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Cardinal Brandmüller: The Form of the Post-Conciliar Liturgy is not Attributable to the Second Vatican Council

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Many of you will likely have already seen this but I think its important to mention for the sake of those who have not as yet come across it.

Rorate Caeli have translated an excerpt from an interview published yesterday in Vatican Insider by Walter Cardinal Brandmüller. In the course of that interview he commented accordingly on the subject of the post-conciliar liturgy and liturgical experience when asked about the fruits of the Second Vatican Council:

I must emphasise that the form of the post-conciliar liturgy with all its distortions, is not attributable to the Council or to the Liturgy Constitution established during Vatican II which by the way has not really been implemented even to this day. The indiscriminate removal of Latin and Gregorian Chants from liturgical celebrations and the erection of numerous altars were absolutely not acts prescribed by the Council.

With the benefit of hindsight, let us cast our minds back in particular to the lack of sensitivity shown in terms of care for the faithful and in the pastoral carelessness shown in the liturgical form. One need only think of the Church’s excesses, reminiscent of the [Iconoclastic crisis] which occurred in the [8th] century. Excesses which catapulted numerous faithful into total chaos, leaving many fumbling around in the dark.

Just about anything and everything has been said on this subject. Meanwhile, the liturgy has come to be seen as a mirror image of Church life, subject to an organic historical evolution which cannot - as did indeed happen - suddenly be changed by decree par ordre de mufti. And we are still paying the price today.

Two Items of Note: Brazil and the Philippines

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A couple of recent events to share. First, on Saturday, August 25th, Bishop Athanasius Schneider celebrated a Solemn Pontifical Mass from the faldstool in the mid-18th century cathedral of Belém in Brazil, the Catedral Metropolitana Nossa Senhora das Graças.




Source: http://caius-santachiesa.blogspot.ca/2012/08/algumas-fotos-do-pontifical-de-dom.html

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The second item I wished to bring to your attention is a Mass offered in the usus antiquior by Msgr. Seamus Patrick Horgan, first secretary of the Apostolic Nunciature in the Philippines on August 26th.




Vestment Work Seen in Berlin

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About a week ago we showed some images from Berlin, Germany and I had commented as an aside that the vestments used had a certain Other Modern quality to them. At the time the best I could offer was to enlarge the photos we had, which only gave a vague sense of the vestments but with little in the way of detail. Since then, the photographer has sent us a selection of these same photos in higher resolution.



I am particularly taken by the coloured, geometric designs in the dalmatic which is simple, original and beautiful. They remind me of some of the vestment work found at the Abbey of Le Barroux.

Here are some further details:




The particular reason I am inclined to show vestments like these is not only because I think they are interesting, but also because I believe one of the challenges we face within the liturgical arts is to resist falling into the pattern of mass produced "catalogue designs" -- what we might even call cliche's.

A great deal can be done with a little imagination, a good sense of colour and a willingness to seek out interesting textiles in the creation of vestments -- and a willingness to think beyond the catalogue styles.

An Outdoor Mass with a Difference

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Often when we think of outdoor Masses we tend to think of events that are not particularly condusive to prayer or to the proper spirit of the liturgy. There are, however, some evident exceptions of course; one of the most noteworthy and familiar is found within the context of the Chartres Pilgrimage.

I mention this because recently one of our readers sent in some photos to us from an outdoor Mass at a Rural Life Conference in Charlton, Iowa. We are told how the priest who coordinated this event took a great deal of time and effort to arrange things such that, despite the outdoor circumstances, would still be befitting the dignity of the sacred liturgy. Having seen the order of service as well, I note that he also prepared a detailed catechesis on the altar arrangement as well as the tradition of ad orientem as it relates to our liturgical history, tradition and theology. Reading it, it is evident that this is a priest who is deeply influenced by Pope Benedict XVI and his new liturgical movement.






More Vestment Work: A Conical Chasuble

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Continuing on with our consideration of some more unique vestments, I am happy to present the following chasuble which was sent to me by one of our readers yesterday.

As you will see it is in the conical style and the orphreys seem to have a very nice bit of texture inclusive of some sort of pearl like beading. (It is my own view that this sort of very thin orphrey with strong linear qualities works particularly well with the conical form.) The textile itself is rather interesting in its design and the photos would suggest to me that the predominant tonality is gold. (Incidentally, the owner of this vestment is missing some pieces and so would like to know if anyone knows if this same textile can still be purchased anywhere. Please leave suggestions in the comments.)

