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Have to hand it to the Brits. No one masters the English language better than they do.The Gloria they use too is like our new translation but IMO more elegantly worded.
Have to hand it to the Brits. No one masters the English language better than they do.The Gloria they use too is like our new translation but IMO more elegantly worded.
Though I did see a 1960s translation of the Gloria which referred to āpeace to people who are Godās friendsā !!Have to hand it to the Brits. No one masters the English language better than they do.![]()
Yes. The CofE Cathedral Church in my Diocese regularly sings Plain Chant. I try to attend Red Letter Saints Days there when I can as the Eucharist is solemnly celebrated. Thereās usually a considerable amount of Plain Chant with parts of the Ordinary of the Mass often in Latin. I went to Evensong at the Cathedral last Sunday which was according to the 1662 BCP but they added Latin Plain Chant Antiphons to the Psalm, Magnificat and Nunc Dimittis. The Psalm and Canticles themselves were in English and sung to Anglican Chant.Do High Church Anglicans sing plain chants during services? What music books do they use? Any liturgical rubrics regarding sacred music for High Church Anglicans like Catholics? What an irony when chants vanish from Catholic Masses while some Anglicans still continue with the tradition (from what I heard of)!
Well, put it this way the music is generally either a Polyphonic mass setting sung by a robed choir or beautifully chanted Plainsong. Our local Anglican church has a Lent Devotion to which we are invited and the sound of the congregation chanting the Lent Prose moved me to tears. The hymmody is traditional too - none of this modern stuff.Do High Church Anglicans sing plain chants during services? What music books do they use? Any liturgical rubrics regarding sacred music for High Church Anglicans like Catholics? What an irony when chants vanish from Catholic Masses while some Anglicans still continue with the tradition (from what I heard of)!