singing into a microphone during congregational singing
cantor( downstairs) at some masses, ... insists on cranking up Mike and controlling all tempos.
the most knowledgeable church musician should be setting the tempi. This should be the organist,
In the case of the song in question here, the question to be asking is not how fast or slow, but whether to or not to sing this anthropocentric song at a theocentric mass. (The correct answer, should there be any doubt, is 'not to'.)But I'm not convinced...
Well, God is, after all, mentioned in this song. Rather, his throne (upon which he presumably sits), and only his throne, is mentioned. This oblique reference is hardly enough to baptise a spiritual song which, really, is all about mankind (anthropo-centric) and the joy of the faithful who gather to cross a purely metaphorical and imaginary river which is said repeatedly (as in over and over - and over again) to be beautiful. It is, in a word, all about 'us' and the river. God's throne is mentioned, but he himself is not. No praise or worship of him is mentioned or offered. All this makes this a religious song which is unfit for liturgical, ritual, use in a mass which must be totally theo-centric, God centred. There may be times and places for religious songs such as this; but the mass or any other ritual celebration is not one of them.Please explain...
Aren't we supposed to approach God as little children
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