Gregorian chant and the sacred polyphony handed down for centuries was jettisoned and replaced with music remarkably ‘soft’ and sentimental by contrast.
the insipid, trite, uninspired and tedious music that has been forced on Catholics from coast to coast.
:)Motu-Propriate
This is where I think we possibly encounter some danger. I would certainly agree that we should not let the perfect be the enemy of the good. But... I think we have to continually strive to educate and build up the correct understanding of good sacred liturgical music, rather than opening the door to acceptance of - sorry I can't be more delicate - musical crap.Am I going, then, to argue against sacro-pop from a moral perspective...
Let's not get side tracked with the homeschooling family. Not only are we not talking liturgical use of music in this instance...
legem credendi lex statuat supplicandi
the law of worship builds the law of belief [Prosper of Aquitaine (attrib.)]
Doesn't the virtuous mean of a parish music program have room for both music of propriety that leans emotionally and devotionally and music that leans towards austerity?
Poor liturgy may be an effect of a lackadaisical clergy, but not a cause, IMO.
I see the music as a result rather than the cause.
Incardination- I am interested in more details of the "profanation of the liturgy." A span of 7+ centuries is quite the range in time. I am not learned on liturgical history, but I wonder if the "descent" is as clean or simple a bell curve as you imply.
If the high-point of chant was the 12th-13th centuries and there was a decline from then to the 19th century... a decline that happened as humanism, modernism, and liberalism began having more and more sway within the Church (and in Her music), surely one could relate the decline liturgically, spiritually, and musically as each reflecting the other.
a balance between emotion and intellect
as a liturgical musician, I might hold a somewhat exaggerated view about the importance of music.
But show me a scenario where the work of David Haas sends somebody to Hell.
The American Church has, for decades, been soft. How deaf were the ears on which Pope Pius X's instructions fell?
Hmmm... I guess it might depend on whether you see the music as merely for those that are already Catholic. I mean, let's face it... someone who is a strong Catholic isn't going to let Haas destroy that faith.But show me a scenario where the work of David Haas sends somebody to Hell.
One could argue that Asperges I is an unneccessarily prettified/professionalised version of Asperges II. So I suggest a decline already evident after the 10th century.If the high-point of chant was the 12th-13th centuries
Jerome says: "Listen, young men whose duty it is to recite the office in church: God is to be sung not with the voice but with the heart. Nor should you, like play-actors, ease your throat and jaws with medicaments, and make the church resound with theatrical measures and airs." commentary on Ephesians 5:19
Can we agree that the lineup on the side of Gehenna should be zero? And if it is not, perhaps that fact should disincline us from using that particular music to represent our worship?That said, I think if you did a theoretical lineup of all the people that Haas’ music helped bring to Gehenna versus all the people whose faith was strengthened by it, the latter would be considerably longer.
Perhaps if we could differentiate between worship and evangelism we could make some headway. This distinction is often difficult for evangelicals to make.
Many scholars have posited that, it being Passover, this 'hymn' was one of the Hillel psalms. 'Psalm' and 'hymn' are pretty much synonymous in New Testament translations....had sung a hymn...
My guess is his Latin wasn't very good.
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