Y
yankeesouth
Guest
What was the most egregious liturgical abuse you ever witnessed?
The 1970s lol.
The 1970s lol.
Have you ever read “Why Catholics Can’t Sing” by Thomas Day? If not, you owe it to yourself to read it.’ve been a church music minister (instrumentalist) for nearly 40 years, in over 15 parishes,
True, people without any musical training would be able to sing Gregorian hymns. Perhaps a congregation could even learn by heart one of the simpler, more familiar ordinaries of the Mass, like, for example, the well loved “Mass of the Angels”. However, much of the repertoire of Gregorian Chant consists of different introits, graduals, alleluias, etc, which require a trained schola to sing properly. Yes, Gregorian Chant is preferable theologically and aesthetically to many of the hymns popular today, but, without trained musicians, the faithful will only be exposed to the bare minimum.Everyone can sing Gregorian Chant–and of course that’s the point!!! If you want active participation, it’s Gregorian Chant all the way.
Right. Many would likely consider something like the Latin hymn "Attende Domine’, for example, to be Gregorian Chant. It really isn’t. At least it isn’t representative of chant as a whole. It has a melody, a refrain, etc. Most chant does not. As you noted, Gregorian Chant for the Mass and the Office, most of which can be found in the Liber Usualis compiled by the Benedictines of Solesmes, is only heard in traditional seminaries and monasteries. I don’t know if the monasteries which observe the new liturgical calendar use a modified version of the Liber , or if they have new chant. My guess is the latter, because many of the propers of Mass have changed as well as the structure of the Divine Office.What you hear in churches today are simply hymns based on Gregorian Chant that are no more religious chant than any other hymns. When Catholics crow about Gregorian Chant, they don’t realize it is something the Church no longer does, outside of monasteries.
No. They use the same chants as before the Council, with a few exceptions. Some chants have been revised based on paleographic studies. For the most part the Mass chants in the 1974 Gradual are from the 1908 Vatican Edition of the Gradual. The exceptions tend to be Year B, as St Mark was not read in the older Rite. Also the feast of Christ the King being recent, from the 1920s, all its Mass pieces are neo-Gregorian.I don’t know if the monasteries which observe the new liturgical calendar use a modified version of the Liber , or if they have new chant. My guess is the latter, because many of the propers of Mass have changed as well as the structure of the Divine Office.
Fremason.Mozart
Lutheran.Bach
Sadly many indeed do not.Just as an aside: people don’t need to “earn” our respect. We owe others their respect as children of God made in His image and likeness. Remember the quote “whatsoever you do to the least of these you did it to me”?
The deserve the dignity intrinsic to all humans. Respect however is earned – or lost.A priest deserves respect. The President deserves respect. A pedophile deserves respect because he is a human being with a God-given dignity that is not stripped away by his sin/crime (which is why we have prison ministries).
I have absolutely no idea who “Hillsong” is, but when they write a Mass–As Mozart and Bach did–let me know. You don’t need to be Catholic to create a work of art that can be admired by Catholics. Literature, painting, music, etc…But I must say, it’s amusing to me when people dislike Hillsong due to them being a protestant worship group (when lyrically there’s quite a few songs in which there’s no issues with on a theological level), while turning around and saying the following guys are fine:
Many of the propers for the Roman Rite of Mass were revised after the council. The Gregorian chants written for the old propers can’t be used in the new rite, so how can they be the same?
Wrong again. The propers were not “re-written” after the council. You cannot re-write the Bible and the vast majority of the propers are from scripture, both psalms and other verses. The chants are the same, the melodies are the same, but some of them have been moved around. As I write this, I am sitting in front of both the 1974 Graduale Romanum (post-Conciliar) and a 1926 edition of the Graduale Romanum,Many of the propers for the Roman Rite of Mass were revised after the council. The Gregorian chants written for the old propers can’t be used in the new rite, so how can they be the same?
What?The Eucharistic minister also cried after I got done with her.