It’s Time We Stop Singing About Ourselves at Mass

Source: Lew Rockwell | VIEW ORIGINAL POST ==>

What is “good” Mass music? As a parish music director, I have often pondered this question. The Church gives clear instructions concerning the implementation of music within the Mass. For instance, the Church stipulates that the most important thing to be sung is the dialogue between the priest and the people: the Order of the Mass.

The next important thing is the Ordinary of the Mass (Kyrie, Gloria, Sanctus, etc.). The next thing sung should be the Propers (Introit, Responsorial Psalm [Gradual], Gospel Acclamation verse, Offertory antiphon, and Communion antiphon). The liturgical documents give provision for some of these proper antiphons to be replaced by “another suitable hymn.”

So, what makes for a “suitable hymn”? How should we gauge “good” and “bad” hymns? I would suggest using a very simple litmus test by asking this question: “Whom are we singing to?”

If the Mass is the highest form of worship to the One Almighty God and Lord of the Universe, shouldn’t our singing be directed especially toward Him? In recent decades, many published songs for Mass have been written with an orientation of me, myself, and I. The worship is not a vertical gaze toward Heaven. Rather, the orientation is a horizontal glance around the room.

By way of example: When singing the song, “Here I Am, Lord” by Dan Schutte, adorers in the pews sing with self-possessive language twenty-nine times, and they sing directly to God merely six times.

As another example, when singing a song like “Be Not Afraid” by Robert Dufford, worshippers are completely oriented toward themselves (twenty-four instances), never once addressing God directly. God is indeed in the song, but His lines have been assigned to us! “You shall cross the barren desert…’’ (God’s line); “Be not afraid. I go before you always.” (God’s line); “know that I am with you through it all” (God’s line).

This concept of speaking and singing in the place of God creates a peculiar worship orientation that is far too common in our modern Catholic music repertoire: We are taking God’s lines, and we are delivering them to ourselves. You may as well place a giant mirror on the altar.

As I considered this question of hymn orientation, I thought it would be interesting to dig a little deeper into the verbiage of our Catholic music within the United States. How often do we sing to ourselves and how often do we sing to God? The following data has been categorized by songs (non-hymnody) and hymns (strophic, stanza-based).

Here are the top ten songs (non-hymnody) from January 1 to June 30, 2024, in U.S. Catholic parishes, as reported by the royalty-reporting company OneLicense.net. Songs are listed by the instances of orientation: (1) “Me/myself/I” language, (2) “God/Lord” language:

I have no doubt that these songs were composed with all sincerity of heart and mind. For this discussion, focusing on the topic of Mass orientation, it is simply worth noting that the aforementioned songs have worshippers singing about themselves more than twice as often as they sing about God!

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The man known as Bunker is Patriosity's Senior Editor in charge of content curation, conspiracy validation, repudiation of all things "woke", armed security, general housekeeping, and wine cellar maintenance.

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