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This includes Western Rite members of the Russian Orthodox Church Outside Russia, as well as the Old Calendarist Autonomous Orthodox Metropolia of North and South America and the British Isles. In spite of interest in the Sarum Use, its publication in Latin sources from the sixteenth century and earlier has inhibited its modern adoption.
The Sarum Rite was a medieval liturgical rite used in England before the Reformation which had a distinct set of liturgical colours. After the Anglo-Catholic Revival of the 19th century, certain Church of England churches began adopting Sarum liturgical colours as an attempt to produce something that was an English expression of Catholicism ...
The Lyme Caxton Missal is an incunable or early printed book containing the liturgy of the Mass according to the Sarum Rite, published in 1487 by William Caxton. The copy at Lyme Park, Cheshire, England, is the only nearly complete surviving copy of its earliest known edition. It is held in the library of the house and is on display to visitors.
Latin liturgical rites, or Western liturgical rites, is a large family of liturgical rites and uses of public worship employed by the Latin Church, the largest particular church sui iuris of the Catholic Church, that originated in Europe where the Latin language once dominated.
Western Rite Orthodoxy, also called Western Orthodoxy or the Orthodox Western Rite, are congregations within the Eastern Orthodox tradition which perform their liturgy in Western forms. Besides altered versions of the Tridentine Mass , congregations have used Western liturgical forms such as the Sarum Rite , the Mozarabic Rite , and Gallican Rite .
[7] [4] Compared to texts like the Ceremoniale Romanum and the Ceremoniale Episcoporum that were meant to standardize cathedral and collegiate church worship according to the Roman Rite, customaries were dependent on the buildings hosting the liturgies. The Sarum Use customary was of particular note in providing for celebrations outside the ...
In England, the 11th century Leofric missal [3] [4] and the later Sarum Rite include the Latin prayer as one of those said by the priest before Mass. [5] [6] A version appears as the introduction to the 14th-century anonymous contemplative treatise, The Cloud of Unknowing:
The Sarum ordination liturgies were the foundations of this ordinal, as the revisers did not have the means to review the precedents to the contemporary Sarum usage. As such, the 1550 ordinal was largely a simplification of those rituals with an intent to emphasize the imposition of hands and associate prayers, including the ancient hymn Veni ...