At thecollege campus where Iheretic training groundlead sacred musicdo music ministry, there is ahereticProtestant who spends much of his time with the Catholics. He has even joined the choir at Mass, and sings every Sunday. We are, of course, very happy to have him with us, both for the sake ofecumenitisNostrae Aetateecumenism, because he's a swell fellow, and because he has one of the better voices in the choir. My question for you lovely folks: would it be permissible for him to lead the Gospel Acclamation?
Not sure about this. Protestants are not allowed to receive sacraments, but my understanding is that the basis of participation in the liturgy per se is baptism, not orthodoxy, and that non-Catholics are generally welcome to join in prayers and singing at Mass and other Catholic services. As for the choir, as I have written before on this forum, Church documents describe two kinds of choirs or scholae: a strictly liturgical choir, which is all male, and a choir of the faithful, which may be mixed or all-female. An FSSP priest I know has stated his opinion that a valid argument could be made in favor of non-Catholic singers supplementing a weak Catholic choir, in which case the Catholics would constitute the real choir "legally" speaking. To answer the question, I would not have a non-Catholic singing the psalm or alleluia verse alone unless there were some urgent necessity such as the assigned cantor getting sick without a Catholic replacement. In fact, if that were to happen, I would probably sing it myself.Properly speaking, a Protestant can't participate in the Mass at all. I don't mean that he's not allowed, but that he's not capable of doing it, anymore than a man is capable of being pregnant, or a women of being ordained.
Except that good ones usually kind of are!Choir is not an exclusive club.
But I think that all the LAITY should sign, voluntarily, to shame the clergy into signing.
Let's face it, the roles of acolytes, cantors, lectors, etc. have been significantly downgraded. They are not clerics, in fact many of them have no training whatsoever for the roles they are attempting. The problem is not with musicians, but with the leadership of the church - or lack of it.
#33. Since the lectern is the place from which the ministers proclaim the word of God, it must of its nature be reserved for the readings, the responsorial psalm, and the Easter proclamation (Exsultet) The lectern may rightly be used for the homily and the general intercessions, however, because of their close connection with the entire liturgy of the word. It is better for the commentator, cantor, or director of singing, for example, not to use the lectern.
but what is the practice in Rome? what is going on in the average church?
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