My famous friends said at West Coast they had a trouble to find a church with church music. I will edit it.
However, it is not always thr case that speaking one's mind-even if it is the mind of the church to authorities is not without cost.
At first I felt betrayed by all this—why had they kept this such a big secret? Why did they hide this from me? When I expressed my amazement at the riches I was finding in these books and rubrics, I encountered people who were viscerally angry! Angry that I had found joy in our own tradition. Angry that I was ‘undoing Vatican II’; angry that I wasn’t buying what they had spent so much time and effort building.
Didn’t I know how bad the old days were? “No, I don’t. I’m only 35—Marty Haugen and Dan Schutte are the ‘bad old days’ for me! Now I get to sing awesome things like Ambrosian Hymns composed in the 4th century and Kyrie’s that are even more ancient. I get to sing Pange, lingua, gloriosi Corporis mysterium, and Adoro te devote, latens Deitas.”
It doesn't much matter to me if an east coast DM sees everything in black and white in terms of repertoire. People need time, reassurance and truly pastoral leadership.
It is worth the investment, keeping in mind that a point can be reached beyond which the congregation will not go. Such is reality.
I digress. The point is the the Church should do what the Church does, whether or not her people approve of it, and regardless of what her people will or won't do.
I joined the Church 7 years ago. I feel like I now understand more than ever before, the phrase "rules were made to be broken".
I think, indeed, that when faced with a rooted musical culture, one should make changes cautiously, respectfully, wisely, and with a professional maturity. But it doesn't seem to work both ways.
It is equally difficult to convince somebody who is addicted to cocaine to try meditation instead.
He clearly didn't understand pipe organs because he would do crazy things like hold a chord and turn the power off.
Listening the last wind escape through the pipes was a much anticipated treat for me at a previous instrument, and guaranteed I wouldn't end up standing in the parking lot unable to remember whether I'd turned off the blower or not.
narcissism, paranoia, egomania, selfishness, plain old childishness and immaturity, ecclesiastical snobbery and hauteur
since condorg has been there for several years,
It's obnoxious to assume that someone is not a US citizen because the person's English is imperfect.
So I speculated. It's obnoxious to assume that speculation is either malevolent OR assumption.
We cannot keep re-inventing the wheel here.
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