The very first step (a Communion psalm)
  • Kathy
    Posts: 5,500
    In a recent Chant Cafe article, I suggest that the first step in reforming parish music is to sing a Psalm at the beginning of Communion.

    Does this sound right?
  • WGS
    Posts: 297
    I recommend following the First Degree of Participation as proclaimed in Musicam Sacram. If the people begin by singing the responses, they will get used to hearing themselves in the context of the congregation. (Unfortunately, this requires the active participation of the celebrant.)
    Thanked by 2bonniebede SarahJ
  • a_f_hawkins
    Posts: 3,372
    Suggestions in the article sound right to me. It facilitates congregational singing according to the Vatican directives, it allows the choir to receive communion as members of the congregation.
  • Kathy,

    It depends what you mean. One important aspect of raising a bumper crop is preparing the ground well. In that sense, focusing on a psalm at Communion can and should be providing theo-centric text, Gregorian chant (or, at least, a form of restrained choral singing) -- which isn't the first thing the congregation will sing, but will lay the ground work for more.

    Dialogues are important, but they come properly when the appropriate theological orientation exists.
  • JulieCollJulieColl
    Posts: 2,465
    I saw a nice exposition on this subject by Fr. Aloysius Wilmes who said in 1947 during his address at the National Liturgical Week in Portland the following which I think echoes what Dom Johnner has said in his book about the ancient custom of the people singing the Communion antiphon:

    "Singing at Communion is especially appropriate, since Communion is at the same time Communion with the Eucharistic Body of Christ and Communion with His Mystical Body, with our neighbors. We do not communicate alone. It is a family meal, the end of which is not only our personal sanctification, but also unity between the members of the Mystical Body. To sing together is a significant and efficacious means of realizing this unity."

    Speaking from the EF perspective as I do, I understand that those on the traditional side of things might shudder at the expression "family meal", but it's important not to forget that important aspect of the Holy Eucharist while also emphasizing the sacrificial and sacramental dimensions. If anything, I think a tad bit more convivial-ness and family-ness would not be be amiss in the traditional environments I inhabit.

    For several years I have included the notation for the Communion antiphon in our handout and the schola sings several verses while the Holy Eucharist is being distributed.

    The EF Communion antiphon seems to be the perfect distillation of the theme of the Mass in a singable and memorable way. It is the quintessential "takeaway" from the Mass.
  • JulieCollJulieColl
    Posts: 2,465
    I might also point out that Fr. Wilmes was speaking in 1947 of the preconciliar Mass, the Vetus Ordo, as "a family meal," which must have seemed a bit shocking and avant-garde for the time, but it seems to me that such a fresh perspective might have been needed at that time, a new spiritual impulse that sought to bring back the notion of the liturgy as a communitarian action of the Church.

    Whatever course Fr. Wilmes may have pursued after 1947 (edited) does not alter the fact that he was correct in 1947 in recalling that the reception of the Holy Eucharist at Mass is indeed a sacred banquet, a sacrum convivium in which the members of the Mystical Body share as a family.

    By the same token, it might be most beneficial if in the Novus Ordo more attention was focused upon the Holy Eucharist as a sacrifice and a sacrament and upon initiating a new spiritual impulse emphasizing the solemnity and mystery of the Mass.
    Thanked by 2Adam Wood bonniebede
  • Liam
    Posts: 4,945
    Perhaps the sacrum convivium can be more clearly understood in eschatological terms as a foretaste of the Wedding Banquet of the Lamb, which is not a picnic.
  • ronkrisman
    Posts: 1,388
    While Fr. Wilmes may have gone on to pursue liturgical renewal through the changing of texts and the winning of new freedoms,...

