The third of the themes identified by Fr. Ratzinger as contributing to the shaping of the Constitution on Divine Revelation is the concept of tradition. This word had a history in Catholic theology which is most often associated with the “two source” theory of how God’s Revelation is present and known in the Church: partly in scriptis (Scripture) and partly in traditis (traditions). The broader idea of Tradition that emerged from the early 19th century onwards provided a unifying concept of how Revelation – God’s Word (eternally present in the Trinitarian communion, and historically revealed in the incarnate Word) is the true, unique “source” of both Scripture and Tradition. Thus no. 9 of Dei Verbum presents this key concept on the connection between Scripture and Tradition: “For both of them, flowing from the same divine wellspring, in a certain way merge into a unity and tend toward the same end.” And again in no. 10, we read: “Sacred tradition and sacred Scripture form one sacred deposit of the word of God, which is committed to the Church.” And again, in the next paragraph, Dei Verbum uses the phrase “interpreting the word of God, whether written or handed on…”
Yes. I suppose this is a bit of irrationality on my part, but I just can't bring myself to use the rallying hymn of the reformation at mass.
The book sells for $20, which means I have to pay $2 per book sold in royalties, smeared out to a bunch of other companies.
Does that mean, now, that for every $2 in royalty fees, $1.50 of it is being moved form my right pocket to my left pocket?
But, like all publishing companies, I sent him a contract early in his career which specifies that BIG3 owns the copyright to his (now very popular) hymntune CROOKED BOWTIE (8787D with Alleluias).
Of the royalties paid to myself, BEN YANKE'S share will be smaller and smaller as more and more pieces of music in the hymnal include a copyright attribution to BIG3 Publishing.
Meanwhile, text alterations, shoddy accompaniments, and whatever else that might be deemed copyrightable can be accomplished by salaried staff...
FR K: some hymnal publishers are wanting the industry standard royalty to be raised from 10% to 12.5%.ADAM WOOD: Why would some publishers want to pay more for their content?FR K: Adam, you overlooked one species of publisher that would benefit from a higher royalty percentage paid to hymnal contributors, namely, a publisher that, by and large, does not itself publish hymnals but which publishes new collections of hymns (either new texts, new tunes, or both).ADAM WOOD: So when you said "publishers" in that case - you meant copyright holders of materials published in hymnals, not publishers of hymnals.FR. K: Yes, but as you yourself wrote, there is some overlap. For instance, OCP, WLP, and GIA all publish collections of new music or new texts besides publishing hymnals.
ADAM WOOD:
New plan.
1. Build invisibility machine.
2. Find out where Ron Krisman lives
3. STEAL ALL THE ACCOMPANIMENT BOOKS FOR MYSELF!!
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