SPLIT: Musical instruments at Mass

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Is there anything in the Documents regarding the use of electronic/computer generated music?
If composed well it can be tremendously atmospheric.
Wind organ to electric organ to computer: A natural progression?
The document that ac claire quoted from Pope Pius XII remains in force regarding electronic means. The computer is not a musical instrument, per se, so it falls under what the venerable Pontiff wrote.
 
My query is;

IF the music is reverent.
IF the music keeps people mindful of the Eucharist.
IF the music does not distract from the Mass.
IF the music pertains to the readings and Gospel.
IF the music is being done without theatrics.
IF the GIRM is being followed.

Does it matter what the instruments are?
 
My query is;

IF the music is reverent.
IF the music keeps people mindful of the Eucharist.
IF the music does not distract from the Mass.
IF the music pertains to the readings and Gospel.
IF the music is being done without theatrics.
IF the GIRM is being followed.

Does it matter what the instruments are?
Yes, it does. We need to read the authoritative documents of the Holy See in tandem with the GIRM. Musicam Sacram, which has not been abrogated, cautions against using instruments that are primarily associated with the secular. What folks, as I read this thread, do not want to see nor admit, is that electric guitars, electric bass guitars and drum kits are commonly and primarily associated with secular music.
 
Yes, it does. We need to read the authoritative documents of the Holy See in tandem with the GIRM. Musicam Sacram, which has not been abrogated, cautions against using instruments that are primarily associated with the secular. What folks, as I read this thread, do not want to see nor admit, is that electric guitars, electric bass guitars and drum kits are commonly and primarily associated with secular music.
Is there anything wrong with the Church taking these instruments and using them for good?

Also, I’m assuming that you do not want Microphones in the Church either. Or video cameras to tape anything, still cameras to take photos. The next time your see our Holy Father on TV during Mass (or any Mass on TV for that matter) we better shut it down. I’m not saying that to be obtuse, I’m taking the logic to the next step.

This all of course means I, and others, have wasted a LOT of money at our “un-liturgical” weddings with those video cameras, photographers, and microphones.

EDIT: Also, as recently as 2004 Life Teen representatives met with the head of the Congregation of Divine Worship regarding how they do the Mass. Corrections and modifications were made, however the use of modern instruments were not forbidden. IF there was a HUGE issue about it, you think they would have mentioned something during those meetings.
 
Is there anything wrong with the Church taking these instruments and using them for good?

Also, I’m assuming that you do not want Microphones in the Church either. Or video cameras to tape anything, still cameras to take photos. The next time your see our Holy Father on TV during Mass (or any Mass on TV for that matter) we better shut it down. I’m not saying that to be obtuse, I’m taking the logic to the next step.

This all of course means I, and others, have wasted a LOT of money at our “un-liturgical” weddings with those video cameras, photographers, and microphones.

EDIT: Also, as recently as 2004 Life Teen representatives met with the head of the Congregation of Divine Worship regarding how they do the Mass. Corrections and modifications were made, however the use of modern instruments were not forbidden. IF there was a HUGE issue about it, you think they would have mentioned something during those meetings.
Let’s not use the straw man argument, Melchior. Musicam Sacram indicates that:
  1. 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
Do you have documentation that supports your claim? Furthermore, in 2005, the Fathers of the Synod on the Eucharist listed this as a major concern:
A few responses made particular mention of music and singing at Youth Masses. In this regard, it is important to avoid musical forms which, because of their profane use, are not conducive to prayer. Some responses note a certain eagerness in composing new songs, to the point of almost yielding to a consumer mentality, showing little concern for the quality of the music and text, and easily overlooking the artistic patrimony which has been theologically and musically effective in the Church’s liturgy.
The proponents of LifeTeen, let alone the supporters of these kind of instruments, have yet to respond to this valid concern that the Synod Fathers raised. Mind you, these were bishops who have concerns about this particular genre of music.

Pope Benedict, in Sacramentum Caritatis, responded to their concerns:
Certainly as far as the liturgy is concerned, we cannot say that one song is as good as another. Generic improvisation or the introduction of musical genres which fail to respect the meaning of the liturgy should be avoided. As an element of the liturgy, song should be well integrated into the overall celebration (128). Consequently everything – texts, music, execution – ought to correspond to the meaning of the mystery being celebrated, the structure of the rite and the liturgical seasons (129).
This particular genre cannot be divorced from the type of instruments used. The organ, for example, was not meant to accompany the PW genre. This style of music was written precisely for electric guitars, electric bass guitars and drum kits.
 
