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EasterJoy
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The Church doesn’t require the musical equivalent of a hair shirt, though.The Church instructs us to use the organ.
The Church doesn’t require the musical equivalent of a hair shirt, though.The Church instructs us to use the organ.
Indeed, we are all dying. In fact everyone capable of playing the pipe organ for President Fillmore is already dead. No worries though. Professional musicians are a just phone call away. The American Federation of Musicians can refer you to competent organists in your area. 1-800-762-3444.Yes, and if the current trend in dying-out organists continues, the organ will have pride of place in many Catholics churches–as a silent “statue” of something that is no longer on this earth. We will all gaze at it in awe and whisper, “I heard those played a long time ago. All the organists died, and there was no one to replace them, and that was the end of organ music in the Mass.”
benedictgal, I have no objection to pipe organ music. I love it and if I had my way, all of life would be accompanied by a massive pipe organ. There’s a beautiful passage in one of the James Herriot books (the veterinarian) about the first time he ever used penicillin–as he watched the animal recover miraculously within 24 hours, in his mind, he heard the pipe organ joyously playing all stops out. (I work in microbiology, so this passage is especially meaningful to me.)
But if there’s no one to play the pipe organ, then it’s pointless to insist that the Mass be accompanied by pipe organ music, unless ghosts really can play.
Acapella Mass is certainly an option, but as I pointed out in another post, there is no reason to insist on acapella Mass when the documents make it clear that other instruments may be used at the discretion of the bishops. Thank God for a sensible Church!
I disagree with you that electric guitars, etc. are suitable for secular music only. That’s a matter of personal opinion. But that’s also another thread. And frankly, I think that there are very few people who excel in playing electric guitars, drums, etc., probably even less than play piano or organ, and those who do play well are playing in professional bands for money, not at Mass for free. (Guitar Hero doesn’t count!) So I think it’s unlikely that we’ll see an influx of rock musicians into the Mass anytime soon.
I certainly think that an acoustic guitar can be used for Mass (if the bishop approves). A lot of guitarists are not used to accompanying congregational singing, but I think that as they gain more experience, they can improve at this.
However, the instruments need to be suitable for the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass. Again, you are coming from a Protestant ecclesial background that does not reflect what the Church’s stance is. That stance, as stated in Musicam Sacram, notes that if the instruments are strongly identified with secular music, they are not fit for use in the Mass.I have no objection to pipe organ music. I love it and if I had my way, all of life would be accompanied by a massive pipe organ. There’s a beautiful passage in one of the James Herriot books (the veterinarian) about the first time he ever used penicillin–as he watched the animal recover miraculously within 24 hours, in his mind, he heard the pipe organ joyously playing all stops out. (I work in microbiology, so this passage is especially meaningful to me.)
But if there’s no one to play the pipe organ, then it’s pointless to insist that the Mass be accompanied by pipe organ music, unless ghosts really can play.
Acapella Mass is certainly an option, but as I pointed out in another post, there is no reason to insist on acapella Mass when the documents make it clear that other instruments may be used at the discretion of the bishops. Thank God for a sensible Church!
I disagree with you that electric guitars, etc. are suitable for secular music only. That’s a matter of personal opinion. But that’s also another thread. And frankly, I think that there are very few people who excel in playing electric guitars, drums, etc., probably even less than play piano or organ, and those who do play well are playing in professional bands for money, not at Mass for free. (Guitar Hero doesn’t count!) So I think it’s unlikely that we’ll see an influx of rock musicians into the Mass anytime soon.
I certainly think that an acoustic guitar can be used for Mass (if the bishop approves). A lot of guitarists are not used to accompanying congregational singing, but I think that as they gain more experience, they can improve at this.
Of course my information is speculative.However, the instruments need to be suitable for the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass. Again, you are coming from a Protestant ecclesial background that does not reflect what the Church’s stance is. That stance, as stated in Musicam Sacram, notes that if the instruments are strongly identified with secular music, they are not fit for use in the Mass.
It is not a matter of personal opinion. It takes into account the very nature and character of the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass. At the Mass, heaven and earth intersect and we have a direct encounter with the sovereign majesty of God. It is something sublime, majestic and solemn. Electric guitars, bass guitars and drum kits have no place in such an encounter.
You seem to think that organists are a heading the way of the Wooly Mammoth; do you have factual information to back this up or is this merely speculative opinion? We do have organists down here. In fact, one of them happens to be the president of the local university and he’s been playing at Mass, weddings and special liturgies. Furthermore, he also holds organ recitals at the Universty where young musicians actually have the chance to play the organ.
