getting them to use a 400-year-old hymn instead of "City of God" cannot be characterized as anything but a victory.
It was a mistake to let them become so complicated only trained choirs could sing them.
It might be a small victory, but it's mostly a pyrrhic victory, because it reinforces the idea that hymns are normal at Mass. It also reinforces the idea that you and I get to make up whatever fits for Mass because, in the long run, you and I control Mass. [Yes, the idea of control is very big in the P/W -- G/P ideology and was certainly part of the Bugnini agenda.]
performance art
And you’re saying it was a mistake to let the propers get complicated. I disagree. The propers should be more ornate and served by the musicians who can do them.
Personally speaking (and so Francis may pour Sulphur on my head, and so may you) I'm not interested in going back to some mythical golden age in the 1950's.
Also, you mentioned about a distinction between Protestant vs Catholic hymns. This is bogus. Hymns express faith. But (unless they are a zillion verses long) they do not express it in its fullness, and nor do they belong to a particular church. Instead, hymns may well have been written by people who were Catholic or Protestant at the time the hymn was written. But that is no guarantee that the hymn has fully and faithfully caught the lyricist's denominational leaning.
Hymns, on the other hand, were available and accessible. The confusion coming out of Rome at the time did not help matters.
There is already a tradition of singing the simple Latin chant ordinary for Advent and Lent.
It is an undisputed fact that nearly every twentieth-century pope — and an ecumenical council — have called for the revival of Gregorian Chant in the Church’s living liturgy. Yet, after nearly a hundred years, we seem no closer to achieving this goal than when Pope Pius X urged that this buried treasure be recovered.
Why didn’t it happen? Although the secular world has recently shown renewed interest in and appreciation for classic Catholic music, can Catholics today hope to recover and "re-inculturate" the Church’s heritage of sacred music?
Susan Benofy, research editor of the Adoremus Bulletin, offers insight into the history of this long effort in a series of essays that begins in this issue.
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