CONSTITUTION
ON THE SACRED LITURGY
SACROSANCTUM CONCILIUM
SACROSANCTUM CONCILIUM
SOLEMNLY PROMULGATED BY
HIS HOLINESS
POPE PAUL VI
ON DECEMBER 4, 1963
INTRODUCTION
1. This sacred Council has several aims in view: it desires
to impart an ever increasing vigor to the Christian life of the faithful; to
adapt more suitably to the needs of our own times those institutions which are
subject to change; to foster whatever can promote union among all who believe
in Christ; to strengthen whatever can help to call the whole of mankind into
the household of the Church. The Council therefore sees particularly cogent
reasons for undertaking the reform and promotion of the liturgy.
2. For the liturgy, "through which the work of our
redemption is accomplished," [1] most of all
in the divine sacrifice of the Eucharist, is the outstanding means whereby the
faithful may express in their lives, and manifest to others, the mystery of
Christ and the real nature of the true Church. It is of the essence of the
Church that she be both human and divine, visible and yet invisibly equipped,
eager to act and yet intent on contemplation, present in this world and yet not
at home in it; and she is all these things in such wise that in her the human
is directed and subordinated to the divine, the visible likewise to the
invisible, action to contemplation, and this present world to that city yet to
come, which we seek [2]. While the
liturgy daily builds up those who are within into a holy temple of the Lord,
into a dwelling place for God in the Spirit [3], to the
mature measure of the fullness of Christ [4], at the same
time it marvelously strengthens their power to preach Christ, and thus shows
forth the Church to those who are outside as a sign lifted up among the nations
[5] under which
the scattered children of God may be gathered together [6], until there
is one sheepfold and one shepherd [7].
3. Wherefore the sacred Council judges that the following
principles concerning the promotion and reform of the liturgy should be called
to mind, and that practical norms should be established.
Among these principles and norms there are some which can
and should be applied both to the Roman rite and also to all the other rites.
The practical norms which follow, however, should be taken as applying only to
the Roman rite, except for those which, in the very nature of things, affect
other rites as well.
To be continued for study each day...section by section
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