Discover the voice of medieval devotion. A vital window into worship. This carefully edited volume assembles four English liturgical texts and offices according to the Use of York, drawn from manuscripts dating between the tenth and fifteenth centuries and accompanied by appendix, notes and a glossary. It lays out rubrics and vernacular devotions composed for lay participation, offering a direct encounter with catholic mass devotions and the procedural detail of medieval church practices. Readable and precise, the work is both a historical prayer collection and an urgent record of early English liturgy that illuminates how ritual shaped language and daily piety. The notes make obscure liturgical terms accessible, and the glossary guides readers new to this field without flattening the original texture of the sources. Including instruction on the manner of hearing Mass, the volume preserves practical guidance that shaped lay devotion. Republished by Alpha Editions in a careful modern edition, this volume preserves the spirit of the original while making it effortless to enjoy today - a heritage title prepared for readers and collectors alike. As a resource for casual readers and classic-literature collectors, as well as for scholars of medieval religion, the Lay Folks Mass Book bridges devotion and academic inquiry. Students of fifteenth century manuscripts and specialists in medieval Christian studies will value the primary evidence for York rite liturgy, while anyone intrigued by England religious history can trace how communal worship and local practice were recorded and instructed. For those seeking a devotional guide for laity or a compelling medieval mass book to add to a collection, this edition offers clear scholarship, faithful reproduction of the texts and an invitation to listen to the voices of medieval worshippers. The editor's explanatory apparatus and glosses make the material accessible for seminar use and private reading alike, ensuring the volume serves both as an object of study in medieval christian studies and as an evocative artefact of historical prayer and piety.