docmattc wrote:It would be interesting to know how many places who have a Mass in the early evening of Christmas Eve actually use the Vigil texts. I suspect, especially if its a 'children's Mass' that the vigil texts are ignored in favour of the midnight ones.
I hadn't realised until I looked in the Missal and the Lectionary that there are two sets of texts for Christmas Eve - one for the morning, being the last gasp of Advent, and other as the first of
four sets provided for Christmas Day. If the Christmas Eve evening Masses are for children, I'd certainly opt for the Midnight texts, just as I would prefer the Dawn texts for a children's Mass on Christmas morning.
In any case, it is important to stress that, even though the traditional hour of midnight, when it was all supposed to have happened(!), has not yet arrived, these Vigil Masses are part of the festival itself - 'Christ is born today!' because the liturgical day of Christmas has already begun.
It is, however, sad to note that, with the permanent suppression of the Second Sunday after Christmas by the transferred celebration of the Epiphany, the great prologue of St John's Gospel, formerly the 'Last Gospel' at every Mass, will never be heard proclaimed except those who happen to attend a late morning Mass on Christmas Day.