Bibliotheca Arnamagnæana - 01.06.1980, Page 181

Bibliotheca Arnamagnæana - 01.06.1980, Page 181
163 vigilias defunctorum, and also of the celebration of the saints’ feasts not contained in the Ordinary, as those of St. Thorlak, St. Jon of Hol- ar, St. Magnus (of Orkney), and others that should reasonably be kept in accordance with the good, old customs of the Church. To these rulings his clergy had consented. The (lost) original letter was signed by the Official and seven priests of the diocese who, together with the Bishop, appended their seals to it. It is interesting that Bishop Jon VII should have attributed the growth of the Skålholt liturgy to his predecessors, the bishops who had been monks. The impact of the monastic upon the secular liturgy constitutes so to say the salient feature of liturgical history in the Middle Ages. The gradual psalms were added to the Canonical Office by St. Benedict of Aniane in the ninth century; the Office of the dead was also a ninth-century addition. The commendationes should prob- ably be understood as the Office ‘Subvenite sancti Dei’ (see ManNor, pp. 86 sqq.; BN, pp. 488 sq.).20 The kantica graduum, ps. 119 to ps. 133 inclusive, were probably recited in the same form as we find them in the BN, pp. 13-14. These were divided into three groups of five, intended pro defunctis, pro nobismetipsis, pro cunctorum salute viuorum, respectively.21 In Nidaros, in 1519, however, they should be adopted only for the feasts of Our Lady and their Octaves and the Saturday Lady Office, as a substitute for the consuetas et quotidianas horas de domina. Two customs, however, had his warm approval. One was vor fru tider, probably the Saturday Office of St. Mary, which appeared in the eleventh century, and subsequently became generally accepted. His second recommendation, of the vigiliae mortuorum, leaves us guess- ing. Did these vigiliae consist of psalmody for the dead, between death and burial, with use of the Pater Noster Psalter of fifteen divisions? Unhappily, there is no proof of it. All in all, Bishop Jon’s letter bears witness to the conservativeness of the Icelandic Church, as does also the Pater Noster Psalter. Once adopted in Iceland, it remained in use, as shown by the great many Icelandic manuscripts against the scanty remains from Norway and Sweden. 20 On the spread of this devotion in England, see The Monastic Breviary of Hyde Abbey, 6 = HBS 80 [1942], pp. 77 sqq. 21 For the gradual psalms in the English liturgies, see Ibid., pp. 64-68.
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