Quite a beautiful piece of work in my estimation. While not absolutely necessary, this sort of vestment would work particularly well with apparels.








A Rare Image from the Pontifical Liturgy of Lyon

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John Sonnen recently dug up an interesting photo which shows the then nuncio of France and future Pope John XXIII apparently celebrating a pontifical Mass in accordance with the rite of Lyon:


Elements that would suggest this is the pontifical Lyon rite are the gremial being carried by two coped attendants before the prelate and the fully vested priests before him.

For more on these interesting rites and ceremonies, do see the following posts:

Ceremonial Details of the Pontifical Mass in the Rite of Lyons - Part I: Mass of the Catechumens

Rare Video Footage of the Pontifical Liturgy According to the Rite of Lyons

There you can see further illustrations and photos.

It is my hope that I will some day be able to pursue the second and final part of "Ceremonial Details of the Pontifical Mass in the Rite of Lyons" for which I have still further photographs to share with our readers in addition to further ceremonial details.

The Institute of Catholic Culture - An Organisational Model for the New Evangelisation

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How to make your organisation at once local and personal and still gain national reach and recognition

I recently gave two talks in Virginia (close to Washington DC) at the invitation of the Institute of Catholic Culture. What impressed me about them was the organisational model that their founder and Executive Director Deacon Sabatino Carnazzo has developed. I have never seen anything quite like it before. I think that this has applications in fields beyond what the ICC is involved with. It's mission is stated here: the Institute of Catholic Culture is an adult catechetical organization, faithful to the Magisterium of the Catholic Church, and dedicated to the Church’s call for a new evangelization. The Institute seeks to fulfill its mission by offering education programs structured upon the classical liberal arts and by offering opportunities in which authentic Catholic culture is experienced and lived.

First of all, this mission seems to me to fulfill what is needed at the moment. The need is for education. We also have to ask ourselves, in my opinion, why educate? Who are we trying to reach? I personally do not think that any programme, or any number of programmes will educate society into transformation. Most people won't be educated, or not without some other agent of transformation. I believe that we are trying to reach those who will be the creators of the new culture. Thinking now of the fine arts, those who create art and music are the ones who will create the forms that participate in the timeless principles that unite all Catholic culture; yet also speaks directly to the modern age. We looking for something that is both new and timeless. This is the popular culture that is beautiful, true and good and will create the 'new epiphany of beauty' called for by John Paul II. This is what will in turn open people's hearts so that they will accept the Word. I addressed this in a previous article Why Create New Art or Music? The people who we need to reach and form are the future artists, composers and the patrons who will pay them to do it.

I spoke on a Friday evening and a Sunday evening and both times the hall was packed with nearly 200 people. I don't flatter myself here, they came because they trusted the ICC to provide lectures that interest them. The Institute organises at least two lectures every week in its curriculum of learning; and each attracts similar numbers. Furthermore, people were watching live on the internet; and DVDs of previous talks were available to all who come, for free. Their organisation was such that by Sunday a DVD of my Friday talk was being distributed. For those who are interested you can see my two talks online at the their website here: Culture, Liturgy and Cosmos; and here: Catholic Traditions in Sacred Art. From the questions people were asking afterwards, many in the audience were artists who were serious about contributing to the New Evangelisation. All of this and the salaries of its employees are funded by many voluntary contributions from those who attend the lectures, not from large donations.

The Institute's model is one of creating a local community of learning. People are drawn from about 10 parishes locally. This means that they have to be in an urban area where the population is large enough to have 10 parishes that a close enough so that people will travel to the talks. They come because the talks are interesting and of high quality and they enjoy the whole experience. For most lectures, Deacon Carnazzo draws on professors from nearby Christendom College. He says that having good speakers and people who are used to teaching your material is vital. In order to give variety he occasionally pays for speakers to come in from outside. The week before I came Denis McNamara gave a talk on sacred architecture (and you can see his presentations here).

At each talk food is available and the lecture hall is prepared so that it is comfortable and looks attractive. One talk (on the transcendentals!) was held outside in a park overlooking waterfalls on the Potomac River and sausages were grilled for any who wanted them. This organisation is possible because there is a team of volunteers who work to make it all happen. Deacon Carnazzo has created a community devoted to learning and to giving back to the organisation. He has done this by careful attention to the personal element. He makes sure that people enjoy the whole expereince. After my Sunday talk I was ready to return to my hotel. He told me that I would have to wait because he and Melanie Baker, his assistant, always stay on to socialise with any, but especially any volunteers, who want to stay on after the lecture.

