You have reminded me of when our holy father Francis founded our order. Originally the Order was an order of brothers. Some diocesan priests, seeing the holiness of Francis asked to join the Order and were admitted. As the years passed more priests joined the ranks of the Brothers. Yes Brothers, Francis never called anyone Father except himself, even though he was never a priest. But that’s another story.
The priests who joined the Order brought with them the Benedictine tradition of Gregorian chant. One day Francis decided that the tradition did not unify the fraternity, but divided it because Gregorian chant required a great deal of taining to be sung correctly. It also required that the Brothers could chant. And it required that all the Brothers new how to read the notation. As Superior General he decided that the Brothers would no longer use Gregorian Chant at mass or during the Liturgy of the Hours. Also they would not use any of the forms that were traditional monastic gestures for celebrating the liturgies of the mass or the hours.
Anyway, there were other forms of music in Latin and Italian that were very reverent. Francis himself was a musician and a poet, so he wrote some music and hymns for the Brothers to use in liturgy. He wrote them in Italian and some in Latin, mostly in Italian. They came to be known as Laudas from the Italian word meaning “praises”.
Church has proclaimed that no man has ever achieved the perfection of the Gospel as well as Francis of Assisi. Therefore, I can’t imagine someone calling Francis irreverent in his decisions regarding how the Brother priests were to celebrate mass or how the entire Order was to pray the Liturgy of the Hours. To this day the friars do not chant the liturgy of the hours, they recite it. They use reverent hymns in Latin or local languages.
There have been two encyclicals on St. Francis and in both the Church proclaims him to be the perfect imitation of Christ, the most perfect Christian and the most perfect Catholic.
If we look at someone like him, we can safely believe that what you’re saying is 100% true. Reverence is in the soul of the believer. Gestures, music, art, clothing and other things help promote reverence. Therefore they are good.
But we cannot be so rigid as to say that they are the only good. This is not the mind of the Church. If this were the mind of the Church, it would never have approved of the movement of St. Francis and his order. His order would not be around today. It would have fallen under its own weight.
Other movements would not have been born, such as the Vincentian movement. I’ll never forget the writings of Vincent de Paul to Louise de Marillac where he prohibits the use of a habit and veil. He also prohibits the sistes from becoming religious. They were to be seculars in temporary vows so that they could preserve their freedom to live on the streets of Paris serving Christ in the poor. They were to attend any mass in the local parish, reverent or not, because the source of their strength and the vitality of their sould came from the Eucharist and their interior disposition to see and serve Christ in the poor.
Vicent’s defintion of reverence was based on the soul’s disposition to see and serve Christ. The Eucharist was the summit of love where Christ was adored and where the Daughters received the nourishment they needed to serve the poor. For Vincent, the reverence of the Eucharist consisted in an interior disposition to find Christ in the Eucharist and take him to the streets among the poor. For Francis, reverence for the Eucharist consisted in seeing Christ’s passion on the cross and his incarnation in the Eucharist. Both of these great men found gestures and ways to stimulate this reverence that were consistent with the mission that Christ entrusted to the Church.
That is true reverence. To find Christ in the Eucharist and to bring him to the world.
Fraternally,
JR