Third, you also are misreading the guidelines from the USCCB, which are referring to the parts of the Mass and their translation not tot the hymns included in the missalettes. A close reading of the document you link to will reveal that. See section C.
Not really. I was referring to the requirement of the
concordat cum originali that is found in all missalettes. If it is missing, then you have a right to be concerned, but I believe it is printed clearly in the front of every missalette or it would not have received permission for publication. Let’s look at these two points in the same document:
4. In particular, from the approved liturgical books to the simplest participation aids, publications should provide the
greatest possible diversity and options, as expected by the liturgical reform.
No publication should limit, directly or indirectly, the breadth of choice open to the priest and other ministers,
the leaders of song, parish and community worship committees, or others who participate in planning liturgical celebration.
Fourth, you’ve yet to answer my original question - **is the music you hear at Mass APPROPRIATE **for the Mass?
Yes, always.
Second, at Mass we worship God not ourselves. Your use of St Augustine is out of context and appalling. We do not become God to the point of receiving latria, worship. That is idolatry.
That’s because you completely misunderstand it.
Here’s the first item to come up after I googled, written by a Franciscan friar. This comes from only one of many religious who have used St. Augustine’s famous quote. My first encounter of this quote was in a papal encyclical at the Vatican, but for now I cannot remember which one. I’ll give my brain a workover and try find it.
Compare that to the Ordinary of the Mass (Kyrie, Gloria, Credo, Agnus, Sanctus) which is entirely focused on praising God, confessing truths about God, and begging for mercy from God.
You are comparing apples to oranges, two different things. These are liturgical prayers and will always be directed to God. A liturgy will not be complete without these, whether or not there is a hymn at all outside of actual liturgical prayer. The hymns may certainly express our identity within the Mystical Body, appropriately so.
I have last year’s missalette and will look at some of the hymns you find so offensive, but when you examine them closely, they merely recite what we believe, which is a good teaching exercise, such as* I am the Bread of Life* (John 6) Nobody would think that they are personally the Bread of Life. Your hyperbole is overstretched here.
Taste and See is actually psalm 34. In song, it is an invitation to the corporate Body of Christ present at that Eucharist to receive Christ and “know” Him. This word is used in the sense of intimacy such as scripture designates when a man “knows” a woman. It is not a sampling of food, as the literal words convey, but they are treated spiritually as was done in the psalm.
Etc., etc.