Cat, with all due respect, in many of your posts on this particular subject, you tend to downplay the importance of Tradition, especially when it comes to the realm of Sacred Music. As I read your posts, you also seem to regard whatever the Holy Father has written as mere personal opinion. Well, he is a classically trained musician. His brother was choirmaster at the Regensberg Cathedral for many, many years. The Holy Father has a very strong sense of what it is to have truly sacred Music. You talk about obedience, but, as I see it, may not realize that obedience is a two-way street. Inasmuch as you note that the documents give the ordinaries the chance to rule on what can and cannot be used in the Mass, such rulings must always be made taking the rich musical Tradition of the Church into account. When the Holy Father makes a highly valid observation about the state of music in the Church, I take his words very seriously. After all, he speaks from direct experience. He knows his material. Even as Cardinal Ratzinger, he spoke with great authority. His observations about rock music, especially the fact that it is incompatible with the Sacred Liturgy are valid and quite true.
I feel bad that there are so few organists in your area. We have a pipe organ in our church, built around 1990, and besides our music director, there are at least 3 or 4 others who can play it, and play it well. We have 6 weekend Masses and all are accompanied by organists from our parish or the music director. We also have a piano that is used to accompany the organ at times or even played solo. I can assure you that it does not sound like a music hall instrument. The choice of music, however, is another matter, but lately they have been playing more and more of the traditional hymns. The guitar is rarely used except for Lifeteen Masses, and once in a while at the 9AM Mass where there is a small chorale, but not as a solo instrument. Also, around here, most of the churches have an organ. It does help that the local University has an excellent School of Music, but I don’t know how many were trained there. But around here, there does not seem to be a shortage of organists, and most of the larger Protestant churches have them, and often have sacred music concerts.Please read the following thread: forums.catholic-questions.org/showthread.php?t=366975
I bumped it up.
And then remember this: ORGANISTS, especially pipe organists, are rare and becoming extinct.
If you’ll read my first post in the thread that I posted a link to, notice that I mentioned the very small number of organists and even pianists in our city of 150,000. I am very involved with youth music in our city, and I know for a fact that there are NO organ students at the moment, there haven’t been any organ students in several years, and several of the universities, both Christian and secular, have closed or are in the process of closing their organ majors, since they have had no students for many years.
I asked the question in the thread, which I don’t believe was answered–what will the Catholic Church do when all the organists are gone?
Acapella singing is extremely difficult, even for a good choir (I was in one in college, and my daughter has done a lot of acapella singing in her college choir.) It is not realistic to think that a typical choir of laypeople will be able to sing acapella repertoire week after week. In the past, perhaps, because people sang in their homes, and school music programs were actually learning situations, not “multicultural sensitivity classes”. Nowadays, the majority of people in the U.S. do NOT know how to sing correctly, and singing correctly is essential for acapella music to not sound like dying cats.
Again, I will repeat that organists are not easy to come by, and in our city, even if the parishes offered an extravagent salary with benefits and candy and cleaning service and a car, there are so few organists that I doubt there would be any takers.
One problem with secular or non-Catholic organists in Catholic Mass is that they are so limited in what repertoire they are allowed to play. If they play the usual lively, all-stops out prelude or postlude, there would be complaints from those traditionalists who believe that the times before and after Mass are reserved for silence, contemplation, and prayer.
The organist also doesn’t get many opportunities to accompany great sacred works, as so few musicians in the Catholic Church are capable of singing these works, and again, many of them are inappropriate (at least, according to the traditionalists) for Catholic Mass. Organists (and pianists, too) get sick of playing Schubert’s or Gonoud’s Ave Maria, and Panis Angelicus week after week after week!
As for use of guitars and other instruments, the Documents of Vatican II, Sancrosanctum Concilium, make it clear that it’s OK. "Other instruments may also be used in divine worship, at the discretion and with the consent of the competent territorial authority as laid down in the articles…provided they are suitable, or can be made suitable, for sacred use, that they accord with the dignity of the sacred building, and that they truly contribute to the edification of the faithful. (Italics mine.)
Do you disagree with the Catholic Church? I don’t. And I think we need to submit to our territorial authorities (bishop) and stop undermining their authority by muttering about how we don’t like it. It’s OK to have a personal opinion–yes, if I had my druthers, I would have the organist from the 1st Lutheran Church in our city at my parish, blasting us all with his Franck masterpieces and making the pews vibrate during the congregational hymns! Heaven!
In fact, for many years, I have made it a point to sit quietly, kneel if my knees are up to it, and listen in silence whenever an organ plays. I started doing this while I was still Protestant, because the organ is so rarely heard anymore in evangelical Protestant churches.
I absolutely love the pipe organ and wish I could play it.
But sadly, it’s going bye bye. And I, for one, do not plan to complain about pianos, guitars, violins (see the banner at the top of the forums), or any instrument approved by the bishop that accompanies the Holy Mass.
Say what?However, the instruments need to be suitable for the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass. Again, you are coming from a Protestant ecclesial background that does not reflect what the Church’s stance is. That stance, as stated in Musicam Sacram, notes that if the instruments are strongly identified with secular music, they are not fit for use in the Mass.
