by Parliament in 1711, and the English and Latin Book of Services authorised by Edmund through the canon Quia solliciti[1]. At the same time, the English book was declared to be the only ones to be used in Divine Service. The Latin service was not to be used except for study or in private.

Mass

The Holy Communion is consecrated at the altar during the mass.

Missal which was produced in 1710, adopted much of the medivæal order of the mass. Other than the rendering into English, the changes wrought simplified the complex rubrics and changeable elements of the mass throughout the church year on different occasions.

The letters missive in 1756 from the then Lord Archbishop of Sulthey, Cardinal Condard, ordered that from henceforth all communicants would receive in both kinds when receiving the Holy Communion, having received under one kind hitherto. The mediæval custom of only receiving four times a year (once a term, at Christmas, Easter, Whitsun and Michaelmas) however still remained.

Forms

The mass may be celebrated as either a high mass or a low mass. A high mass may also be a solemn high mass if the priest is assisted at the altar by both a deacon and a subdeacon (nowadays a role taken by the clerk). At a simple high mass, the priest is holpen at the high altar without deacon and subdeacon but with two clerks in albes in lieu. Whereas a high mass is chaunted through, a low mass is read plainly without tone, and only one clerk in surplice helps the priest.

In most churches, a high mass is celebrated at noon on Sundays and festivals, and at least a low mass on other days. Before the high mass, other low masses may be said by other priests. A „morrow mass” in the early morning after Mattins is common. On Christmas Day, there are two high masses — the „Mass in gallicantu” after Mattins at the early morning and the „Mass in die” after Prime at noon. There are no masses of any kind on Black Saturday or Good Friday. There is a Vigil Mass on Easter Even after first Vespers, followed by the Easter Mass proper at noon.

Order of the Mass

Before the mass begins, the priest, deacon and clerk vest, saying appropriate prayers. The daily high mass occurs around noon. A procession and Asperges often occurs after the office and before the High Mass on Sundays and festivals.

Antecommunion

The Gospel lectern is often in the form of an eagle.

The antecommunion service is the former half of a mass before the ceremonies pertaining to the consecration are done.

The Office anthem is chaunted as the ministres and quire go to the chancel and make their private prayers, all standing. It consists of an anthem, a psalm verse, the Gloria Patri followed by the anthem again. The Kyrie eleison is then begun. The Kyrie is always troped, except on fairs during Adventtide and Lententide. The hymn Gloria then follows. The Collects are then prayed, kneeling. Up to seven collects may be bidden, although usually only three.[2]

On festivals or solemn days, the readings begin with the Prophecy or Lesson, the former from the Old Testament or Revelations, and the latter from the Acts or the martyrology of a saint. The Responsory follows.

The Epistle is then chaunted by the clerk, followed by the Alleluya or Tract. A Sequence hymn then follows on most festivals. The Gospel is then chaunted by the deacon, all standing. The Credo, chaunted by all, follows on festival days. The Sermon is then said if one is to be said. The Bidding concludes the Antecommunion, when the people are commanded to bid their prayers for various causes.

Communion

The communion service is the latter half of a mass. It begins with the Offertory anthem wherein the bread and wine are offered to the altar. Here follows several prayers including the Secrets corresponding to the Collects. The people also offer their own oblations, such as money or alms.

After the Offertory, there is a Confession before the Preface is said, concluding with the Sanctus and Benedictus, all standing. This leads directly into the Canon, which forms the prayer for the consecration of the bread and wine to the Body and Blood of Christ. The Canon is in three or five parts — the Prayer for the Church Militant ending with a Prayer of Oblation, the Prayer of Sacring, and the Prayer for the Church Expectant beginning with another Prayer of Oblation. The Canon is never sung, mostly spoken in „plain steven”, or ordinary voice, while the Prayer of Sacring is bidden „in close”, i. e. in a low voice. There is no elevation of the host or chalice upon their consecration, but the sacring bell is rung inviting all to bow and make their worship.

After the Pater noster is chaunted by all and the Fraction, the host and chalice are shewn to the people as the Agnus Dei is begun. The Priest meanwhile gives the Pax to the Deacon and thence to the Clerk, saying „Peace be alway with you”. After the Agnus Dei, the Priest receives the Eucharist himself and then gives it to the Deacon, the Clerk and the Quire. Then the Priest and Deacon give the Eucharist to the communicants at the rood screen, who receive by intinction on the tongue, the houseling clothes placed underneath the chin.

