C
Cat
Guest
If this were a horse race, I would bet on pnewton. 
pnewton does liturgical music week after week, year after year, in a real parish. pnewton is not just “thinking,” but “doing.” The “thoughts” are based on real-life experiences. pnewton works with real people, real priests, and real laypeople in real situations.
opus101, on the other hand, as far as I can see, has no practical experience in parish music. It’s all ideas, theories, and opinions. Am I wrong, opus101?
As for me, if anyone cares, I’m in-between. I play what the “pnewtons” of my parish tell me to play. I have no say in what music is done. I just obey. And I have done church music for a gazillion years (actually, for over 40 years), so I have a lot of real-life experience under my belt, too.
Anyway, I’ll always bet on the “horse” who actually walks the walk, not just talks the talk.
opus101, a suggestion–YOU know what the word “profane” means in the Catholic context. So does pnewton. And so do I.
But why are you using a hundred-dollar word when a 50 cent word will do? Just say “secular.” It’s much clearer. The word “profane” has a lot of modern baggage attached to it, and I really don’t think it’s the best word to use in a computer discussion forum because the meaning is unclear to many. Save it for a treatise.
And if you think that contemporary Christian music is “secular,” then you really don’t understand contemporary Christian music at all, and you probably should withhold your comments until you do gain a broader understanding of CCM.
pnewton does liturgical music week after week, year after year, in a real parish. pnewton is not just “thinking,” but “doing.” The “thoughts” are based on real-life experiences. pnewton works with real people, real priests, and real laypeople in real situations.
opus101, on the other hand, as far as I can see, has no practical experience in parish music. It’s all ideas, theories, and opinions. Am I wrong, opus101?
As for me, if anyone cares, I’m in-between. I play what the “pnewtons” of my parish tell me to play. I have no say in what music is done. I just obey. And I have done church music for a gazillion years (actually, for over 40 years), so I have a lot of real-life experience under my belt, too.
Anyway, I’ll always bet on the “horse” who actually walks the walk, not just talks the talk.
opus101, a suggestion–YOU know what the word “profane” means in the Catholic context. So does pnewton. And so do I.
But why are you using a hundred-dollar word when a 50 cent word will do? Just say “secular.” It’s much clearer. The word “profane” has a lot of modern baggage attached to it, and I really don’t think it’s the best word to use in a computer discussion forum because the meaning is unclear to many. Save it for a treatise.
And if you think that contemporary Christian music is “secular,” then you really don’t understand contemporary Christian music at all, and you probably should withhold your comments until you do gain a broader understanding of CCM.