You’re right about the Annus here hunc, and I understand what you’re saying; after all that document doesn’t want *any *musical instruments in an ideal world. But I still think it’s relevant to show the traditional mind of the Church re: sacred music. Our Church relies on tradition, it’s part of who and what the Church is.
By the same token, one could state with equal validity that polyphonic chant is not desired in a perfect world, as that was once forbidden.

Seeing the significant changes in the Mass since 1958 and the existence of Musicam Sacram, I give the 1958 documnent no more consideration than an historical piece, worthy of consideration only with in the context it was written.
 
By the same token, one could state with equal validity that polyphonic chant is not desired in a perfect world, as that was once forbidden.

Seeing the significant changes in the Mass since 1958 and the existence of Musicam Sacram, I give the 1958 documnent no more consideration than an historical piece, worthy of consideration only with in the context it was written.
But, a good chunk of it was never abrogated. In fact, the documents make references to what Pope Pius XII wrote, even going back to what Pope St. Pius X had stated. Even Pope John Paul II was not quick to disregard what Pope St. Pius X wrote, readily admitting that the problems that plagued liturgical music back in the saintly pontiff’s day were being regurgitated in our own time.
 
By the same token, one could state with equal validity that polyphonic chant is not desired in a perfect world, as that was once forbidden.
Thing is, it was forbidden due to the fact that early polyphony sounded more secular in nature. It wasn’t until Guillame de Machaut in the 1300s refined the music composition and the presentation of polyphony, did it become acceptable for liturgy.

Now, I know that there are purists out there who probably could agree with your statement, believing that only monophonic chant would be acceptable use for liturgy, since it is one of the only types of music which had its origins for sacred use, whereas almost all other forms of music and instrumentation had some sort of secular beginnings. I’m not of the purist train of thought and the Church isn’t either.

To me, if a person can refine the way their instrument is played or a piece of music is composed or “performed” for liturgy and the Church accepts it, it can be acceptable. Singing completely operatically is not acceptable for mass. Refining my voice in a way to be less “dramatic”, “operatic” etc. and still keeping in the classical training and maintaining reverence, is. That is the same for all musicians, whatever instrument they play.

And I think that is the difference with some people’s thoughts on instrumentation. There are people who do not want to refine how they play a certain instrument and so what the play will sound too secular in sound. For instance, I’ve heard beautiful renditions of Ave Maria played on classical guitar and you really can’t equate it with a secular sound, but I’ve heard guitarists and singers play the same piece, “jazzing” it up or making it sound more like a broadway hit or pop song.
 
In responding to another thread in another forum, I came across this interesting piece of information. If you look at the citation from Musicam Sacram:
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
You will note footnote 44. Footnote 44 references on Instruction on Sacred Music given by the former Congregation for Sacred Rites (now known as the Congregation for Divine Worship and the Discipline of the Sacraments). It notes that:
b) The difference between sacred, and secular music must be taken into consideration. Some musical instruments, such as the classic organ, are naturally appropriate for sacred music; others, such as string instruments which are played with a bow, are easily adapted to liturgical use. But there are some instruments which, by common estimation, are so associated with secular music that they are not at all adaptable for sacred use.
It goes on to restate the matter here:
  1. Musical instruments which by common acception, and use are suitable only for secular music must be entirely excluded from all liturgical functions, and private devotions.
As I stated in the other thread, just because it is 52 years old, that does not necessarily make that particular footnote (and the Instruction it’s taken from) outdated.
 
  • “No kind of sacred music is prohibited from liturgical actions by the Church as long as it corresponds to the spirit of the liturgical celebrations itself and the nature of its individual parts (Constitution on the Liturgy, Art. 116), and does not hinder the active participation of the people*(Constitution on the Liturgy, Art. 28).*”
  • "The playing of the organ, or of other instruments characteristic of a particular people."
V2 Instruction on music in the Liturgy, Musicam sacram, 5 March, 1967
 
  • “No kind of sacred music is prohibited from liturgical actions by the Church as long as it corresponds to the spirit of the liturgical celebrations itself and the nature of its individual parts (Constitution on the Liturgy, Art. 116), and does not hinder the active participation of the people*(Constitution on the Liturgy, Art. 28).*”
  • "The playing of the organ, or of other instruments characteristic of a particular people."
V2 Instruction on music in the Liturgy, Musicam sacram, 5 March, 1967
But, you are still missing the section that I cited which is at the heart of this discussion, Kevin:
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
This section comes from the same document that you quoted. So, even quoting the document does not make your argument.
 