The Thanksgivings are bidden after the Ablutions are completed, while the Postcommunion anthem is chaunted. This is followed by the Dismissal and Blessing.

Proper of the Mass

Proper Kyries for Tides
Festivals Fairs Tide
Cunctipotens Kyrie altissime Michaelmastide
O Rex clemens Te Christe Rex Crispintide
Kyrie, salve Adventtide
Kyrie magnæ Deus Dominator Deus Christmastide
Rex sempiterne Kyrie Rex immense Epiphanytide
Clemens Rector Summe Deus Shrovetide
Deus Genitor alme Lententide
Lux et origo Rector cosmi pie Eastertide
Kyrie Rex celse Firmator sancte Whitsuntide
Orbis factor Kyrie Genitor Midsummertide
Conditor Kyrie Pater excelse Samsontide
Kyrie Rex genitor Stelliferi Conditor Austintide

The changeable Introit, Grail, Alleluya, Tract, Offertory and Communion anthems and Sequences are included in the Gradual, whilst the Prophecies, Epistles, Gospels and Collects are contained in the Lectionary. The Kyrie,[3] Gloria, Credo, Sanctus, Agnus Dei and other fixed chaunts are contained in the Kyriale.

Hours

Monks and minchens say the hours daily at the many religious houses through Great Nortend.
At Vespers, candles and lamps are lit during the chaunting of the Lucernary.

According to the revised Breviary published in 1708, there are two daily greater hours of Mattins and Vespers, as well as the five lesser hours of Prime, Tierce, Sext, Nones and Compline, which are not usually observed except by monks and minchens. Clerks in holy orders, professed monks, minchens and nuns are required to pray Mattins and Vespers daily, preferably sung in quire but at the least privately. Before each hour, the Pater noster and Ave Maria are said silently. In many places a „Paternoster” bell is rung before Mattins and Vespers as a reminder for the people to make their devotions.

Order of the Hours

When sung in the church, the ministers dress in their quire habit. Mattins can be said any time in the morning while Vespers can be said any time in the evening. At monasteries, ideally Mattins is said at dawn, Prime between 6 and 9, Tierce between 9 and 12, Sext between 12 and 3, Nones between 3 and 6, Vespers at dusk and Compline before bed.

Mattins begins with Domine labia mea followed by Deus in adjutorium. These are followed by the Gloria Patri and then Alleluya. Then follows the Venite exultemus at Mattins or Domine clamavi at Vespers with their anthems. Then a hymn appointed is sung, followed by three or four psalms according to the day of the month. Then at Mattins and Vespers only there are three lessons, each followed by a responsory. On fairs, all three lessons are taken from Scripture, which is read in order. On festivals, the final lesson is usually taken from a History or Homily of the saint, of the day or on the lessons. Then follows the canticle Benedictus at Mattins and Magnificat at Vespers with their anthems. Then the hour ends with the Preces, which consist of a three-fold Kyrie, the Pater noster and versicles, collects, remembrances and prayers.

The Order of Mattins for the First Sunday after Michaelmas, 1st October, 2023 is given as an example below of the structure of the greater hours.

Minister. O Lord, open thou my lips.
Answer. And my mouth shall shew forth thy praise.
Minister. O God, make speed to save me.
Answer. O Lord, make haste to help me.
Minister. Glory be to the Father, and to the Son, and to the Holy Ghost.
Answer. As it was in the beginning, is now and ever shall be, world without end. Amen.

Invitatory. God open your hearts in his law and commandments, and send you peace.
Venite. O come, let us sing unto the Lord ... (Ps. xcv)

Psalm. Blessed is the man ... (Ps. i)
Psalm. Why do the heathen rage ... (Ps. ii)
Psalm. Lord how are they increased ... (Ps. iii)
Psalm. Hear me when I call ... (Ps. iv)

Hymn. Father we praise thee ...

Lesson. And it happened that ... (I Macc. i)
Responsory. God open your hearts in his law and commandments ...
Lesson. Perhaps the glory of war ... (Ambr. I Officiis Mini. xl)
Responsory. Our enemies are gathered together ...
Lesson. In the mean time ... (Luke xii)
Responsory. Thine is the power and thine the kingdom ...

Anthem. The Lord said unto the sick of the palsy, Son, be of good cheer, thy sins be forgiven thee.
Benedictus. Blessed be the Lord God of Israel ... (Luke i)

Minister. The Lord be with you.
Answer. And with thy spirit.
Minister. Let us pray. Lord have mercy upon us.
Answer. Christ have mercy upon us.
Minister. Lord have mercy upon us. Father our ... and lead us not into temptation.
Answer. But deliver us from evil. Amen.

