Latin Mass  

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-'''Drinkers Masses''', to include '''Gamblers Masses''', was a genre of medieval Latin poetry which parodied the [[Roman Catholic]] [[Latin Mass]] in order to make fun of drinking and gambling monks and clerics. These masses were written between about 1100 to 1700, with the first example being the gamblers mass (''officio lusorum''), found in the [[Carmina Burana]]. The genre is somewhat related to other medieval ecclesiastic parody, such as the [[Feast of Fools]] and the [[Feast of the Ass]].+The term is frequently used to denote the [[Tridentine Mass]]: that is, the [[Roman Rite|Roman-Rite]] liturgy of the Mass celebrated in accordance with the successive editions of the [[Roman Missal]] published between 1570 and 1962. In most countries, this form of Mass was celebrated only in Latin, ''[[Tridentine Mass#Language|though other languages were used in a few places]]''. In the mid-1960s, permissions were granted to celebrate most of the Tridentine Mass in vernacular languages, including the [[Canon of the Mass|Canon]] from 1967 onwards.{{Efn | Historically speaking, "Latin Mass" could be applied also to the various forms of [[Pre-Tridentine Mass]] from about the year 370, when the Church in Rome changed from [[Greek language|Greek]] to Latin.
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The term is frequently used to denote the Tridentine Mass: that is, the Roman-Rite liturgy of the Mass celebrated in accordance with the successive editions of the Roman Missal published between 1570 and 1962. In most countries, this form of Mass was celebrated only in Latin, though other languages were used in a few places. In the mid-1960s, permissions were granted to celebrate most of the Tridentine Mass in vernacular languages, including the Canon from 1967 onwards.{{Efn | Historically speaking, "Latin Mass" could be applied also to the various forms of Pre-Tridentine Mass from about the year 370, when the Church in Rome changed from Greek to Latin.




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