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Sacred Music Music Religious Music Sacred Music Liturgical Music Why is music important to the liturgy? “handmaid of the liturgy”: bears the sacred words of the liturgy Christ is present in his Word and is, in fact, the Word of God Music is the only sacred art that has the privilege and responsibility of bearing Christ in his Word. Why kind of music is appropriate for the liturgy? “[T]o ask what is ‘suitable’ must always be the same thing as asking what is ‘worthy.’” Pope Benedict XVI What instruments are worthy of the liturgy? PIPE ORGAN • supports congregational singing by providing powerful musical foundation for an entire congregation singing with gusto. • only single instrument that is versatile enough to - express the full range of human emotion, while at the same time - help to draw our minds to the power and grandeur, tenderness and mercy of God. What instruments are worthy of the liturgy? HUMAN VOICE • All other instruments were modeled after the human voice. CHOIR AND ASSEMBLY • The choir and the assembly are the musicians that are most vital to the liturgy. Why should I sing at Mass? “…the faithful assemble for no other object than that of acquiring this [true Christian] spirit from its foremost and indispensable font, which is the active participation in the most holy mysteries and in the public and solemn prayer of the Church” (Pius X – Tra le sollecitudini, 1903). Congregation encouraged to chant Ordinary: “In order that the faithful may more actively participate in divine worship, let them be made once more to sing the Gregorian Chant, so far as it belongs to them to take part in it” (Pius XI – Divini Cultus, 1928). Why should I sing at Mass? “Through this active and individual participation, the members of the Mystical Body not only become daily more like to their divine Head, but the life flowing from the Head is imparted to the members…” (Pius XII – Mediator Dei, 1947). Through grace, the liturgical assembly partakes in the life of the Blessed Trinity, which is itself a communion of love. In a perfect way, the Persons of the Trinity remain themselves even as they share all that they are. For our part, “we, though many, are one body in Christ and individually parts of one another.”The Church urges all members of the liturgical assembly to receive this divine gift and to participate fully “depending on their orders [and] their role in the liturgical services.” Within the gathered assembly, the role of the congregation is especially important. (USCCB – Sing to the Lord, 2007) 20-21st Century Catholic Liturgical Reform Documents Pius X Motu proprio: Tra le sollecitudini 1903 Pius XI Divini Cultus 1928 Pius XII Mediator Dei 1947 Pius XII Musicae Sacrae Disciplina 1955 SCR* De musica sacra et sacra liturgia 1958 Vatican II Sacrosanctum Concilium 1963 SCR* Musicam Sacram 1967 USCCB Sing to the Lord: Music in Divine Worship 2007 *Sacred Congregation of Rites Pius X Motu proprio - Tra le sollecitudini 1903 Sacred Music must be: Holy, “True Art,” and Universal Appropriate Inappropriate Gregorian chant and polyphony Anything secular or theatrical Clerical (therefore male) choirs Mixed choirs Organ (winds by permission only) Piano, percussion, bands “…the faithful assemble for no other object than that of acquiring this [true Christian] spirit from its foremost and indispensable font, which is the active participation in the most holy mysteries and in the public and solemn prayer of the Church” (Tra le sollecitudini, Introduction). Pius XI Divini Cultus 1928 Short reiteration of Pius X’s Motu Proprio, because: “… these most wise laws in some places have not been fully observed, and therefore their intended results not obtained.” Congregation encouraged to chant Ordinary: “In order that the faithful may more actively participate in divine worship, let them be made once more to sing the Gregorian Chant, so far as it belongs to them to take part in it.” Pius XII Mediator Dei 1947 “Through this active and individual participation, the members of the Mystical Body not only become daily more like to their divine Head, but the life flowing from the Head is imparted to the members…” (#78). Pius XII Musicae Sacrae Disciplina 1955 Organ and strings are instruments appropriate to liturgy Ambrosian, Mozarabic, Gallican chants no longer overlooked Considered appropriate for