Minister. O Lord, shew thy mercy upon us.
Answer. And grant us thy salvation.
Minister. O Lord, save the King.
Answer. And hear us when we call upon thee.
Minister. Clothe thy ministers with righteousness.
Answer. And make thy saints joyful.
Minister.O Lord, save thy people.
Answer. And bless thine inheritance.
Minister.O Lord, hear my prayer.
Answer. And let my cry come unto thee.

Collect. O God, forasmuch as without thee ...
Answer. Amen.
Collect. O almighty God, who hast safely brought us ...
Answer. Amen.

Anthem. Well done, good and faithful servant; thou hast been faithful over a few things, I will make thee ruler over many things, saith the Lord.
Prayer. Almighty God, who by thy servant Remigius ...
Answer. Amen.

Prayer. O Lord our heavenly father ...
Answer. Amen.

Minister. Let us bless the Lord.
Answer. Thanks be to God.
Minister. The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ ...
Answer. Amen.

Proper of the Hours

The Breviary includes the changeable anthems, responsories and hymns of Mattins and Vespers in the Antiphoner, and the collects, lessons and chapters in the Collectar. These are called the propers. Many festivals and most Sundays have their own propers which replace the ferial propers prescribed for the different tides of the church. The Sunday responsories, anthems and collects are often repeated throughout the week, although during certain tides such as during Adventtide, Lententide and Eastertide, there may be proper anthems for each day.

Other Services

The Book of Services also includes the Manual and Pontifical. The former contains the orders for baptisms, marriages, confessions, unctions, churchings, funerals and various litanies, processions and and ceremonies used by priests, whilst the latter contains the orders for confirmations, ordinations, coronations, consecrations and various blessings and other ceremonies used by bishops.

Calendar

The propers and readings for the mass and hours change through the year following the church calendar, which is a set of interlaced cycles. The fixed cycle of the church calendar begins on Michaelmas Day every year and specifies the dates of the immovable festivals such as Christmas Day, Lady Day and St. John’s Day, which also define the civil calendar terms used in Great Nortend. The Church of Nortend follows the Gregorian calendar, having been introduced in 1582 prior to the Schism in 1614. The moveable Paschal cycle changes annually based on the computation of Easter, setting the dates for Lent, Good Friday, Easter, Ascension and Whitsun, inter alia.

Furthermore, the Calendar reckons liturgical days as being festivals or fairs. There are three classes of festivals — double festivals, semidouble festivals and simple festivals. Sunday is always reckoned as being at least a semidouble festival. All days which are not festivals are reckoned as fairs. Some fairs are holy days, although not festal. Some fairs, such as most Fridays, are fasten days, although Sundays in Lent are also reckoned as fasten days. The ordinary liturgical day begins and ends at midnight. Semidouble and double festivals, however, begin at Vespers on its even day. Unlike the rest of Western Christianity, the Church of Nortend does not mark Trinity Sunday.

Terms and Tides

There are four terms in the church year, roughly corresponding to the civil terms. Each term has three main seasons or „tides”, which determine many of the propers through the year :—

Michaelmas Term
  • Michaelmastide, beginning on the Sunday after Michaelmas Day
  • Crispintide, beginning on the Sunday after Saint Crispin's Day
  • Advent, beginning on the sixth Sunday before Christmas Day

Christmas Term

  • Christmastide, beginning on Christmas Day
  • Epiphanytide, beginning on Epiphany Day
  • Shrovetide, beginning on the ninth Sunday before Easter

Easter Term

  • Lententide, beginning on the sixth Sunday before Easter
  • Eastertide, beginning on Easter Day
  • Whitsuntide, beginning on Whitsun Day

Summer Term

  • Midsummertide, beginning on the Sunday after Saint John's Day
  • Samsontide, beginning on the Sunday after Saint Samson's Day
  • Austintide, beginning on the Sunday after Saint Augustine's Day

Music

Regular public celebration of divine service is sung, or „chaunted”, in church by the ministres, quire and people. The words of the liturgy are ordinarily chaunted in plainsong and accompanied by pipe or reed organs. During Lententide and Adventtide organs are „muffled” and during the Triduum, they are forbidden to sound completely.