    I have no idea what you are insinuating. Do you? Did you ever meet Fr. Wilmes? (I knew him in the late 60's and early 70's.)
  • JulieCollJulieColl
    Posts: 2,465
    I didn't mean to insinuate anything specific. I thought he was associated with the liturgical reform movement of Msgr. Hillenbrand Hellriegel, but I will be happy to correct my statement. I was just trying to make the point that the preconciliar statements of members of the Liturgical Movement ought to be taken at face value and ought not to be interpreted solely by the light of their later postconciliar convictions.
  • ronkrisman
    Posts: 1,388
    Fr. Wilmes, as I recall, had once served as an associate pastor to Msgr. Hellriegel (in the Archdiocese of St. Louis), not Msgr. Hillenbrand (in the Archdiocese of Chicago).

    I would agree with your last sentence, immediately above. I would add that I do not think, as your writings seem to indicate, that the Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy was on the same trajectory as was the century-old Liturgical Movement which preceded it. That movement had as its goal the restoration of sound liturgical praxis from the past. The Council fathers thought that such a restoration was, by the 1960's, inadequate for the Church and that a revision of the Church's liturgy was necessary. Those two differing perspectives on the goal of the Council regarding the liturgy can be detected in all the skirmishes of the "liturgy war" of the past 25 years or so.
    Thanked by 1JulieColl
  • ronkrisman
    Posts: 1,388
    As to Kathy's proposal, I think it is very sound. I have always been an advocate of singing a psalm (either with the proper communion antiphon or with a more general antiphon) during the communion procession, rather than a metrical hymn or a medley of various things. I do not think its being proposed as "the first step in reforming parish music" has much chance of success in the vast majority of parishes that do not think their music needs reforming (even if it does). So I would steer away from promoting the practice with language that has a negative tone.
  • Kathy
    Posts: 5,500
    Is "reform" a negative word?
  • ronkrisman
    Posts: 1,388
    Reform | Definition of reform by Merriam-Webster
    www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/reform‎
    Full Definition of REFORM. transitive verb. 1. a : to put or change into an improved form or condition. b : to amend or improve by change of form or removal of faults or abuses.

    Negative tone? Yes.
  • Kathy
    Posts: 5,500
    I'm asking because it's a hugely significant term in liturgy over the past century and more. Are you sure that's how you would like to characterize reform?
  • JulieCollJulieColl
    Posts: 2,465
    Well, Father, I'm so glad that you brought this up because I'm now enjoying reading Volume II of the Collected Works of Josef Cardinal Ratzinger, "Theology of the Liturgy".

    On p. 536, there is a short chapter entitled, "In memory of Klaus Gamber". In this beautiful chapter Cardinal Ratzinger talks about how a young priest said to him, "Today we need a new Liturgical Movement."

    As the Cardinal states, this priest sensed that we "need a beginning from within, as the Liturgical Movement at its best had intended, when it was concerned not about making texts or inventing actions and forms, but rather about the rediscovery of the living heart, about entering into the interior fabric of the liturgy to a new celebration that is shaped from within."

    He continues, "The liturgical reform, as it was carried out concretely, distanced itself more and more from this origin. The result was not revival, but devastation."

    He says later in the chapter, "What happened to a great extent after the Council has quite a different significance: Instead of the developed liturgy, some have set up their self-made liturgy. They have stepped out of the living process of growing and becoming and gone over to making. They no longer wanted to continue the organic becoming and maturing of something that had been alive down through the centuries, and instead they replaced it----according to the model of technical production----with making, the insipid product of the moment."
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  • JulieCollJulieColl
    Posts: 2,465
    .
  • JulieCollJulieColl
    Posts: 2,465
    Forget everything that I've said above, and my sincere apologies for my wordiness, but I think I've finally reached an understanding of some of these concepts.

    Here it is in one sentence why Cardinal Ratzinger said the original Liturgical Movement was hijacked:

    They (the Bugnini reformers) went from connecting people with the interior fabric of the liturgy to advocating textual reform and inventing actions and forms; the true understanding and praxis of participatio actuosa was replaced by a "liturgy-by-committee" which abandoned the centuries-long process of organic development.
    Thanked by 2francis bonniebede