C
CatholicNerd
Guest
Well, ok. I’ll stop listening to Mozart because he was a Mason. My Bach scores? I’ll be sure to burn them before I defile a Mass with his “protestant” music. Wow, just think of all the hymn tunes we’ll have to throw out because they were written by protestants. I guess “Holy God, we Praise Thy Name” will have to go… and oh no, the beloved chorale setting of “Tantum Ergo” will have to go too. Oh, wait… the Chant? I think Luther sang that. Well, darn, there go the Ordinaries --oh no, Kyrie Eleison is Greek! And on Holy Friday we sing the Trisagion!!!Say what you will, but in our Church’s view, Luther was a heretic and we most certainly do not consider him a saint. Also, I didn’t say that he’s burning in hell – that came from the writings of Saint Teresa of Avila, someone whom the Catholic Church does view as a saint.
Furthermore, in my original post, I never said that there are any doctrinal reasons against the text of the song. As I said, it is more about an implied endorsement of Luther than it is about the actual song. I used to like A Mighty Fortress myself until I looked in the fine print and saw who wrote it.
And once again, even if we just base it on historical reasons, A Mighty Fortress isn’t a song fit for Catholics, because it was the anthem of the people who fought against the Church. You know the songs of the US Revolutionary War? Would it make sense to sing those songs at ceremonies with the Queen of England? Even if they’re songs that are about general patriotism and have nothing about the US or the UK in it, would it ever be appropriate to have these songs there?
If I can bring in another example, the Italian Monarchy captured the Papal States. The Pope and the Italian King were at odds. Would it make sense, then, to have the Swiss Guards play the Italian anthem before the Pope? Wouldn’t this be an insult to the Pope?
Please remember that this is from a Catholic perspective – a perspective that does *not *view Luther as a saint, a perspective that took after Saint Teresa of Avila, among others. So the question isn’t about the song. It’s about Luther. Having hymns written by him is practically an endorsement of him and his beliefs – this is something that contradicts five centuries of Catholic opposition to Luther.
Oldfogey put it aptly when he compared it to having a hymn written by Judas Iscariot. Why have a hymn written by Judas when we have a bunch written by, say, Saint Thomas Aquinas? Frankly, the truth is that we view Luther more closely to Judas than we do to Saint Thomas Aquinas.
OY VEY, get a grip, man. I understand and appreciate your zeal to defend Holy Mother Church, but rejecting even the notes penned by Protestants? That’s taking things way too far. Believe you me, the version of “A Mighty Fortress” that is sung at Mass is nothing like the text that Luther penned. Not the latter verses, anyway. As I and other posters have already stated, the Church goes out of her way to sanctify beautiful things that were once not Catholic.