This personal touch is vital for the growth of the program, and in my belief to the success of the process of its education. The traditional model for a college, for example, was built around the idea of creating a community of learning because the personal relationships that it engendered (all centred on the liturgical life of the community) allowed for the possibility of God's grace to transform information learnt into wisdom. This is why the old Oxford colleges are designed as they are.

But this model has a limit to how much it can grow. The group of people cannot grow too large, otherwise this sense of community will be lost. If the Institute of Catholic Culture is to grow, therefore, the answer is not for it to develop a larger and larger group of people (with a beaurocracy growing along with it to organise them), but rather, to create new communities of learning. This is what Oxford University did. When each college reached its limit (perhaps 300 at most), it was not allowed to grow, but instead new colleges were founded.

I know that Deacon Carnazzo is aware of this because I had this very conversation with him during my weekend stay.

Although, their focus is on lectures, they do organise events around the liturgy and promote the liturgy of the hours especially by connecting events to the celebration of Vespers. They have organised traditional Latin Vespers, Choral Evensong by a congregation from the Ordinariate and Vespers in the Eastern liturgy. I have posted two posters (if you forgive the pun). One is for a Byzantine Vespers at Melkite Catholic church which is on Saturday September 1st at Holy Transfiguration Church in McLean, Virginia. This is combined with a Middle Eastern Food Festival at the Church and before and after Vespers, Deacon Carnazzo will give tours of the church describing its design and explaining the importance of the icons to the liturgy.



Below a similar poster for the Choral Evensong earlier this year.



Most of their events are in a very smart church hall in the area, but sometimes they go for a more spectacular site, on the bank of the Potomac River. Here is the location for the talk on the transcendentals, in which the sunshine of the good, the true and the beautiful (and perfectly grilled sausages and burgers) more than made up for the rain.



Basilica della Santissima Trinità di Saccargia, Sardinia, Italy


22nd Sunday, English Propers

A Talk in Boston on the Traditional Liturgy

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For those who are in the Boston area, I will be delivering a talk this coming Friday evening at the invitation of Juventutem Boston. Mass will be celebrated in the lower church of the Cathedral of the Holy Cross at 7:30 p.m. (75 Union Park Street), following which, I will be speaking about "The Culture of the Traditional Liturgy." This event is entirely open to the public, and I will be happy to answer questions from the audience afterwards. (Entrance to the lower church is on the left side of the building as you face the building from the front.)

Musical Discretion and Power

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Every weekend or so, some name composer of mainstream Catholic music is out and about giving a workshop in a parish somewhere. I’ve been to enough of these to pretty much know what they are going say in advance.

They stand in front of parish musicians and repeatedly tell them that the most important job is to engage the congregation to the point that people feel like singing, and that means catchy tunes and simple words.

And how to decide between the hundreds of such songs in the mainstream pew resources? The answer is to look at the theme of the week, which is given by the readings. Flip through the book and find a song that seems to match in some way. Check the theme index. Then consider and anticipate the congregation’s reactions the pieces of your choosing and give it your best shot.

Sadly, nearly everything about this is wrong. In this model, the musicians are being charged with making the liturgy happen on a week-to-week basis. The Church struggles with provide liturgical books with deep roots in history, but the musicians show up and put five minutes of thought into making decisions about styles and texts that have a gigantic effect on the overall liturgical ethos. It is too much responsibility to put on their shoulders, and no one is competent to pull it off.

What is restraining and constraining the musician’s range of play in this model? Only their own subjective view of what’s right and what works. in practice, this is no restraint at all.

The liturgy itself is being held hostage to a few people’s on-the-spot views of what the message should be and what should take place. A major aspect of the Mass, one that can make or break the entire point of the ritual, is being put in the hands of people who have little or no substantive guidance or basis for their decision making.

To be sure, it is flattering for the musicians to hear that they have this power. When the workshop leader comes and tell them this, their egos get a boost. Most aren’t paid and most are really trained, so this kind of responsibility can be welcome in lieu of material reward. It is to be accept a job that is almost priestly but without the trouble of six years of training and ordination. But the truth is that no actor in the liturgical world should have this level of power and discretion, and it is wrong to expect this of anyone.

