Singing is the main act of adoration in the service. I might even say it is like a sacramental: it is a physical, emotional, intellectual and spiritual act; it is a personal confession of faith made amid a confessing congregation; it is the high point of their full, conscious, active participation in the service. And if they sing classic hymns, their singing is an act of solidarity with past generations, going back to the Reformation, which they regard as practically a rediscovery of the gospel.
He finally was released on June 19 and hitched a ride on a milk truck back to his hometown, Traunstein.
His family was happy to see him. "Of course, for full joy, something was missing. Since the beginning of April, there had been no word from Georg," he remembered. "So there was a quiet worry in our house."
Suddenly, in the middle of July, in walked Georg, tanned and unharmed. He sat at the piano and banged out the hymn "Grosser Gott, wir loben Dich," "Mighty God, we praise You" as father, mother, sister Maria and Joseph rejoiced. [This is actually Holy God, We Praise Thy Name--the Te Deum.]
The war was truly over. He wrote: "The following months of regained freedom, which we now had learned to value so much, belong to the happiest months of my life."
Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/story/2005/04/19/pope-recalls-being-german-pow/#ixzz2aR9jbjeT
Question whether it is fine or not for Catholic organists to play at protestant services. (comments on this one please)
Many Protestants also don't complain about 30-minute sermons.
16. One cannot find anything more religious and more joyful in sacred celebrations than a whole congregation expressing its faith and devotion in song.
The dumb, mute congregations at Catholic churches are a scandal, and ought to be a source of shame for these people. It is a flat-out refusal to give God the glory due unto Him. No excuse or hogwash about "interior" this or that can cover up that basic reality. End of story.
And it's a bit dependent on what you want them to sing. When I'm attending another Mass, I'm sorry, but I just can't bring myself to sing a sacro-pop "Glory to God."
The dumb, mute congregations at Catholic churches are a scandal, and ought to be a source of shame for these people. It is a flat-out refusal to give God the glory due unto Him. No excuse or hogwash about "interior" this or that can cover up that basic reality. End of story.
What I meant was not that singing lustily was a bad idea ( which I will explain in a moment), but that the fact that people were singing lustily didn't mean that they 1) understood what they were singing; and 2) heartily agreed with the sentiments of the songs - or cared, for that matter.
In my young life (I'm only 45), I've attended many events -- which I won't catalogue for you - for which the purpose was to get excited. As I've said elsewhere recently, it matters what feeds the fire. Large groups of people, using the "get excited" mantra, can then be used as a powerful weapon mob, which can easily be diverted from its "original" agenda.
I'll never make a salesman: "Get excited. Be excited about getting excited. Get excited about being even more excited. Now....... Go out and ............."
Near the end of my time in a wonderful parish with a straight-shooter priest I was asked to play for a funeral. I agreed. I found that the family of the deceased wanted the Latin chants which were available in the missalettes, and a few simple hymns, and..... they didn't need much organ at all, for they sang well. Those present prayed for the repose of the soul of the deceased.
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