This makes me wonder: Will the Swine Schola will intone Pigorian Chant ?If you are ever successful in convincing a friend of something by showing that Church Documents agree with you, then you have some amazing pedagogical talents, and should strongly consider starting a swine schola.
[para. 60b:] The difference between sacred, and secular music must be taken into consideration. Some musical instruments, such as the classic organ, are naturally appropriate for sacred music; others, such as string instruments which are played with a bow, are easily adapted to liturgical use. But there are some instruments which, by common estimation, are so associated with secular music that they are not at all adaptable for sacred use.
That would seem to rule out electric guitars, drum sets, and other instruments that are associated primarily with dance music and other entertainment music.
JUDE
20 It is for you, beloved, to make your most holy faith the foundation of your lives, and to go on praying in the power of the Holy Spirit;
21 to maintain yourselves in the love of God, and wait for the mercy of our Lord Jesus Christ, with eternal life for your goal.
22 To some you must give a hearing, and confute them;
23 others you must pluck out of the fire, and rescue them; others again you can only pity, while you shun them; even the outward fringe of what the flesh has defiled must be hateful to you.
24 There is one who can keep you clear of fault, and enable you to stand in the presence of his glory, triumphant and unreproved, when our Lord Jesus Christ comes;
25 to him, who alone is God, to him, who gives us salvation through Jesus Christ our Lord, glory and majesty and power and domination are due, before time was, and now, and for all ages. Amen.
1 THESSALONIANS 5
9 God has not destined us for vengeance; he means us to win salvation through our Lord Jesus Christ,
10 who has died for our sakes, that we, waking or sleeping, may find life with him.
11 Go on, then, encouraging one another and building up one another's faith.
12 Brethren, we would ask you to pay deference to those who work among you, those who have charge of you in the Lord, and give you directions;
13 make it a rule of charity to hold them in special esteem, in honour of the duty they perform, and maintain unity with them.
14 And, brethren, let us make this appeal to you; warn the vagabonds, encourage the fainthearted, support the waverers, be patient towards all.
15 See to it that nobody repays injury with injury; you must aim always at what is best, for one another and for all around you.
Music and instruments aren't exempt from the inertia of evolution, even revolution. One of the benefits of revolution, post Psalm 150, was the repeal of the association of the earliest manifestations of wind driven reed organs with the secular plays and celebrations of the plazas and marketplaces within the city walls encompassing both castle and cathedral.
All well and good. But nowhere in scripture or Church law, is authority given to those who are not, and have never been, in charge.
In the conclusion of the document posted early on in this thread, our Holy Father writes:
I would like to conclude my remarks with a fine quotation from Mahatma Gandhi which I recently found in a calendar. Gandhi mentions the three “living areas” of the cosmos and notes that each of these involves a specific manner of existing. Fish live in the sea, and they are silent. Animals on earth below, bark and bray. But the birds who inhabit the heavens sing. Silence is proper to the sea, braying is proper to the earth, and singing belongs to heaven. But man has a share in all three, for within himself he bears the depths of the sea, the burden of the earth and the heights of heaven. Hence he possesses all three properties: silence, bellowing and singing.
Today, I would like to add, we see that for man deprived of transcendence there remains only braying, because he desires to be earth arid nothing more, indeed tries to make the heavens and the ocean deep to be his earth. True liturgy, the liturgy of the communion of saints, gives man once again his completeness. It instructs him once again in silence and in singing by opening for him the depths of the sea and by teaching him to fly—the existence of the angels. By “lifting up the heart;” true liturgy allows the buried song to resound in man once again. Indeed, we could now actually say that true liturgy can be recognized by the fact that it liberates from everyday activity and restores to us both the depths and the heights: silence and singing. True liturgy is recognizable because it is cosmic and not limited to a group. True liturgy sings with the angels, and true liturgy is silent with the expectant depths of the universe. And thus true liturgy redeems the earth.
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