It is not a matter of personal opinion. It takes into account the very nature and character of the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass. At the Mass, heaven and earth intersect and we have a direct encounter with the sovereign majesty of God. It is something sublime, majestic and solemn. Electric guitars, bass guitars and drum kits have no place in such an encounter.
First of all, the Catechism of the Catholic Church is not designed to be a regulatory document. It is a teaching document; thus, not everything pertaining to the Church is contained in it.Say what?
I have been Roman Catholic my entire life, and my home parish is a charismatic one where we use guitar, piano, and sometimes, GASP, bass guitars and drums!
You worship at that church and feel the power of the Holy Spirit at work among the congregation. How can the Holy Spirit be present when devil instruments are being used, you ask? Well, maybe it’s because they’re not devil instruments.
I’m sorry for my sarcasm and that I’m putting words in your mouth; I know that you didn’t actually call them “devil instruments,” but that’s the impression I’m getting from your post and I am merely trying to show how ridiculous it sounds, at least in my opinion.
The key is using these instruments in the appropriate manner. For example, beating the drums while the host is being consecrated, of course, is inappropriate (God forbid that ever happen at a Mass, Amen). The music liturgy group at my Catholic high school had an over-abundance of rock instruments that I thought was really annoying; too many instruments and not enough vocalists. You really don’t need 3 guitars, 2 basses, and a drummer amped to the max while there is one guy “leading” the singing and his mic is turned halfway down while the 3 girls sharing a mic hardly have any sound coming from their mouths, let alone the fact that their mic is hardly even on.
I would just like to know where in the CCC it says to only use an organ for worship. As many people on this thread have said, it simply isn’t realistic to expect every church to use a pipe organ for all their worship services. I think it’s awesome when it’s possible, don’t get me wrong, but when it isn’t, you’ll just have to make due with some peaceful guitar and piano. Just because a guitar and piano are used, it doesn’t mean that it’s noisy and irreverent.
Also, my first post on the second page was completely ignored, I felt. I asked if guitars took away from the Real Presence of the Eucharist and nobody answered my question.![]()
"The pipe organ is to be held in high esteem in the Latin Church, since it is its traditional instrument, the sound of which can add a wonderful splendor to the Church’s ceremonies and powerfully lift up men’s minds to God and higher things.
"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."43
You will note that footnote #44 makes reference to another document, the Instruction on Sacred Music, promulgated by Pope Pius XII:
- 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
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.
I do not know if youi were being sarcastic when you asked about the Real Presence. Jesus is present at the Mass, regardless of how many abuses there occur in the liturgy, the poor, slipshod quality of the music, or the bad homily. However, because we are in the presence of the divine majesty of the Triune God, we must make every effort to have a celebration that is worthy of His dignity.
- 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.
Assembly of God flashback!!!:crying:I have been Roman Catholic my entire life, and my home parish is a charismatic one where we use guitar, piano, and sometimes, GASP, bass guitars and drums!
I’ll answer: guitars played inappropriately, as they too often are in mass (in my experience) don’t negate the Real Presence but they sure can distract the attention of the worshipers away from it.Also, my first post on the second page was completely ignored, I felt. I asked if guitars took away from the Real Presence of the Eucharist and nobody answered my question.![]()
We have a harmonica! I’m not particularly fond of harmonica music, so I may be biased but I just don’t like it at mass.I am a big fan of the organ. I feel this is a very good way to celebrate the mass. I wish the organist at my Church would play it more instead of the piano.
What do you think about pianos, guitars, and etc. in place of the organ?
Could anyone see these instruments as dangerous?
Some opinions that I have heard is that the guitar symbolizes a sinful musical genre (rock-and-roll) and the instrument is simply not reverent enough. I personally cannot see any problem with using these for worship as long as the tabernacle is not in the same room!!!
God Bless
I’m probably a fuddy duddy right with you. One of the most beautiful Masses I ever went to was with 3 men singing Gregorian chant throughout the Mass, acapella. All 3 had beautiful voices, and it felt a little bit like heaven to me.We have a harmonica! I’m not particularly fond of harmonica music, so I may be biased but I just don’t like it at mass.
This Sunday at mass they played the thing during the Communion song.
I think an acoustic guitar (at the appropriate time) can be okay. I’m just old-fashioned and really don’t see a need for instruments at all. We have many people with wonderful voices and I’d rather stick with that myself.
I guess I’m just a fuddy duddy.
I can’t think of the name of it at the moment, but another instrument that I haven’t seen in a long time (and never really liked it to begin with), was a hand held harp of some sort that was strummed. Does anyone remember something like this?As a former Mass guitarist, I’ve just gotten darn tired of this instrument at Mass. It’s gotten old!!
Actually, this instrument doesn’t sound bad in a BLUEGRASS band, but like with all instruments it depends on who is playing it. I disliked it used at Mass. It is called an Autoharp.I can’t think of the name of it at the moment, but another instrument that I haven’t seen in a long time (and never really liked it to begin with), was a hand held harp of some sort that was strummed. Does anyone remember something like this?