This is extremely inspiring, a post in the Diocesan newspaper by Bishop Robert C. Morlino (Madison, Wisconsin):
Chant as our prayer at Mass
I find myself almost forced to mention the workshop on Gregorian chant which the diocese sponsored last Friday night and Saturday morning. For me it was one of those benchmark events since I have been in the Diocese of Madison. Easily over 80 people were in attendance — we were almost too large a group for the venue to which we were assigned — and the presentations by Fr. Robert Skeris, of the Archdiocese of Milwaukee, a master presenter and scholar in the area of Church music, were both profound and excellent. His enthusiasm stirred a great deal of enthusiasm among those present.
And after about two and a half hours of practice, those present were able beautifully to sing the whole Mass (Novus Ordo) in Latin, using Gregorian chant. The beauty of this kind of prayer impressed itself on all of us who were there and made the Church’s preference for Gregorian chant seem much more reasonable, and the chant itself seem much more “doable.”
When we think of Gregorian chant as our prayer at Mass, not something that somehow accompanies our prayer but which embodies in sound the prayer itself, we start to think very differently about Church music in general.
This is certainly part of the renewal of the liturgy that we are seeking to accomplish in preparation for the First Sunday of Advent 2011, when we will begin to use the new English Translations of the Roman Missal, but it is also to recover the kind of sacramental attitude with which all of us should approach our full, active, and fruitful participation in the liturgy. Much more needs to be said about this, and indeed, much more will be said about it in the days ahead.
Pray in thanksgiving for Bishop Morlino, or for any other Bishop including the Holy Father, at http://www.RosaryForTheBishop.org.
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"Much more will be said about it in the days ahead"
Interesting indeed. I can't help but think that there is something in the works concerning liturgical music… First the address by Msgr Marini at the Priests Conference in January, then the speech by Msgr Wadsworth at the SE Liturgy Conference, the lecture by M. Uwe Lang last Friday, and now this. I'm sure there are other statements along similar lines made in the last year that I'm forgetting, but this kind of "chatter" is seldom done in isolation
a very nice statement, and it's all true.