But, you are still missing the section that I cited which is at the heart of this discussion, Kevin:
This section comes from the same document that you quoted. So, even quoting the document does not make your argument.
“The use of other instruments may also be admitted in divine worship, given the decision and consent of the competent territorial authority, provided that the instruments are suitable for sacred use, or can be adapted to it, that they are in keeping with the dignity of the temple, and truly contribute to the edification of the faithful.” (Constitution on the Liturgy, Art.120)
In permitting and using musical instruments, the culture and traditions of individual peoples must be taken into account. (Instructions of the Sacred Congregation of Rites, 3September 1958, n.70)
 
“The use of other instruments may also be admitted in divine worship, given the decision and consent of the competent territorial authority, provided that the instruments are suitable for sacred use, or can be adapted to it, that they are in keeping with the dignity of the temple, and truly contribute to the edification of the faithful.” (Constitution on the Liturgy, Art.120)
In permitting and using musical instruments, the culture and traditions of individual peoples must be taken into account. (Instructions of the Sacred Congregation of Rites, 3September 1958, n.70)
But, again, you are ignoring the fundamental point: the issue of secular usage. Furthermore, “youth” is not defined as a culture per se, insofar as inculturation is concerned. Inculturation deals with people in indegenous lands and missionary territories.

Thus, your arguments fail to take this point into consideration.
 
“The use of other instruments may also be admitted in divine worship, given the decision and consent of the competent territorial authority, provided that the instruments are suitable for sacred use, or can be adapted to it, that they are in keeping with the dignity of the temple, and truly contribute to the edification of the faithful.” (Constitution on the Liturgy, Art.120)
In permitting and using musical instruments, the culture and traditions of individual peoples must be taken into account. (Instructions of the Sacred Congregation of Rites, 3September 1958, n.70)
The only culture that electric guitars come from is the secular, popular culture. We all know this is true. It’s dealt with, among other places, here:
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 only culture that electric guitars come from is the secular, popular culture. We all know this is true. It’s dealt with, among other places, here:
If use of an organ is pertinent to sacred music then what do you make of secular groups who take an organ into a musical arrangement. If taking an electric guitar into Holy Mass is considered sacramental secularization, does this make that piece of work sacred?
To me this seems a logical proposition.
 
If use of an organ is pertinent to sacred music then what do you make of secular groups who take an organ into a musical arrangement. If taking an electric guitar into Holy Mass is considered sacramental secularization, does this make that piece of work sacred?
To me this seems a logical proposition.
But, that is not how the Church sees it. The organ has pride of place in the Church insofar as instruments are concerned. With all due respect, what you fail to realize, as I read your posts, is that what is commonly used for secular music is not suitable for usage within the confines of the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass. In this case, the converse is not applicable to the Church since the organ has been used for Sacred Music for several centuries. Please refer to Sarabande’s explanation, as written by Pope Benedict XVI. He is an authority on the subject as he is a classically-trained musician and has a keen sense of the sacred.
 
I find it interesting to think the original accompaniment to the Psalms was David’s stringed instrument, the forerunner of the modern day guitar.
The organ is said to have originated in Chaldea or Greece, where it first appeared as Pan Pipes or Syrinx and was used for public celebrations. It was not adopted for use in the church until A.D. 450. It did not appear in Rome until the 7th century (where it was used to improve the singing of the congregation.)
The organ began life on a secular note and has now replaced the stringed instrument engaged by David in early liturgical worship.
 
But, a good chunk of it was never abrogated. In fact, the documents make references to what Pope Pius XII wrote, even going back to what Pope St. Pius X had stated. Even Pope John Paul II was not quick to disregard what Pope St. Pius X wrote, readily admitting that the problems that plagued liturgical music back in the saintly pontiff’s day were being regurgitated in our own time.
In fact, Pope John Paul II reafirmed much of what was said, that which he saw as needed which is why* I* see Musicam Sacram as the rule to be followed. I see the previous historica documents as useful guidelines to how we got where we are, even as I see Sing to the Lord as a useful guideline of the way Musicam Sacram can be applicable to the United States, at least as seen by some bishops.

From there, I do the best I can. At present, I am somewhat conservative in what I see as allowable, though not so much as others. Oh, and I clear everything through the priest.

I think one point you were trying to make early on needs to be brought up again. Whether we all agree or not, there is no reason to ignore these instructions written for us. We must try to see things as the Church sees things.
 