respective rites Mixed choirs permitted Vernacular hymnody allowed 4-hymn pattern: Entrance, Offertory, Communion, Recessional SCR De musica sacra et sacra liturgia 1958 Practical instruction on documents above Forbids automatic instruments and recordings, but amplification allowed Bells permitted (handbells associated with liturgy) Paul VI Sacrosanctum Concilium 1963 Liturgical music: Adds delight to prayer, Fosters unity of minds Confers greater solemnity upon the sacred rites Chant and the pipe organ have the “pride of place” in the liturgy. Pope Benedict XVI on Sacrosanctum Concilium, 1963 Tension within Council document reflects tension inherent in subject Desire to affirm “treasury of sacred music,” but also desire to see liturgy open to common participation Tension between art and simplicity of the liturgy. example: Gregorian chant vs. participation Participatio actuosa: “fatally narrowed down” to “evidence of external activity” Article 30 of SC speaks of silence as mode of participation SCR* Musicam Sacram 1967 Three forms of liturgical participation Sacramental Internal - greater emphasis on need for silent participation External – active participation manifested by singing Catechesis should lead to more complete participation 4 categories of sacred music after the Council Chant Proper antiphons Psalm/Gradual Ordinary and Canon of Mass Polyphony Instrumental Sacred music of the people = hymns Pope Benedict XVI: A Theology of Liturgical Music Benedict XVI on Plato “Through rhythm and melody themselves, pagan music often endeavors to elicit an ecstasy of the senses, but without elevating the senses into the spirit; on the contrary, it attempts to swallow up the spirit in the senses as a means of release. This imbalance toward the senses recurs in modern popular music… Here music does not purify but becomes a drug, an anesthetic… If music is to be the medium of worship, it needs purifying; only then can it in turn have a purifying and ‘elevating’ effect” (Feast of Faith, 118-9). “Sing Artistically for God” The Theology of Music from the Psalms (A New Song, 102) Psalm 47:7 – Two translations Sing sapientier - with wisdom or understanding Intelligibility = Word-oriented Reason = Logos-oriented Sing cum arte – artistically, with excellence Challenges highest abilities of musician Ordered, artistic singing Example of Exodus Theology of art developed from construction of the sacred tabernacle: *Artists themselves do not plan what might be worthy of God and beautiful. *Artists have been given understanding and skill to carry out what God has instructed them to do. The Lord “called by name” the principle artist Shares with prophet vocation of “seeing together with God” (New Song, 103). Exodus to Psalms This theology of art not depicted elsewhere in Bible, but Psalter being dedicated to King David draws similar analogy. David gave God his dwelling place in Israel He in turn showed the Holy People how to praise God with dignity Thus Old Testament theology of art is contained in the bene cantare of the Psalms. The criterion for a properly spiritualized music that maintains its harmony with Logos (Reason and Christ): “Does it integrate man by drawing him to what is above or does it cause his disintegration into formless intoxication or mere sensuality?” (Spirit of the Liturgy, 151). “It is above all in Church music that the sober inebriation of faith takes place… [T]his intoxication remains sober, because Christ and the Holy Spirit belong together, because this drunken speech stays totally within the discipline of the Logos, in a new rationality that, beyond all words, serves the primordial Word, the ground of reason.” (Spirit of the Liturgy, 140). “The whole of Church history can be seen as the struggle to achieve the proper kind of spiritualization… [T]he fruit of this struggle has been the great church music of the West – indeed, Western music as a whole. The work of a Mozart or a Palestrina would be unthinkable apart from the dramatic interplay in which creation becomes the instrument of the spirit, and the spirit, too, becomes organized sound in the material creation, thus attaining a height inaccessible to ‘pure’ spirit. Spiritualization of the senses is the true spiritualization of the spirit” (Feast of Faith, 119). “[T]o ask what is ‘suitable’ must always be the same thing as asking what is ‘worthy.’” Pope Benedict XVI