An interdict? Prohibited
attendance at Mass? You’re joking, right. For interpreting Church documents in the light of Sacred Scripture and encouraging people to make their preferences known to the bishop? Who exactly is going to impose an inderdict on me, and for what canon? I sincerely doubt it will be my bishop, who has published a four-part series on sacred music, the importance of plainchant and the significance of the proper antiphons. Many of the things I have said in this thread and others have been in lock-step support of my own bishop.
For crying out loud. I would imagine, no, I would guarantee, that a lot of priests who try to add tiny bits of Latin, chant, organ, or polyphony to the Mass generate TONS of complaint mail to his ordinary. I read the testimony of a priest recently (I can’t remember where - Fr. Z’s blog) who said that he made tiny changes, and putting the Kyrie in Greek started “World War III”. So why can’t the bishop hear from the other side? Why can’t we make our preferences known? By all means, write words of praise on behalf of that priest who puts the Kyrie in Greek. Write a recommendation letter for a pastor who implements more chant, organ, or polyphony in the liturgy. Be positive and charitable. But if we run into the opposite, why should we be quiet about it?
Honestly, Pope Francis told us to make a mess.
Redemptionis Sacramentum is law and guarantees us an abuse-free liturgy. It also guarantees us the right to make our voices heard. Poor music is an insult to right liturgy. It is like tying a millstone around the neck of the priest as he celebrates. He can be as reverent as he wants and say the black, do the red, but bad music can just drag it down.
It is a deeply ingrained abuse that has become acceptable. The biological solution is beginning to work here, but we can do more to expose young people to truly great sacred music, we can do more to educate people in the fine arts. We can offer them a good alternative to what has passed for music in the last 50 years. The Roman Rite has so much more to offer. And so much of it can be had for less money and unencumbered by restrictive copyright and licensing agreements. That is merely the icing on the cake. Pastors should be made aware of the alternatives. We can’t wait for them to cast around and find out for themselves. Liberals know how to be the squeaky wheel, strident and disobedient. Let’s prove that we can squeak much better than they can, in charity and obedience.