Well, as a priest I certainly appreciate the humour in it and would have welcomed it. Laughter, after all, is a spontaneous human reaction to a variety of unexpected scenarios.
I remember in my early teaching days being with a friend for the celebration of the triduum during the school’s break and concelebrating the Easter Vigil with him. The moment came for him, as the presider, to solemnly intone the alleluia. He intoned it – but his initial note was too high for where he had to go.
I immediately knew this was not going to work…but we were committed and we all responded to the first alleluia and off we went. Inevitably, he reached the point in the third alleluia where his vocal range would not allow him to continue the upward gradation that he needed to…although he certainly gave it all he had. Of course, everyone at a point had basically stopped singing, except the choir, as this unfolded…and then suddenly crashed.
At the moment his voice completely faltered, the organ fell silent and everyone fell silent…except one quick thinking soprano chorister who took up and finished my friend’s faltered alleluia and then proceeded to answer herself in an improvised solo that took her to that final crescendo of the last alleluia, which she sang a cappella. I have never before or since heard an alleluia sung in that vocal range – but she did it. I am sure that my face must have looked to the congregation like one dumbstruck. I imagine I went slack-jawed.
In those moments, as she finished, the organist recovered himself, the choir recovered, and they took up singing the verses that precede the gospel as if nothing had happened and the deacon proclaimed the gospel – and then my friend went to the pulpit for the homily. He paused for a moment and said in an even voice “Well…let us hope that I can preach better than I sing.” Everyone laughed, including him, and totally ended the awkwardness of the moment as well as the cringes we had etched on our faces. I still laugh every time I remember it – and the myriad of expressions on the various faces – after all these many years.