Novus Ordo
English
editEtymology
editEllipsis of Ecclesiastical Latin Novus Ordō Missae (“New Order of the Mass”).
Pronunciation
edit- (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /ˈnɒ.vəs ˈɔːdəʊ/, /ˈnəʊ.vəs ˈɔːdəʊ/
Proper noun
editNovus Ordo (uncountable)
- (Roman Catholicism) The version of the Roman Rite of the Mass established in 1969, the Mass of Paul VI, usually celebrated in a vernacular language.
- Synonyms: (slang, derogatory) Bogus Ordo, NO, OF, Ordinary Form
- 2004, Michael Daniel, “What Constitutes a Valid Consecration?”, in CatholicCulture.org[1]:
- A Catholic may consider the Novus Ordo banal, but he may not proclaim that the new rite is invalid.
- 2006, The Catholic World Report[2], volume 16:
- […] the material in the interview indicated to me that he’s celebrating a Novus Ordo Mass in Latin.
- 2019, Matthew Warner, “Which is Better: Latin Mass or Novus Ordo?”, in National Catholic Register[3]:
- I’ve heard many make the case that the Novus Ordo actually more closely resembles the Mass of the first 1000 years of Church history than the recent practice of the Tridentine (Latin) Masses. Surely Jesus didn’t speak Latin at the Last Supper. But many others point out that what has become of the Novus Ordo Mass was not what was originally intended either.
Derived terms
editFurther reading
edit- Novus Ordo on Wikipedia.Wikipedia