I find it interesting to think the original accompaniment to the Psalms was David’s stringed instrument, the forerunner of the modern day guitar.
The organ is said to have originated in Chaldea or Greece, where it first appeared as Pan Pipes or Syrinx and was used for public celebrations. It was not adopted for use in the church until A.D. 450. It did not appear in Rome until the 7th century (where it was used to improve the singing of the congregation.)
The organ began life on a secular note and has now replaced the stringed instrument engaged by David in early liturgical worship.
You might have missed the post (post 151, page 11) providing the actual reason/history for the use of the organ during liturgy which Benedict XVI gave in an article/lecture to the Church Music Department of the State Conservatory of Music in Stuttgardt, Germany. Pnewton also provided a link to the entire lecture. It’s well worth reading thoroughly - so much information to drink in. 🙂 I really enjoyed it myself.
musicasacra.com/theological-problems/

Anway, the organ wasn’t employed to improve the singing of the congregation. In short, it represented “all the voices of the cosmos”. I’ll just quote the highlighted part from my original post:

Originally, with regard to the secular reasoning:
…the organ was supposed to be the combination of all the voices of the cosmos. Accordingly, the organ music at imperial utterances meant that when the divine emperor spoke, the entire universe resounded.
How the Church began to view it:
The “organon” is the cosmic instrument and as such the voice of the world’s ruler, the imperator.18 As against this Byzantine custom, Rome stressed a cosmic Christology and on that basis the cosmis function of Christ’s Vicar on earth: what was good enough for the Emperor was quite good enough for the Pope.
and… how the secular surroundings, such as the emperor, was against the Church and the Pope having “cosmic claim”, etc… and how the Church fought this by keeping the use of organ basically in order to put the emperor in his place:
To the exclusivity of an imperial theology which abandoned the Church to the Emperor and degraded the bishops to mere imperial functionaries,19 Rome opposed the Pope’s cosmic claim and with it the cosmic rank of belief in Christ, which is independent of and indeed superior to politics. Therefore the organ had to resound in the papal liturgy as well.
In addition, the use of the organ was to separate itself from the old ways of praising God in terms of music and other traditions. Although the Church has an inheritance from the Jewish faith, she wanted to be sure to not be like worship in the Temple, showing that the Church surpassed that of the worship in the synogogues due to its claim to the divine cosmos - the “very dimensions of the Universal”:
Such a borrowing from imperial theology is not regarded with favour by contemporary theological scholarship, which considers such acceptance as “Constantinian” or as “Romanisation,” which is naturally far worse than Hellenisation. As a matter of fact, what has been said thus far suffices to indicate clearly the convincing reasons for the whole process, as well as its logic within a Christian context: this detour made it possible to avoid turning the Church into a synagogue and to carry out in practise the true claim of the Christian faith, which accepts the inheritance of the Temple and surpasses it by far, into the very dimensions of the Universal.
For me, just based on this history alone, to use the argument of what was used for worship and praise in the Jewish faith during the OT, is no longer a good one. Prior to reading his Holiness’ article, I wouldn’t have had a good enough answer for myself, at least, to this argument except that this was what the Church wanted, not what Jewish faith wanted. But just this bit in his well-researched and interesting article/lecture on Church music, provides much explanation. The Church was supposed to have “surpassed” this, creating a new way of worship and prayer because she is supposed to have the fulfillment of the Truth through Christ. Whether or not people agree with that is one thing and can make decent arguments and very good reasons for using different instruments other than the organ, without using the OT/David used it, etc. argument. But based on this, there was obviously a lot of well-thought out reasons behind much of what the Church chose to do to delineate all of this, especially early on in the Church’s history.
 
I find it interesting to think the original accompaniment to the Psalms was David’s stringed instrument, the forerunner of the modern day guitar.
The organ is said to have originated in Chaldea or Greece, where it first appeared as Pan Pipes or Syrinx and was used for public celebrations. It was not adopted for use in the church until A.D. 450. It did not appear in Rome until the 7th century (where it was used to improve the singing of the congregation.)
The organ began life on a secular note and has now replaced the stringed instrument engaged by David in early liturgical worship.
Yes, that is interesting. As Catholics, however, we seek to obey and listen to what our bosses tell us in such matters and not what we think they should tell us. It is useful to understand these things, as they reveal to us a Church that is not stagnant and does incorporate that which is secular and make it holy. The examples of this extend beyond polyphonic chant and the organ. Pagan locationg, holidays and traditions have all been incorporated into the tradition of the Catholic faith. This is also why I have no problem with an instrument because it is commonly secular, as long as it is not only secular, as the Pope John Paul II has said.

If Christmas can become the sacred Holy Day it is now and St. Peter’s Bascilica built on Nero’s Circus, then anything is possible. I do not ever forsee the day that the organ and Gregorian chant will ever be denied the place of pride they have been given. Centuries have not changed this.
 
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