I
was fortunate enough to have the opportunity to attend a Mass in the
Extraordinary Form recently.
Generally,
although one is offered in my diocese every weekend, the distance and
timing, and my own Sunday obligations are such that I instead seek a
musicless Mass.
My
husband, a late in life convert to Catholicism, was raised by a
Mother who, Methodist or not, understood the concept of the "Sunday
Obligation;" and at the time he and I arrived at an
understanding, we usually attended two services every Sunday morning,
(a Mass and whatever protestant church in the area gave promise of
the best music,) so he was a very experienced church-goer by the time
he was received into the Church.
The
first time we attended a Mass with no singing or instrumental music
whatsoever, he was taken aback, he had never before encountered any
kind of Christian worship which did not include singing.
He
hated it!
How
could you praise God without bursting into song?
We
continued in our nomadic life to seek musical excellence where we
could find it, but gradually his hunger for the Eucharist eclipsed
his musical preferences, and as he grew to understand the level to
which liturgical music has sunk in many places, (Protestant as well
as Catholic, I might add,) he embraced the quiet Mass.
We
settled for a time in a parish that had a not too bad music program.
When
I became involved in a "liturgy committee", (mea
culpa,)
they were in the process of trying to introduce music into the single
quiet Mass in the entire town of five Catholic churches, and the
congregants were fighting them tooth and nail.
The
PIPs, for the most part, refused to pick up hymnals, and kept their
jaws clenched.
Someone
on the committee bemoaned the fact, and I repeated the complaint I
had heard regarding the choice of hymns, which were puerile, to put
it mildly; TPTB had supposed that what was needed as an ice-breaker
were "easy" songs, so with no change from week to week,
they were asking people to sing the stuff programmed at school
Masses.
Over
and over.
They
knew whom I was quoting, so obviously the PIPs were trying to,
forgive the paradox, make their voices heard.
I
suggested instead of inserting fairly arbitrary songs, they start
with the dialogues and the Our Father, maybe the alleluia
before the Gospel.
Blank
looks.
You
know,
(I had probably just learned this phrase,) “progressive
solemnity.”
More
blank looks.
Like
it suggests in Musicam Sacram? A document of Vatican Council?
Oh,
well, maybe, they all agreed, even the priests, that that might be
the way to go - until they realized that "dialogue" meant
singing initiated by the celebrant or other minister.
Nope,
they just wanted the people to sing more.
Mind
you, all of our priests had fine voices and could either read music
very well, (including square-note, I later learned,) or were very
good natural musicians who could pick up anything by ear.
But
having drunk deeply of the spirits of Vatican, Too, they, (with the
agreement or even insistence of their lay colleagues,) were intent
upon getting the people to "do" more, not altering their
own approach to celebrating Mass.
Eventually
I was offered a music/choir director position.
(I
had had one years before, while I was still in school, but this was
so long ago that it was in the period when the job was picking out 4
hymns that used some of the same words as the readings and posting
the numbers. The less said about it, the better.)
In
this new position I tried to steer things toward a less
preference-centric choice of music, but the deeply-ingrained, three
generation long, choir culture; competing ethnic and language needs;
and the power structure of rectory/school/religious ed office
required constant negotiations.
Returned
for a visit after we moved, discovered that some practices I had
pressed for for years unsuccessfully had finally been adopted, (
singing the verbum
Domini
dialogues,) others which I had instituted had been discarded, (the
Exultet
as written, sung Sequences when called for,) and others which only
began under my short tenure, not without push-back, were acknowledged
as "the way we've always done it,"(singing the Lectionary
psalm.)
The
parish where I now find myself has a well-meaning but slap-dash
approach to liturgical music and liturgy in general.
I
have found other ways to contribute, and enjoy the lowest and
earliest of Sunday
Since
I am no longer responsible, or even much effected by any musical
planning, for over three years I have thought of myself as taking R &
R from the front lines of the Liturgy Police Action, (it's not a
war!)
.............................
When
I've worked in a parish setting, TPTB were always slightly
Latin-phobic, so obviously only Ordinary Form for Mass or LotH.
Convincing them that what they wanted to sing, or were accustomed to
sing weren't necessarily the most important things to sing, and that
the Church actually gave us guidance on this, (apart from what our
diocesan OoW put out,) was like pulling teeth.
Instead
of Progressive Solemnity, we were fortunate to even be able to
achieve a sort of Regressive Triviality.
I
have taken part in Extraordinary Form Masses with great joy, at
Colloquia and when I have found myself in the environs of St John
Cantius, or had the opportunity to attend one for which Jenny
Donelson's schola sang; and I have even been happy to have the chance
to hear the traditional Mass when neither the priest nor the
musicians, nor we faithful in the pews seemed very sure of who should
do what when.
