So you think people should be deciding to come to Mass on the basis of the music? Sorry but I fundamentally disagree with that.
No, not to decide to come to Mass, but I think that people should have a choice to decide on which Mass to go to. If contemporary liturgical music is what moves them to deeper prayer, they should have that option. If chant does the same for others, they should have the option. As a musician, I have had the experience of people being drawn to a particular Mass because of the music.
Other posters argue that new music
is the reason people have left the church. What is your opinion on that? (In my opinion, that argument doesn’t hold water because how would you then explain the differences in sizes of Confession lines 50 years ago and today?)
The food we come to Mass to get comes from Our Lord which for most Catholics reaches its fullest expression in receiving His Body and Blood and hearing his Word.
I agree. You know this and I know this. However, approximately 70% of Catholics
do not believe in the Real Presence. They’ll never learn if we can’t get them inside the church.
The only smell to be added into that equation is incense.
No problem with incense.
If you think the music is so delectable now then just wait till Gregorian Chant is restored to a place more inkeeping with the esteem the Church holds it in.
Your opinion.
You can’t expect every Homily to be entertaining, spiritually fulfilling and/or amusing and you can’t expect every Priest to be a St Thomas Aquinas or G.K. Chesterton. You can’t seriously advocate that its a good thing for a Priest to not tell the congregation about sin, the state they should be in to receive Communion or the value and significance of that Communion. You are contradicting yourself, people will never understand unless someone tells them the truth, you can’t expect the Priest to couch every Homily so that it offends no one and then criticise him when his Homily says nothing.
Well if I remember correctly not much longer than 50 years ago there was the TLM, which in many places had more suitable music which was more vertically focused and wasn’t driven by the gratification of the congregation. The real difference is 50 years ago we had a greater number of Priests who would call a sin a sin and give a Homily which wasn’t afraid to tell the congregation that. Now we are starting to get more Priests and Seminarians who are willing to do the same. We have Orders which restore Church music to its proper place, and put the focus of the liturgy back where it belongs, not in the hands of ‘music leaders’ which can only be a good thing.
That is not what I meant

! I re-read my own post and I could have worded it so much better!!!
What I was trying to say and which I totally muddled

(lesson learned: don’t post while feeling sick and before the antibiotics take effect!), is that people don’t want the bland, but will complain about the spicy. But the spicy, the homily that does speak of sin, etc., is what people need to hear, but don’t want to hear, so they complain to the Bishop “who contacts the priest who then tones down his sermon to baby pablum which doesn’t help to catechize the poorly churched masses who are attracted to the music but not getting fed and so they leave.” Priests who don’t comply get transferred. I have had priests tell me that this is what happens. (Maybe it doesn’t happen in every diocese.)
I think the greatest need in the Church today is adult catechesis, and the homily is the greatest place for that because the people who might not come to an evening class, meeting, Bible study, etc., have come (hopefully) to Mass. I think it’s important to get them in the Church, and whatever draws people in is something good. If more people are drawn by contemporary music (as long as it is solid, good, liturgical music) than by another form of music, then use the genre that most people prefer.
A well-catechized Catholic would not leave the Church even if the only music played at Mass was “rap” because a well-catechized Catholic would know they are there to praise God, to worship as a community, and most importantly would know and believe what is happening on the altar. (No, I’m not suggesting that “rap” be employed.) Why should we lose the poorly catechized to the Pentecostal church down the block because their worship services are more alive and joyful? Why can’t there be
joyful worship during Mass? Isn’t Mass supposed to be a little bit of heaven on earth? In heaven, won’t we be worshipping God joyfully? Or will our faces look as though we had just lost our best friend, as most faces in our congregations now look?
Somehow, I just don’t believe that the
only music used by the heavenly choir to praise God is Gregorian chant.