Next to go should be those "We are Jesus" hymns in which the congregation (for the first time in two millennia of Christian hymnology) pretends that it's Christ. "Love one another as I have loved you/Care for each other, I have cared for you/Bear each other's burdens, bind each other's wounds/and so you will know my return." Who's praying to whom here? And is the Lord's "return" to be confined to our doing of his will? St. John didn't think so. "Be Not Afraid" and "You Are Mine" fit this category, as does the ubiquitous "I Am the Bread of Life," to which I was recently subjected on, of all days, Corpus Christi — the one day in the Church year completely devoted to the fact that we are not a self-feeding community giving each other "the bread of life" but a Eucharistic people nourished by the Lord's free gift of himself. "I am the bread of life" inverts that entire imagery, indeed falsifies it.
Could the top 25 list of songs represent what Catholics want to believe?
I've often wondered if I wrote a hymn paraphrase of Arius's hymn "There was a time when he was not" (perhaps in a Latin-American style) and sent it in to OCP.... how much money would I make when they published it?
To me this falls under the understanding that the Communion Antiphon was not to be sung by the people, but by singers who have a liturgical position.
one must examine the entire work [i'm sure that he would have said oeuvre, so this indicates that the filter was firmly in place] of the person rather than just a bit of his work to determine heresy.
Jeff, I think the singing the voice of God is discussed in other thread. And what I understand is that there's a significant difference between the whole congregation singing "I am the Bread," "or "We are the Voice' and listening to the choir singing the voice of God. (And sorry to say that in modern concept where the focus is on us and me, it gives very different perception. Also to me singing in vernacular language, instead of sacred language makes a difference.)
To me this falls under the understanding that the Communion Antiphon was not to be sung by the people, but by singers who have a liturgical position.
B) Norms drawn from the hierarchic and communal nature of the Liturgy
26. Liturgical services are not private functions, but are celebrations of the Church, which is the "sacrament of unity," namely, the holy people united and ordered under their bishops [33]
Therefore liturgical services pertain to the whole body of the Church; they manifest it and have effects upon it; but they concern the individual members of the Church in different ways, according to their differing rank, office, and actual participation.
27. It is to be stressed that whenever rites, according to their specific nature, make provision for communal celebration involving the presence and active participation of the faithful, this way of celebrating them is to be preferred, so far as possible, to a celebration that is individual and quasi-private.
This applies with especial force to the celebration of Mass and the administration of the sacraments, even though every Mass has of itself a public and social nature.
28. In liturgical celebrations each person, minister or layman, who has an office to perform, should do all of, but only, those parts which pertain to his office by the nature of the rite and the principles of liturgy.
29. Servers, lectors commentators, and members of the choir also exercise a genuine liturgical function. They ought, therefore, to discharge their office with the sincere piety and decorum demanded by so exalted a ministry and rightly expected of them by God's people.
Consequently they must all be deeply imbued with the spirit of the liturgy, each in his own measure, and they must be trained to perform their functions in a correct and orderly manner.
30. To promote active participation, the people should be encouraged to take part by means of acclamations, responses, psalmody, antiphons, and songs, as well as by actions, gestures, and bodily attitudes. And at the proper times all should observe a reverent silence.
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