Hi. I don’t have time to respond in great depth. But, let me just say this. I acknowledge, admire, and appreciate the love that many have for sacred music. I personally am not an expert in music, and I don’t pretend to be. I can only speak from my own experience leading young people on retreats. While a few may truly enjoy Gregorian chant, I have found these to be the exceptions, rather than the rule.
Most of my experience with chant and teenagers has been like a slow train wreck. They don’t sing, they lose focus, they talk to their neighbors, they text, they do just about anything but pray. So, I have to ask, why? Because, conversely, I have seen stadiums full of Catholic youth engaged in the liturgy and praying at countless retreats and youth conferences. Part of this is the setting. Part of it is a different preaching style that engages them more. And, I will suggest, part of it is music. That may not be the ideal, but it is the reality. I fear that if as a church we move to a hard and fast policy of chant or polyphony, and only chant or polyphony, sung a capella or with an organ, but absolutely no drums, keyboards, guitars, etcetera, then we will lose an entire generation, which, the reality is, we’re already losing anyway.
Like it or not, these kids are engaged at Steubenville, NCYC, World Youth Day, Youth 2000, whatever you want. The priests who go there are vibrant and engaging, and, believe it or not, orthodox. Liking contemporary P&W music is not the same thing as being liberal and endorsing poor liturgy. Go to this website:
steubenvilleconferences.com/youth, click on The Team, and check out some of the priests who will be at these conferences this year. I’m good friends with many of them, and “liberal” is not an adjective I’d use to describe any of them.
And, with respect R_C, I will tell you the bishops are on board. If Archbishop Charles Chaput, for example, wasn’t on board, do you think he would have allowed Steubenville of the Rockies to take place in Denver? Like it or not, the bishop is in charge of the liturgy in his diocese. It is a dangerous mentality that the Catholic right often finds itself in of constantly criticizing and questioning the bishops, the shepherds God Himself has appointed over the Church.