Plainsong is sung to the settings of the Book of Chaunts, published in 1730 by the Precentor of St Peter's Cathedral, Lendert following on the Roman chaunt reforms of the 16th century. Miers and other churchmen inspired by Luther strongly favoured congregational singing, especially of the hymns, sequences, psalms and canticles. Thus, at the expense of modality and melismas, the old Gregorian chaunts were strongly adapted to have a plainsong which could be harmonised in the mensural chorale style, suitable for the unison singing. The use of newly-written hymns in church has been more controversial, however, and general practice is to limit their use to outside divine service. Books of folk songs and „ghostly songs” are popular.

For the anthems and responsories, figured music is sung by quires of trained boy quiristers and singing clerks. These settings are usually in lightly polyphonic harmony with plainsong verses or incipits. Lady masses and lady hours in cathedrals and collegiate churches traditionally are sung with more florid polyphony. Figured music in the form of deschaunt is also often sung to the psalms, canticles, hymns and ordinary also alternatim between the unison plainsong and a deschaunt. Deschaunt settings of the anthems and propers are also sung.

Vestments

A priest in massing dress — frock, bands, albe, cope, stole and manipell.

Canon law and the liturgical rubrics order certain vestments to be worn by ministres and clerks in divine service. Most of the vestments worn are of great antiquity, descending from the common dress during the Roman Empire. After the Small Schism, there was controversy over the retention of certain „massing vestments” such as the chasuble, tunic, manipell and stole. These were settled by the Book of Masses, which forbade use of the chasuble and tunic, both of which were replaced by copes, while the stole was replaced by the tippet and the manipell disappeared.

  • Frock : The frock, or cassock, is an ankle-length coat which may be worn by all clerks. It is properly worn with breeches and stockings, but usually with trousers. The frock is ordinarily black. Cardinals and members of royal foundations wear scarlet frocks in full dress. Bishops who are not cardinals wear violet-blue frocks in full dress. In undress, the frock is black with coloured piping, buttons, cuffs and girdle as appropriate.
  • Bands : Starched linen bands are tied around the standing collar. The collar is a high „Imperial” collar, which is the source of the nickname of „stiff-necks” for clergymen. Pleated and unstarched mourning bands are worn during mourning.
  • Surplice: The surplice is a fully white linen robe worn over the frock during divine service. It has sleeves and may be decorated with linen cuffs or hemstitching. The length of the surplice for clerks is related to his office, seniority or age. The surplice is worn girdled high around the waist by the ministres and altar clerks for masses, as an albe.
  • Tippet: The tippet is worn by ministres over the surplice. The tippet is broad and made of silk for graduates and woollen stuff for bachelors and non-graduates. Bishops and dignitaries wear furred silk tippets, also called almices. Mourning tippets of crape are worn during mourning. During masses the tippet is worn crossed by the priest and worn diagonally by the deacon, in the fashion of the stole.
  • Hood : The academic hood is worn in quire dress by graduates if a cope is not worn. It is worn over the tippet. Mourning hoods of black cloth are sometimes worn during mourning.
  • Cope : There are three vestments known as copes :—
  • The silken cope is worn by ministres at the mass, the greater hours, rites, ceremonies, processions, blessings &c.
  • The stuff cope is a woollen cloak with hood and cape worn in quire dress over the surplice in cold weather.
  • The furred cope is worn in choir dress by dignitaries as a juridictional garment which has a furred cloth hood, cape and sometimes train.
  • Square cap : The woollen square cap is worn by ministres during divine service, and also outside when the gown is worn.
  • Wig : The clerical wig is sometimes worn by cardinals, bishops and archdeacons. It has a circular patch in the centre to represent the old tonsure.
  • Mitre : The mitre is worn by bishops, cardinals and other dignitaries on certain occasions. It is otherwise only carried as a symbol of dignity.

EG. Mattins/Vespers: All in quire dress (surplice, tippet and hood); officers in cope Prime/Compline: All in quire dress; officers without cope. High Mass: The ministres girdle their surplices, cross their tippets and put on the cope.

Liturgical colours

The prescribed colours for silken copes are red, green, white and blue. However, purple, yellow, gold/silver and black, along with their lighter or darker shades, are all permissible are commonly used based on traditional associations. Red is ordered for Sundays, semidouble and simple festivals, double festivals of martyrs, Passiontide and Whitsuntide. Green is ordered for fairs after Michaelmas, Epiphany and Midsummer. White is ordered for other double festivals, Christmastide and Eastertide, and blue during Lententide and Adventtide and All Souls’ Day.

References

  1. „Whereas our well-beloved servants ... moved by the holy fear of God and need for unity in our Church ...”
  2. Of the day, for the King, and for some other cause.
  3. Note that the Kyrie at high masses are usually troped.