I understand about the full-time positions being rare, but that's no guarantee of good liturgy or music....It drives me nuts---ask the musicians to do it for free, but pay the florist, the plumber, the maintenance people, ad infinitum...?
ask the musicians to do it for free, but pay the florist, the plumber, the maintenance people, ad infinitum
There is something distasteful about paying people to pray.
There is something distasteful about paying people to pray.
Therefore the laity of male sex, whether children, youth, or men, when they are appointed by the competent ecclesiastical authority as ministers of the altar or to execute sacred music, if they fulfill such duties in the manner and form established by the rubrics, exercise a direct but delegated ministerial service, on the condition that, where they are to sing, they form an actual part of the "choir," the schola cantorum. (no. 93c)
Trained musicians have spent a lot of time and money to develop their skill set and should be justly compensated.
Trained musicians have spent a lot of time and money to develop their skill set and should be justly compensated.
I've had too much experience of unpaid accountants! Professional lectors don't sound like that bad an idea either.trained qualified accountant
Indeed! We have instituted lectors at Walsingham, instituted personally by Bishop Lopes at high mass last fall. Their specific responsibilities are to sing the Lesson and the Epistle on all solemnities. We do have, also, St Bede's Lector's Guild, which consists of specially chosen and competent persons for reading the lessons on non-solemnities. They do a fine job.'...and you'd be on to something. :)
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