What’s more, from what I can observe from parishes I visit, it doesn’t actually accomplish the goal. What actually happens is that people feel as if the musicians are overreaching and asking something of the congregation that the people don’t feel the need to give. Mandatory enthusiasm for someone else’s project doesn’t go over well in any aspect of life, especially not in music. Many people sit there vaguely and habitually protesting in their minds. So the musicians end up with a feeling of failure and confusion. Or they blame others and end up getting mad about the people and their refusal to go with the program.

What, then, is the constraint? Where are the boundaries? Where are the guidelines? The second Vatican Council plainly stated: Gregorian chant is to have first place at Mass. This statement has profound significance if you understand something of the structure of the liturgy and the purpose and applicability of Gregorian chant within it.

The trouble is that hardly anyone does understand this. Most everyone today think that Gregorian chant is a style or a genre, one marked by a monkish solemnity. They figure that, given that, it is enough to sing Pange Lingua on Holy Thursday, or sprinkle in a bit of Latin during Lent. Surely that is enough.

But this characterization completely misses the point. Gregorian chant’s distinct contribution is that it is the most complete and robust body of music for the ritual of the Roman Rite that elevates and ennobles the word of God in the liturgy itself. The point is not to sing chant but to sing the liturgy itself, meaning the text that is assigned to be sung at the place in the Mass where this particular text is intended to be sung. The notes are important but secondary to the word.

In other words, it is not our job to discern themes of the day and take over the job from the Church of pushing texts that we find appropriate. The texts for singing at Mass are already given to us. There is an entrance text, a Psalm text, an offertory text, and a communion text. These are in the liturgical books. The counsel to pick and choose whatever you want amounts to a counsel to ignore the liturgy of the Church and substitute something of your own making.

(If you want to know more about these points, there is no better source that William Mahrt’s The Musical Shape of the Liturgy (CMAA, 2012). Here is the fully presentation of the bracing but uplifting reality.)

So we can see that the Council’s embrace of chant was not about some old men who wanted to hear old-style music rather than new music. People who ignore chant and diminish its place in liturgy like to think this is true, but personal or generational preference has nothing to do with it. Nor is tradition the whole story. The embrace of chant is really the embrace of the liturgical text that is to be sung, and a drawing attention to the most complete and ideal musical model for presenting that text.

Of course musicians do not know that they are throwing out whole parts of the liturgy that have been integral to the musical experience of the Mass dating as far back as documentary history. Nor do the workshop leaders intend to do violence to the liturgy in this way. Most just don’t know about Mass propers and the role of the choir. Or if they do know, they find the project of singing propers to not be viable because... well... the project really hasn’t been picked up much over these last fifty years.

To be sure, this last point has been a serious problem. Musicians have not really had any really means of singing Mass propers. They are not in the hymnbooks. Bishops haven’t really insisted on them. Confusion about these points has been everywhere. The official chant books of the Church, to the extent anyone knows about them at all, seem forbidding. And as self justification for not following any guidelines, people could always point to the can-of-worms-opening clause in the General Instruction that permits “another suitable song” to replace propers when necessary.

But thanks mostly to the efforts of the Church Music Association of America, we now have the beginnings of a growing repertoire of music that is both accessible to parishes and seeks to do what the Church intends with regard to the liturgy, which is to say that these new resources set the liturgical word to music. The idea is to provide a bridge to the ideal, to re-root the singing at Mass in a coherent framework, to restrain the wandering power of the subjective imagination of musicians, and to unleash a new kind of beauty that comes with following both the letter and spirit of the liturgy itself.

For most Church musicians, this is a completely new way of thinking. It is an amazing thing to discover. It also comes with a new mandate, not to rule but to serve, not to invent but to re-discover what is, not to impose but to submit in humility to what is bigger and greater than ourselves. To discover Mass propers as the musical mandate is also a liberating experience because it frees us from implausible and unworkable tasks and gives us a means of truly contributing to the life of the liturgy.

Yet Another Outdoor Mass -- This Time from Ireland

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I was very interested in your recent article regarding the outdoor Mass in the USA. In this regard, I am sending you some images of an outdoor Mass which was celebrated by the Apostolic Nuncio to Ireland, Archbishop Charles-John Browne. The Mass was offered at the ancient monastic site of Clonmacnois which Youth 2000 held its annual summer festival. The pictures are evidence of the youth group's efforts to follow the example of Pope Benedict with regard to the Sacred Liturgy.

