I repeat my earlier post and its references for clarification of what has been banned and on whose authority:
Thanks, but no thanks; you obscure rather than clarify, Woodstock.
Professor Thompson made it clear, on the bishop’s authority, that any parishes singing Eucharistic para-liturgical hymns are in violation of the promulgated revision. They may only be sung before or after the Liturgy and may not be included inside it. If sung before the Liturgy, they have to be followed with his setting as the last hymn before the Liturgy. They are especially forbidden during communion.
One of the links you gave is a thread on the topic of
alternative settings of the liturgical hymns. On that question, the council of hierarchs was silent. You quote an instruction of Bishop Andrew, that, with his retirement, is obsolete. The former head of the MCI made it plain that the idea was to take the present time to learn the common settings in the new book, but to expect a growing repetoire.
Please give time for people to thoroughly become acclamated to the tunes therein; I for one will be working for a “supplement” to the Faithful’s Book with other prostopinije melodies, but it’s not going to be for a while yet.
(chantermt from the first link).
None of this, has to do with paraliturgical hymns.
That topic is considered on the other link that you gave. And SVP is correct: there is no outright ban. There are, however, specific instructions as to what types of hymns are appropriate at what times. My sense is that we have had, and maintain much more latitude in the use of para-liturgical hymns in the liturgy than is customary within Orthodoxy. (For, example, there is an Indiana list post from Bishop Tikhon (OCADOW) criticizing in the strongest terms the use of Christmas carols of any provenance at the Nativity liturgy). I like our way - it is our way. But we should realize that our way is not especially Eastern. And we should realize that some guidelines on what is fitting at various times is not inappropriate, is not a ban on paraliturgical hymns, and does not represent a failure of our bishops to be in touch, or to protect our tradition.
While one of the guidelines is to use only liturgical and scriptural texts during communion, the idea of Woodstock that “Eucharistic para-liturgical hymns, … if sung before the Liturgy, … have to be followed with his setting as the last hymn before the Liturgy” is not what chantermt actually said on the given link"
- In discussing hymns before the celebration of the Divine Liturgy (especially on the Lord’s Day and feasts), the Cantor’s Companion says:
“When selecting a hymn or hymns to be sung prior to the celebration of the Divine Liturgy, the text of the hymn should reflect the propers of the Divine Liturgy for the day, the season in which the DL is taking place, or the time of day at which the DL is being celebrated.” (CC p. 12) … I would like to nuance this a bit. If a parish is singing SEVERAL hymns before the DL, the one during the incensation (i.e., closest to the beginning of the DL) should be the most relevant to the issues listed in the Cantor’s Companion.
(chantermt on the second link.)
There is much more latitude here than Woodstock allows. In particular the restriction to “his setting as the last hymn before the Liturgy” just isn’t there.
The thread is worth reading also to realize that there is no conspiracy to discard our hymns. Indeed plans to publish a hymnal are noted in the thread.