Dear Buffalo,
I can’t trust that judgement when the music director states “it doesn’t matter” or “I can’t play those responses because they don’t sound good on guitar so we’ll just pick a song that sounds good”. Sorry!
Can I assume that the congregation is able to respond to his “songs?” Or do you all sing it through together in entirety.
In fairness to the person, are you aware that there are 150 psalms? Some are so long that they are not even used in fullness when it is printed in the sacramentary - but there are only portions of a psalm.
Are you able to positively determine from your knowledge of all 150 psalms that the words of the song he chooses are NOT a psalm? That they are NOT appropriate for a response to the reading?
Our choir hymnal has all of the psalms listed in the index with a correlating hymn that contains its words. Do you
know that this person is not liturgically correct in picking one of them, even though it is on guitar? {I’m just playing devil’s advocate here.) It takes someone saying the Divine Office (Liturgy of the Hours) four full weeks to go through all of the psalms, and that is only if they say the full psalter all day. So it is quite possible to miss the connection of the hymn unless you have a trained ear for psalms.
If it bothers you, can you attend a mass without guitar accompaniment?
Buffalo, have you thought about what the Mass proper is? Somebody posted on the forum that a soldier in the field of battle may not be able to hear the Liturgy of the Word, but only the Liturgy of the Eucharist, and still have it be a valid mass. If the Psalm, which is part of the Liturgy of the Word, is replaced with a hymn that does not contain the psalm, whose responsibility is it?
Will God hold you accountable if you sing what the guitarist selects? Is it really all that grave of an abuse to worry yourself about it? Do you honestly ask the guitarist each week if (s)he picked a song with the proper psalm in it? I pray that you give your spirit rest and not concern yourself about things that are not obvious to your ordinary ability to discern.
By the way, the above words are in a psalm: #131, “O Lord, my heart is not proud, nor are my eyes haughty; I busy not myself with great things, nor with things beyond my strength. Nay rather, I have stilled and quieted my soul like a weaned child. Like a weaned child on its mother’s lap, so is my soul within me.”
And there is a hymn that uses these words, rather popular, in fact:
Like a Child Rests. Would anyone recognize it as a psalm?
Peace,
Carole