For this occasion, the vestments and antependium were borrowed from the collection at Haddington Road Chuch and were recently displayed during the Eucharistic Congress in Dublin. As part of the preparations for the Mass, the organisers were careful to ensure an altar stone was placed in the temporary wooden altar.




Upcoming Ordinariate Event

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This event looks rather interesting. Do take note that the particular liturgical books being used for this particular event is that of the pastoral provision in the United States, the Book of Divine Worship.


Re-Dedication of the Monastic Church of Saint Michel de Kergonan

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The blessing of any church is always a special and unique occasion, and all the more so when it is a monastic church.

The following video shows excepts of the dedication of the monastic church of Saint Michel de Kergonan which has been completely rebuilt following a fire five years ago. It was recently re-dedicated by Bishop Centene of Vannes (Brittany, France).

The Mass, which was offered according to the Ordinary Form of the Roman Rite was celebrated ad orientem with a goodly amount of Latin and Gregorian chant.

Many thanks to one of our readers in France for bringing it to our attention.

Renovation: St. Thomas More, Scranton

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We haven't shown a "before and after" church renovation for awhile and this one comes within the context of St. Thomas More Catholic Parish -- an Ordinariate parish in Scranton, Pennsylvania.

BEFORE


AFTER


Here is a closer view of the high altar:


In addition to the obvious sanctuary renovations, including the communion rail which was installed, a variety of other features were also tackled as part of this church purchase. You can read more about it in the parish newsletter.

Architecture: Basilique Sainte-Marie-Madeleine de Vézelay, France

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[A number of you really enjoyed our last dip into sacred architecture so I thought we would show you some more.]



Online Liturgical Resources: Martyrologies on Googlebooks

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In one of my regular searches through the wilds of googlebooks, I recently came across a few interesting examples of old Martyrologies. The first of these was published in 1520 for the use of Benedictine monks, without indication of the congregation. The title page is missing, but the type is a nice example of the printed liturgical works of the period. Many of the individual entries are much shorter than those of the Roman Martyrology revised by Cardinal Baronius in the later 16th century, which aimed to be a more universal catalog of Saints for the Universal Church. Also notice that the calculation of the phases of the moon is delineated by only 19 letters of the alphabet, where the post-Tridentine Martyrologies incorporate the Gregorian Calendar reform, and count the moon though 31 phases delineated by various upper and lower case letters.

The canonical hour of Prime is divided into two parts. The first part consists of the the hymn, the psalmody, the chapter, a short responsory, and a prayer. (In monastic breviaries, this prayer is preceded by Kyrie eleison and the Lord's Prayer; in the non-monastic breviaries, by a series of versicles called "Preces", but these are often omitted.) The second part of Prime is known as the Chapter Office, consisting of the Martyrology, and then a series of prayers for the sanctification of the day's work. Among Benedictine monks, a chapter of the Rule of St. Benedict is read at the end of the Chapter Office; therefore, many editions of the Martyrology include the Rule at the end, as this one does.


The edition noted above contains no indications of how much of the Rule is to be read or on which days; on the other hand, this 1689 Cistercian Martyrology divides the Rule into roughly 90 sections so that one can be read each day, and the whole four times a year. It was the custom of the Cistercians to follow the reading of the Rule with a section of the Order's Constitutions, which are not, however, included in this book. Each entry of the Martyrology is followed by another entry in small type with notices of Cistercian Saints and Blesseds, including the name of the abbey where they lived. The first reading of the Rule begins each year not on January 1st, but March 21st, the feast of St. Benedict and the anniversary of the founding of Citeaux in 1098 by St. Robert of Molesmes.


The third book is called "The Martyrology of the Church of Milan", but is not (sadly!) a complete Ambrosian Martyrology. It is rather a catalog of Saints associated in one way or another with the see of Milan, including their entries as they appears in the Roman Martyrology or one of its derivatives, and extensive notes about the life of the Saint.


For those who are interested, there is a wealth of such things to be found on googlebooks. Any search criterion such as the name of a liturgical book ("Martyrologium", "Missale" etc.) often turns up very interesting results if you add the word "ordinis" or the name of a particular church, such as "Sarum". Happy hunting!

Bishop Athanasius Schneider and the New Cathedral at Karaganda

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You can read a partial English translation of the Zenit interview with Bishop Athanasius Schneider at Rorate Caeli which concerns the new cathedral at Karaganda, but here are a few images of it. It is set to be consecrated on September 9th.




