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Why the USCCB will vote on a new Bible

Michie

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The U.S. bishops’ conference will vote this week to approve a new liturgical Bible, paving the way for a new lectionary to be used at Mass, and for the eventual publication of a new translation of the Church’s Liturgy of the Hours.

The USCCB official who oversaw the process told The Pillar that the approval would a major step in several liturgical projects for the U.S. Church, and that the Church will now

“The liturgical Bible that the bishops will be voting on has three components: the 2010 Old Testament, the Abbey Psalms and Canticles, both of which have been confirmed for liturgical use by the Holy See already, and then this new New Testament, which the administrative committee approved in September, and the bishops will vote on in Baltimore,” explained Mary Sperry, associate director of the USCCB’s Office for the Biblical Apostolate.

The approval of the liturgical Bible, Sperry explained, will eventually see parishes in the U.S. replace their current lectionaries, approved for publication in 2002, with new Biblical translations, rather than 1970 Old Testament translation and 1986 New Testament translation currently in use.

Continued below.
 

AveChristusRex

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The U.S. bishops’ conference will vote this week to approve a new liturgical Bible, paving the way for a new lectionary to be used at Mass, and for the eventual publication of a new translation of the Church’s Liturgy of the Hours.
Seems they have sped through the process, as at the USCCB’s 2023 fall meeting in Baltimore, Fr. Dought stated the change to be made by June 2026 (source): “For the most part those were updates, but the bishops still need to review those, have an opportunity to modify those, and then the full body of bishops will vote on those [4,000 pages] in June of 2024,” Dought said. Hm!
 
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