O
OraLabora
Guest
In a way, that’s often what we attempted to do when evangelizing: imposing our notion of Western cultural superiority. We don’t do that any more, I hope.
Nobody today is talking about imposing “anything”, but it’s likely if a parish has a large ethnic group in it, some of their cultural traits will find their way into the liturgy. We had several busloads of Poles from Toronto show up at the abbey for Sunday Mass one day and their habits were different, for example when to kneel for the E.P. It was a bit awkward but not the end of the world.
When “Silent Night” was first played accompanied by the guitar it caused scandal. But now it wouldn’t be considered in appropriate to play it at Midnight Mass.
As was said it isn’t the instrument but the manner in which it is played and whether it is played at appropriate times. I agree emphatically with you that rock-concert style drumming has no place at Mass. But I don’t agree that it’s impossible to play a drum or guitar many other instruments appropriately in the liturgy.
I myself have a preference for Gregorian chant, a Capella, I sing regularly in a Gregorian schola, and am a director of the Gregorian institute of Canada. But I recognize that Gregorian chant isn’t for everybody and that Latin is a serious obstacle in some parts of the world where the language is radically different from Western languages (e.g. in Asia).
The Church is universal, that is not synonymous with uniform. So my answer would be one that is not one of the choices offered: drums can be appropriate at Mass.
Nobody today is talking about imposing “anything”, but it’s likely if a parish has a large ethnic group in it, some of their cultural traits will find their way into the liturgy. We had several busloads of Poles from Toronto show up at the abbey for Sunday Mass one day and their habits were different, for example when to kneel for the E.P. It was a bit awkward but not the end of the world.
When “Silent Night” was first played accompanied by the guitar it caused scandal. But now it wouldn’t be considered in appropriate to play it at Midnight Mass.
As was said it isn’t the instrument but the manner in which it is played and whether it is played at appropriate times. I agree emphatically with you that rock-concert style drumming has no place at Mass. But I don’t agree that it’s impossible to play a drum or guitar many other instruments appropriately in the liturgy.
I myself have a preference for Gregorian chant, a Capella, I sing regularly in a Gregorian schola, and am a director of the Gregorian institute of Canada. But I recognize that Gregorian chant isn’t for everybody and that Latin is a serious obstacle in some parts of the world where the language is radically different from Western languages (e.g. in Asia).
The Church is universal, that is not synonymous with uniform. So my answer would be one that is not one of the choices offered: drums can be appropriate at Mass.