The Music of Roman Hurko and the Principle of Noble Accessibility

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Below is some new music written by Roman Hurko, a Byzantine Catholic. It is the Our Father from his Liturgy of St John Chrysostom, which has recently come to my attention.

I have written a couple of times on the importance reestablishing our traditions of art and music as living traditions in which there is a dynamic creativity that communicates to people today. We are looking for a popular culture that does not compromise on its principles. The phrase that seems to summarise this idea is 'noble accessibility'.

My first reaction to the music of Hurko was that although I like it, might not correspond to the principle of noble accessibility. I can't imagine many congregations being able to sing this - it is just too difficult. It was my colleague Paul Jernberg a choral music specialist and himself a composer who introduced me to this music. In some ways this is surprising, for Paul is adamant that this principle of noble accessibility must be present in liturgical music. So I asked him about to tell more about this. The points he made in response are given below, but to summarise, he told me that for him there are two aspects accessibility. First is one that means that the music is simple enough for an average congregation can sing - the St Michael Prayer that I recently featured comes into this category. The second emphasises the meditative aspect of liturgical music - it might be so difficult to sing that only the choir can handle it, but it must something that the ordinary congregation can listen to easily and in the right way. All of this without compromising on its beauty. Here is what he wrote:

• The noble accessibilty that needs to characterize all Catholic sacred music, is important both in congregational and choral music, each of which has an important place in the Liturgy.

• Whereas music composed for the congregation needs to be “singable”, music composed for choirs needs to be accessible to the minds and hearts of the congregation as they hear it! It needs to communicate in a musical language that the faithful can readily receive, and which through its beauty and sacred character lifts hearts to the transcendent.

• Yes, there might be some formation needed here, as those unaccustomed to the tradition of Sacred Music adjust to its contemplative nature. However, one should not be required to undergo extensive musical training in order to appreciate music in the Liturgy! The formation required will be more theological and spiritual, rather than musical.

• The choral music of Roman Hurko, composed for choirs singing the Divine Liturgy of St. John Chrysostom (Eastern Catholic Rite), is an eminent example of this noble accessibility in choral music. His melodies, harmonies and rhythms are composed in such a way as to communicate
to the common man, a profound beauty that lifts the heart and mind to prayer.

This aspect of listening as well as singing is important in the liturgy. Some settings or parts emphasize the vocal participation of the congregation; others, such as polyphonic settings in the Western tradition, call forth the more meditative participation of the congregation. Antiphonal singing, an important aspect of both Eastern and Western liturgical traditions, engages us in both ways. Sometimes this involves having the congregation divided into two groups, while at other times the antiphonal principle is manifested through the choir alternating with congregation. In the latter case, it is appropriate for the choir to sing more ornately beautiful and challenging settings, corresponding to their musical abilities, while the congregation sings simpler arrangements.

As an artist I am always thinking about the parallels between sacred art and music. In the case of art participation is not a requirement - we don't expect everybody to be painting in church, that would be art therapy! But the other aspect of accessibility does apply. It is down to artists to work within the traditional forms in such a way that ordinary church goers will respond easily and willingly so that it raises their hearts and minds to God.

Roman Hurko's website is here; and a link through to his iTunes page, for anyone who would like to download his music, is here.

Paul Jernberg is Composer-in-Residence at Thomas More College of Liberal Arts, Merrimack, NH.

English Propers, 23rd Sunday

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I'm pleased to announce a new book, the Parish Book of Psalms, by Arlene Oost-Zinner. It is a collection of a cappella Responsorial Psalm settings composed in the Gregorian tradition. These settings, already widely-used through the Chabanel Psalms project, are easy and accessible for congregations, and provide a way to introduce plainchant in English in the average parish. They employ Gregorian Psalm tones, and include all verses in form fully notated for ease of singing.

This volume includes psalms for the complete three-year lectionary cycle of Sunday and holy day Masses according to the liturgical calendar for the U.S.A. It can be used by a lone cantor or full choir.

I'll be posting them week by week. Remember when you hear these that these are an alternative not to the Gregorian Gradual but to the usual Psalm between the readings in average parishes. In many ways, this is the most regrettable aspect of the music at Mass. This new book enables a beautiful and liturgical Psalm to be sung in an parish.


And these are the Simple English Propers:






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