Slow compound meter.
I think that in my mind that this phrase indicates a parish in which the people get their way, as their own wants and desires as far as music and liturgy drive the entire show.
Expect waterfalls, banners and even...clowns. And a Barney Mass.
But this is just in my mind. Other's mileage will vary.
Not just in your mind, but in the church offices, the committees, and the masked intentions of the decision makers of a parish.
church music should be governed by the criteria of liturgical, pastoral, and musical, in that order. So liturgical concerns outweigh pastoral ones, and pastoral outweigh musical.
....but that the people want....
There is a certain coterie of folk who are fond of telling us what the people want. Did the people come to them and tell them that? No! These folk simply decided on everybody's behalf,
I also fail to see how liturgical, pastoral, and musical can be mutually exclusive categories.
In no universe that I wish to inhabit does a "pastoral" concern trump a music concern.
Such an approach would be divisive and would even likely cause a loss of faith for some people.
Folksin my areaeverywheretend toalmost always resent being dictated to,even ifespecially when the dictator is correct
It is also important to remember that most of the peoplewe work with in the parish settingeverywhere do not haveour training or experiencea lick of common sense or decency and so we need tobring them along slowly by first meeting them where they are.beat them with an antique push broom while throwing cheese at them
A good lesson there for the uplifted wannabes.
Again, this notion of divisiveness. Who divides from whom? Does the DM divide the people, or do they divide themselves based on the actions of the DM, because some of them cannot or will not accept the changes that are to come?
Consider the case of Fr. Robideau: was it he who divided his parish, or was it his parish that divided itself over him?
I disagree that certain approaches or actions or types of music or choices we make as DMs are "divisive." I do agree that people in certain places will divide themselves over whether or not they like or dislike the change that has been made. I want to point out that this happens with any change you make at the parish level: even introducing a new Mass setting.
The parish gets divided when they have to make a choice about whether or not they like something you've done. That's when you get "divisiveness," and at this point, we're worrying about who is right, not what is right, which is contained in the Church's documents and teachings, which PGA has rightly pointed out in several places on this forum.
You can talk semantics about who did the dividing and where the blame SHOULD go. But any of those people involved in those cases would tell you the same thing: "Whether the music was good or bad before, the parish was at least not DIVIDED the way it is today."
You are talking about "the way things ought to be." I'm talking about "the way things are."
These things have serious consequences. People literally leave the faith when they feel the rug has been pulled out from under them at their parish. Couple these types of dramatic, sudden music changes with a pastor who says "If you don't like it, leave" when they complain, and you've got a real recipe for someone actually leaving the Church and never coming back.
Jesus Christ himself was divisive, and so was His message. He was also vehemently vilified for this. Was He wrong to bring His message to the world because it might have divided the people?
Surely you don't mean to compare your judgment as a professional Church musician with the divine teachings of the eternal Word (who prayed to his Father ut unum sint). Also, Latin and chant--as wonderful as they are--are not of divine mandate, and it would be troubling to suggest that their preservation or promotion was worth the cost of a single immortal soul. This is what it means to give priority to pastoral judgement.
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