17. Sacred polyphony may be used in all liturgical functions, ... .
... one would be straying from the straight path were he to ...; and lastly were he to disdain and reject polyphonic music or singing in parts, even where it conforms to regulations issued by the Holy See.
It might be said the simple chant from one or two devoted hearts that accomplishes this is more acceptable than 40 professional singers on hire giving a “stellar performance.”
. I would require them to at least be Christian and seeking to live a moral life.
I am in total agreement with you- -I was only attempting to be charitable toward the cause of Incardination and his efforts... believe me... I am not on the 'side' of VII (or better, it's lax abuse) in any way whatsoever.You have the Second Vatican Council on your side, although the Council fathers go further than you do: they require that anyone who fulfills a liturgical ?munus be a Catholic known for his upright life. Hence, armies of Un-necessary Ministers of Holy Communion shouldn't include anyone known to be divorced-and-remarried, and lectors shouldn't be those who use their mouths to speak ill of the Church.
Would you accept a Catholic choir member in a state of mortal sin? What about ones inwardly questioning their faith or "cafeteria Catholic"? Those with less than orthodox opinions on certain matters? It seems to me that to draw a black and white distinction is rather academic.
Honestly, though - if you wouldn't pay the people in your choir, but instead choose to pay (even Catholic) "outsiders" to fill your choir, then why do you have the members you do?
God wants praise from the hearts of his faithful true and pure (“Worship in spirit and in truth”) It might be said the simple chant from one or two devoted hearts that accomplishes this is more acceptable than 40 professional singers on hire giving a “stellar performance.”
Our Roman liturgical music does not admit much individual expression. If I am going to a Baptist or Pentecostal church, sure, it's noteworthy that the singer on stage used to be a mafioso and is now an evangelist and now is going to tearfully sing "Softly and Tenderly, Jesus is Calling". But if I am going to Mass, I know the chant for today is on page X of the Gradual, and I want to hear it sung skilfully by well-trained voices. Who they are isn't part of the equation, just like I don't care who the celebrant is, if he's been properly ordained, sings well, and says the black and does the red. They are getting themselves out of the way and celebrating the rite the Church has given us.
This whole thread has a strong stink of "ewww, yucky gays; we can't have them around here with their gross lifestyle."
The thread is about Lenten polyphony, in the context of which someone asked about whether it is kosher to have non-Catholic musicians singing or otherwise serving leading roles in the public worship of the Church. Your reference to #2358 apparently missed my observation about the difference between contumacious public sinners and the rest of us, which has no necessary connection to those who suffer from the confusion referenced in #2358.
"Musicians should do what they do purely and simply for love of God. Catholic, non-Catholic - doesn't matter. No paid musicians at all."
I will agree that it is a fine line as Francis indicates in his response. On the other hand, there is a fine line in being overly critical of that participation as well... which was the analogy I made about paying musicians (I am paid, I'm not making a true argument against it).
I have mixed feelings about this and will offer scattered thoughts rather than a conclusive argument one way or the other. Church documents recognize both liturgical choirs (men or boys, may be vested and in the sanctuary) and choirs of the faithful, which cannot sing from the sanctuary. We read in De musica sacra et sacra liturgia thatthe absurdity of one ridiculous statement (universally excluding non-Catholics from singing in a Catholic choir because they are apparently incapable of being pure and faithful in their praise of God)
I cannot think of any part of the liturgy sung by a liturgical choir that cannot be sung by a lay "choir of the faithful." Furthermore, I'm unaware of any part of the liturgy sung by the choir that could not, at least in theory, be sung by the whole congregation. Are non-Catholics present as Mass or other liturgical services allowed to sing as part of the congregation? If the answer is yes, why should they be excluded from the choir? Does it matter why a non-Catholic wishes to sing at Mass? On the other hand, it would be going too far to say that non-Catholics have a right to participate in the liturgy, even merely as part of the congregation.The laity also participate actively in the liturgy by virtue of their baptismal character which enables them, in their own way, to offer the divine Victim to God the Father with the priest in the holy sacrifice of the Mass itself.
With Passiontide approaching I have some little reservations about that.We would probably also find near-unanimous agreement that it is preferable that anyone singing in church actually believe the words being vocalized.
Non-Catholics who physically attend Mass can verbally (or musically) make all the responses, and can take all the proper postures, and still not participate in the Mass.
in our primary role as a choir.they can't truly "participate" as members of the Church
Do you care to elaborate?With Passiontide approaching I have some little reservations about that.
But surely we do want them to believe that the scriptural account they're taken from is factual and inspired by the Holy Ghost!"We don't really want people to mean "Crucify Him!" all over again, even as Masses are cancelled in dioceses internationally.
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