I agree with LighthouseRon and Truthfulreign.
I’m sorry Benedictgal, but your arguments break down by your own quotes from the GIRM and common sense. You may know the law, but you have no clue about the “SPIRIT” of the law. Anytime people are excluded in any task because they don’t have the politically correct instrument or idea than I see a problem with that.
This kind of thinking makes God’s people run away, People did not run away from Jesus. Jesus was inclusive. You are exclusive of any idea that conflicts with your interpretation.
Please balance your great knowledge with the Holy Spirit and then you will see fruit from you labor…but not until then …
God Bless You All
Actually, all three of you do not see the point of what the GIRM states. There are Masses that feature settings written by Mozart and others where orchestral percussion (timpani) is used. What all of three of you seem to be ignoring is the key phrase in all of this from Musicam Sacram:
- In permitting and using musical instruments, the culture and traditions of individual peoples must be taken into account. However, those instruments which are, by common opinion and use, suitable for secular music only, are to be altogether prohibited from every liturgical celebration and from popular devotions.44
The GIRM should not be read in isolation. That is something that three of you are doing. Drum kits and electric guitars are, by common opinion and use, suitable for secular music only.
The big disconnect that I see with what the three of you are saying is that you seem to be thinking along the lines of what the alleged Spirit of Vatican II noted, as opposed to what the documents actually stated.
Why, then, did the Fathers of the 2005 Synod on the Eucharist raise objections to the music used at Youth Masses? Why then, did Venerable Pope John Paul II, the founder of WYD, raise concerns over the lack of quality music in the liturgy to the point that he stated that not everything is suitable for the Mass? Why did Pope Benedict XVI write about his concerns regarding the use of pop and rock genres in the Mass?
Or, are the three of you going to accuse them of having a narrow interpretation?
Furthermore, the so-called “youth culture” does not fall into the parameters of inculturation. Inculturation, as the Church sees it, is for indigenous groups such as the Aboringines and missionary territories (including Africa and certain parts of Latin America).
The other part of the problem is that the three of you seem to regard the LifeTeen manuals as more important than the actual writings of the Church. In fact, I believe that one of you admitted that he has not read the authoritative documents of the Church. The music used for the Mass is not an anything goes issue. OCP, the publisher of Spirit and Song, is not the Church and does not act with the authority of the Church. LifeTeen is an ecclesial movement of the Church, but, it has no authority to supercede what the Church requires. The Neocatechumenal Way tried doing that and the Holy Father himself had to intervene and cease their questionable liturgical practices. LifeTeen was also told by the CDWDS to cease their questionable liturgical practices as well.
Making an informed decision and an informed statement involves reading things from all sources, namely the Church’s authoritative documents and the writings of the popes. Prior to his election as Pope, Joseph Cardinal Ratzinger was dismissed by many for his opinion on the lack of quality music for use in the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass. Now that he is pope and is setting the example for what should be used in the Mass, I wonder if those same voices, many who came from camps similar to LifeTeen, are going to heed his words.