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That’s one that I thoroughly despise, and I will not sing it.…Lord of the Dance…
That’s one that I thoroughly despise, and I will not sing it.…Lord of the Dance…
Fortunately, our parish does not sing “Lord of the Dance,” but they do sing another one with the same tune – “Simple Gifts”. That song is a target of my own despisement (?), and I refuse to sing it.That’s one that I thoroughly despise, and I will not sing it.
Had to sing it once during my short tenure in the parish choir. Hated every second. It’s such an empty platitude of a song.Go Make a Difference should incur excommunication and banishment to Siberia.
Actually, no hymns are approved. The USCCB has copped to the fact that they don’t really approve hymns or hymnals; moreover, the Church has made no requirement that hymns sung at Mass have any approval or vetting whatsoever.The music is vetted and no approved hymns have egregious doctrinal errors
If the song you’re talking about is “The Summons” which someone posted, I don’t think that lyric refers to actually going around emptying the jails. In context, it’s like curing the lepers, mentioned in the next line; it’s an allusion to setting people free from the sin, darkness, and bad habits that hold them back.One song I had trouble with had in the third or so verse, Would you set the prisoners free? I believe this was in a list of things that would be good to do. My thought on that was, No, the prisoners are where they need to be–locked up and far away from me. I posted something like, Does anybody read these lyrics before putting the song in the hymnal? People got pretty rude with me over that.
This is a good way to put it. I can understand being “Mr. Spock” when a song seems to have a real doctrinal problem, such as “Mary Did You Know”, but there are always people who take it too far.We have “Mr. Spocks”–these folks analyze everything in the hymns literally, examine every word, every phrase, and sometimes even the melodies and rhythms of hymns. They approach hymnody as a “science” or a mathematical exercise.
And we have “Dr. McCoys”–these folks do not analyze but feel their way with their hearts, basing their conclusions on their personal experiences and emotions. They approach hymnody as a “devotion” or a spiritual exercise.
I always interpreted it metaphorically; like, helping people become free of the prison of sin and despair. Not, like, let’s go let out Jeffrey Dahmer.I can see where you’d get blowback if you somehow took it to mean let’s let serial killers and pedophiles run loose…that’s not what it means though.
We have that hymn in Canada’s Catholic Book of Worship II but that verse is omitted.Maybe we’ll no longer have See Us Lord, About Your Altar as a communion hymn. While I can find a Catholic reading of the lyrics, I’m also extremely uncomfortable having verse 3 be sung at communion time.
It’s funny, although this is a popular funeral hymn at my parish (not that I go to many funerals there anyway) the first place it made an impact on my life was at my 8th grade graduation. We all learned sign-language gestures and performed the song at our Baccalaureate Mass.This has been sung at every funeral in my family since I was a child. I don’t know who keeps choosing it, but now I just associate it with death.