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I like Amazing Grace. Also, I just love “How Great Thou Art”, but the only place I ever hear that one is on my own lips.
Yeah, I agree with you! A good number of them are suspect - I mean, basing a hymn on the Old Testament, or the Psalms, or the Gospels or Epistles - I mean, how dare they?I choose music for Mass every week.
I’ve played “Amazing Grace” but not very often, maybe once or twice a year.
I play mostly traditional (e.g. Praise To The Lord) and some of the less annoying newer ones.
I’ve never heard of any “official” information on what is and is not allowed, outside of the parish priest. Even at weddings I play songs for one priest that another priest forbids.
Is there some central authority or database we could go to find out whether the hymns are OK or not? I suspect that a good number of the hymns I buy from OCP publications (ocp.org) are suspect, and so far I use my intuition to decide.
Alan
Yeah! All that stuff form the Old Testament, and the Psalms and the Gospels and Epistles - how un-Catholic! You’ld think someone actually approved that book!Oh, I should mention that even though I dislike using “Amazing Grace” at Mass, there are other songs that are far worse than “Amazing Grace.” Most of the questionable hymns/folk songs we sing at Mass that seem to go against Catholic teaching were written by “Catholic” composers.
I really wouldn’t mind if we kept Amazing Grace, as long as we got rid of anything that was written after 1962, most of it is AWFUL![]()
porthos11 said:“Amazing Grace” is an approved hymn for the Liturgy of the Hours (Common of One Martyr, Evening Prayer II). The approved hymns for the Hours also include Martin Luther’s “A Mighty Fortress is our God” (also from the Common of One Martyr, Morning Prayer), as well as several from Charles Wesley. Since the Hours is the official prayer of the Church, it’s reasonable that we can also use these hyms at Mass especially during the recommended liturgical celebration. The English editions of the Hours did not come down to us without approval of the Holy See.
Many Protestant hyms from previous centuries are more Catholic than modern “Catholic” songs.
Well, given that it is part of the approved songs attached to the other official liturgy of the Church, and was approved by Rome, perhaps you might not want to be more Catholic than the Cathiolic Church…If it has lyrics that are contrary to Catholic teaching and you still don’t mind it being played at Mass… then this attitude is prideful and self-serving. You will be throwing aside all obedience to the truth for the sake of that which is pleasing to your ears.
God Bless you.
Tongue in cheekYeah, I agree with you! A good number of them are suspect - I mean, basing a hymn on the Old Testament, or the Psalms, or the Gospels or Epistles - I mean, how dare they?
In fact, it was written by a popular Calvinist hymnodist named John Newton who wrote many many hymns. If you read/listen to the lyrics with a scrupulous ear, the Calvinist message becomes clear.It’s not Catholic, it was written by a Protestant. My parish occasionally sings it. But that doesn’t mean it’s permitted.
.Many Protestant hyms from previous centuries are more Catholic than modern “Catholic” songs

I agree. I think Amazing Grace is a beautiful song, and I also fail to see how it contradicts Catholic teachings.I really wish people wouldn’t be so positively judgmental against Protestants. I was one for 50 years until Christ converted me to his Church through the Eucharist–and yes, I’ve gone through being very angry at having been robbed of this–but I have no one to blame but the original reformers, and sin, and history–I’m a very orthodox, JPII, B16 Catholic, and yet it really annoys me to hear some of these posts. I love “Amazing Grace.” Perhaps it shouldn’t be sung in today’s poorly catechized parishes–the state of things is truly appalling–I can’t believe it, and I’ve been Catholic almost 2 years. I can’t believe how bad things are, really. But I digress. Do you all know the story of “Amazing Grace”? In the 1700s, John Newton, a deserter from the British Navy and slave trader, lived a dissolute life. After an injury aboard ship, he read a copy of Thomas a Kempis’ Imitation of Christ. As his ship almost sank, he had a conversion experience and his soul was flooded with a manifestation of God’s grace. He became a minister and composed over 280 hymns, of which this was his best known. It really is no different from St. Paul’s experience, or that of many other adult converts to Christianity. We do not know why some of us were given the grace to become Catholic, and we shouldn’t condemn those that, for whatever God’s mysterious reasons are not. I really am not at all sure “Amazing Grace” is contrary to Catholic Faith. It brings me to tears.
1 your explanation is quite a leap and requires one to do some mental gymnastics.For the lyric in question, it’s all about how you interpret the word, “appear.”
According to Merriam Webster, there are several definitions, including:
So, a Protestant would use definition #1
- to come into existence
- to have an outward aspect; to seem or to look like
“How precious did that Grace [come into existance], the hour I first believed.”
But for Catholics saved by Grace at infant Baptism, there’s still going to be an inevitable moment in later childhood/adulthood when we truly embrace, understand, and love the faith. That’s the moment we’re singing about:
“How precious did that Grace [look], the hour I first believed.”
For us, the Grace was there all along. It just appears/looks so precious the moment we truly and fully believe.