C
Consecrated
Guest
Thanks!I have read the various things you are quoting, but I don’t remember which one out of several possible documents it is. I’ll keep the mystique and won’t throw out any names.
Not to be contrary, but I would submit that there is indeed “an objective standard in terms of the inherent qualities of the music itself.” Doesn’t there have to be if we are to say that some music (whether we’re talking about a type or one song in particular) is more suited to Mass than other? I submit that the standard is this: The more perfectly music mirrors the Truth, Beauty and Goodness of God, the more like God it is. The more like God it is, the better it is suited to the Divine Mysteries. Purely sacred music, music as devoid of the secular as is possible for humans to accomplish, is the best suited.What is the standard of reverence? I’m not really sure that there is an objective standard in terms of the inherent qualities of the music itself.
Why must we define it "without the context of ‘secular’ "? I think your Webster definition is right on. The more like God music is, the more it leaves the profane behind and transcends the “world” to become sacred.What makes sacred music sacred? It is difficult to define “sacred” without the context of “secular”.
According to the dictionary (merriamwebster.com), sacred is defined thus:
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…
The other two definitions have to do more with how something is used. I would contend that it is the way in which music is used that determines whether or not it is sacred.**
It is true the the way music is used contributes to its sanctity or takes away from it, but the music itself, the composition of notes and lyrics, can also be judged more or less sacred.
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.For example, one time when I was playing music for mass, we played a very nice song. There was one part of the song that had a chord pattern similar to that of a U2 song, and the music leader decided to use a melodic line directly from the song. . . and everybody in the church knew it, and it was quite inappropriate in my opinion. There wasn’t anything in the music itself that made it inherently inappropriate. Rather, it was inappropriate due to its overwhelming identification with a purely secular thing
This is a really great example of how elements of the secular mar the purity of the sacred. I submit that this “overwhelming identification with a purely secular thing” is the very thing that makes said selection “inherently inappropriate”.
Let me take this another step, though, and submit that a drumline, for example, and the drums themselves, have an “overwhelming identification with a purely secular thing.” In what context did the world first hear the drumline, and see the drum set typically part of the modern “band”? In a completely secular context, right? Does everyone agree that, drums first, and for a long time solely, were used for music that was not sacred, as the word is defined in Webster? Does it not follow that this would give them an “overwhelming identification with a purely secular thing”? Even the big tymponi (sp?) drums used in classical orchestras were first used in the performance of music entirely unrelated to the Sacred Mysteries.
continued next post