M
Murmurs
Guest
I’m all for extricating popular music from the Mass and leaving it to fill stadia (or radio stations, etc) where it’s really in-context.I don’t know when or how the liturgy became subject to peoples’ personal preferences/taste but it is not continuous with the Catholic tradition. Changes have been made throughout history to the Roman liturgy but always with the intention of nourishing souls and making saints. Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger disagrees with your opinion that music is subjective.
He writes in his The Feast of Faith, “Through rhythm and melody themselves, pagan music often endeavors to elicit an ecstasy of the senses as a means of release. This imbalance toward the senses recurs in modern popular music: the “God” found here, the salvation of man identified here, is quite different from the God of the Christian faith.”
P.S. I highly recommend The Feast Of Faith. It is a great book to read if you want to learn about liturgy.Code:If Cardinal Ratzinger's view here appears extreme, it is only because western culture has drifted so far from its Christian roots. Music used to be taken seriously but a high view of it has no place now in our utilitarian culture. The value of objects are determined by their usefulness. Pop music gives us results. It releases the neurotransmitter dopamine, which makes us feel pleasure in the way Gregorian Chant just doesn't do.
P.S.S. In my opinion, the commercialized music in some “liturgies” hurts ecumenical relations with the Orthodox who have an understanding of liturgy that is more consistent with past Christian thought. Cardinal Newman wrote over a hundred years ago that if St. Athanasius were alive, he would feel right at home in the Catholic Church. Now, I am not so sure. I think many of the Saints wouldn’t recognize it today. We need to restore a high view of liturgy that Vatican II actually sought to protect.
By the way, I enjoy pop music but I think the context in which one enjoys it matters.
But I think it’s not that reasonable to suggest that the use of such music in worship is inherently detrimental to nourishing souls, just because you and I would prefer a musically traditional Mass. I wouldn’t say it’s reasonable for then-Cardinal Ratzinger so to argue either - if only because for anyone to argue that music is not subjective is *itself *subjective!
To put it another way: Gregorian chant (when well done anyway) can be just as transportive into ecstasy and a brilliant song composed last week can leave one cold. Yes absolutely musical tastes change but the fundamental power of music - our differing responses to it - haven’t
Now there is an undeniably more solemn and edifying (I am sure some people today would say “boring”) spirit in the traditional liturgical music which is perhaps more suitable to the occasion, and if only for that reason alone it ought to be preferred. But I think any argument beyond that is ultimately a way of justifying imposing personal preferences (which I hasten to add I share!) on everyone else.
With regards your PPS I hadn’t thought about ecumenical relations before and you are probably right to draw attention to it! However - Newman, wonderful writer as he is, was really referring to the doctrine of the Church, surely, and not its music? Chant, for instance, as we have today and as Newman knew, did not really exist in the same way in St Athanasius’ time. He died in about 370AD . St Athanasius would have felt as out of place at a Mass of 1880 as Newman would in many of 2016.