I
even accidentally attended Mass at a schismatic chapel, before I knew
there were such people and places, and I give thanks for, and
"enjoyed" that.
I
have never had any musical responsibilities at these, (other than
singing as told at CMAA functions,) so never thought much about what
is supposed to be done.
I
generally position myself near someone who seem confident of his
postures and gestures, whose hand missal looks well-loved, and copy
him.
But
I have realized that there is very little consistency from place to
place.
(The
first clue that I had was the PBC notation about "IF
the confiteor is said again, turn to pg 25," or some such.)
Some
places one priest reads the Lesson and Gospel in English while
another reads them quietly in Latin, others the vernacular follows
the "real" scripture. Some places the PIPs kneel for the
entire time except the Gospel and homily. Some everyone recites the
Gloria along with the celebrant. One priest stopped in mid-Pater
noster to
silence the people who were singing along with him, another
practically conducted us to sing along.
I
was given to understand that this is all because, in the day, there
really were
no rubrics for the people.
But
the rubrics for the musicians are pretty clear, I had thought,
especially the distinctions between solemn, sung and read Mass, a la
Musica Sacra.
But
even these seem to be a source of confusion.
The
organist at one parish told me she and her choir "just do what
Father wants," and there are four different "Fathers"
who might show up on a moments notice.
The
Mass I attended Sunday was lovely, and profoundly prayerful.
I
found myself entering into it such that I was saved from playing
Liturgy Scorekeeper, (a more passive role that Liturgy Police,) no
ticking off boxes, wondering why so and so did such and such.
It
was only after Mass that I thought, hmmm,
2 Latin motets and one English anthem,
or that
was nice, that little organ filler, sounds like Rossini, and then
repeat the anthem,
or, gee,
only one voice to a part, none of them very strong but sweet
polyphony,
or wait
a minute, they only sang some of the Gregorian Ordinary, and we all
spoke the rest together, didn't we?
It
all seemed, it felt appropriate.
Were
they, perhaps, applying principles of progressive solemnity from
Musicam Sacram to the EF, taken advantage of the provision for
varying "degrees" of sung Mass?
And
why shouldn't they?
That
might sound flip, or combative, but it's really not.
IRL
I have no access to anyone particularly knowledgeable about this, and
I thank God every day for Those InterWebs.
But
the internet is full of Facts that Everybody Knows - that aren't
true.
And
there often seem to be differences of opinion as to what
pronouncements are descriptive and what prescriptive.
I
thought I had learned that Musicam Sacram does not apply to the EF,
(though of course there are some who try to insist it doesn't apply
to the Novus Ordo... who, pray tell, would they be?)
I
was startled to learn, (but I am ignorant - people who keep up on
these things also seemed startled to learn,) in the comment box of this
several month old thread at New Liturgical Movement, which addresses
these very questions, that a
book of rubrics for the old Mass is available online. The
date of publication is 1960, but would it be in effect for the 1962
Missal?
A
lot of the conversation there of course is simply opinion - leaned,
informed opinion, but not really helpful for those who might be
preparing sing half take baby steps in preparing music for liturgy.
It
doesn't matter to me right now so much what the Church should
have
asked of us as what She does
ask.
I
want to know what's what, and what ought to be, and what ought not
-- because I have a premonition, or at least a hope, that I might
need to know.
What
“legitimate diversity” is there in the Extraordinary Form?
2 comments:
Dear Scelata,
I remember the days when I was still writing in my old weblog, (pauca) Lux ex Oriente, and when you would make both kind and cogent comments there. I am happy to say that while I seem to have lost touch with you, that I found you once again.
As regards your 'Adventures in Progressive Solemnity', you have the misfortune of having more liturgical and musical knowledge than the priests you have attempted to serve.
The Dark Ages were so called by haughty humanists who decried a clerisy which did not know classical Latin and Greek. How much darker these ages, where the priests and bishops do not have ANY knowledge of those languages at all.
I feel your pain. What I cannot tell you is what to do about it. Sorry.
How delightful to hear from you!
Actually, I have several things I can do about it, and one involves an Eastern rite Catholic church about an hour away.
During the school year, teaching religious ed makes it too difficult on Sundays,but it offered Himself and me a most marvelous Holy Thursday evening.
And I feel quite hopeful that there will be an EF Mass in town withint the year.
God bless you, and dont' be a stranger - are you blogging anywhere now?
G
(Save the Liturgy, Save the World)
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