We are the “Large Array”

If you’ve ever seen the film version of Carl Sagan’s “Contact,” you’ve seen two of many magnificent earthbound radio telescope installations, namely the Large Telescope in Arracebo, Puerto Rico and the Very Large Array of dish telescopes in the New Mexico desert. Jodie Foster’s character resolutely believes that “little green men” have and are trying to contact “us.” So, she and her crew relentlessly listen for frequencies that are unidentifiably “foreign” to cosmological emmissions.

I’ve had my second bout of bronchitis at a colloquium this year, but got antibiotics called in from California which I got onboard immediately. That allowed me to participate in my schola and choir for each day, amid getting some rest at other points of the day. But, during yesterday’s Mass (Latin OF) and Wednesday’s EF I purposefully sat in the very back- does that make me a real Catholic or just a conscientious PIP?- even though bronchitis isn’t contagious.

The Reverend Doctor Ed Schaefer’s schola chanted the Latin Introit from the very front of the nave on the gospel side. From the back of the church I could hardly hear them without intensive focus on my part. When I psychologically adjusted to that I heard first the men effortlessly sailing through the antiphon in a manner that would suggest an almost sotto voce vocal technique, but it really wasn’t. They sang with what Horst Buchholz says, “sing with two ears, not one mouth.” And then the more accessible treble women took over the antiphon adding the beauty of womenchant with almost sheer perfection. I had to write down, “I’m listening to angelic choirs (literally?) crossing, or permeating the noises and frequencies that reverberate through both the cosmos and our earth. AKA, “Contact.”

It was yet another revelation to me from yet another moment in a colloquium. Actuoso means that, like those telescopes, we have to have our human “operator,” our will and desire, predisposed to listen for those beatific sounds. Maybe all of them won’t be perfect or pretty or pristine, but they’re there at every Mass. And if you don’t understand what I’m saying, get thee to a colloquium.

Books Mentioned During Plenary Session

I have been asked several times to give a full list of all the books I mentioned in rapid random fire during my talk on Liturgical Theology: Are We Just Now Beginning?

So, here goes the full list:

Romano Guardini, The Church of the Lord
St John Paul II, Ecclesia de eucharistia
Benedict XVI, Sacramentum caritatis: Summorum pontificum
CDF, Dominus Jesus
St Pius X, Tra le sollecitudini
Pius XII, Mediator Dei
Vatican II, Lumen gentium; Sacrosanctum concilium

Annibale Bugnini, The Reform of the Liturgy 1948-1975
Piero Marini, A challenging Reform: Realizing the Vision of the Liturgical Renewal 1963-1975
Nicola Giampietro, The Development of the Liturgical Reform As seen by Cardinal Ferdinando Antonelli 1948 to 1970

Gero Weishaupt, forthcoming book on Summorum Pontificum

Klaus Gamber, The Reform of the Roman Liturgy
Laszlo Dobszay, The Bugnini Liturgy and the Reform of the Reform
Josef Ratzinger, The Spirit of the Liturgy

Laurence Paul Hemming, Worship as a Revelation: the Past, Present and Future of Catholic Liturgy
Jonathan Robinson, Mass and Modernity: Walking to Heaven Backwards

Charles Journet, The Mass: the Presence of the Sacrifice of the Cross
Abbot Vonier, A Key to the Doctrine of the Eucharist

Happy reading, and to all the CMAA Colloquium 2014 participants in Indianapolis, thank you for your kindness and good spirits during an excellent time together!

Oremus pro invicem!

Colloquium Vlog – Day 4

Day four has come and gone. I was lucky enough to be able to be able to learn how to better harmonize chant, then play the big organ as well! We also had vespers and compline. Check it out!

How the Eucharist Ended a Heresy and Restored Peace

Last week I spent some time in Orvieto, a city a couple of miles north of Rome. In the time of St. Thomas Aquinas’ residence there, it was part of the papal state, and St. Thomas had access to the Holy Father’s libraries and was often asked to give him counsel, walking to the papal palace along streets like this one.

St. Thomas wrote some of his most important writings in Orvieto, and while I thought I was going to visit for this reason, it turns out that Orvieto is a major pilgrimage site and had actually been designated as a special place of pilgrimage for this year by Pope Emeritus Benedict, before his resignation changed this as it changed other things. The great Duomo or cathedral would have been inundated with tourists instead of quite free for prayer and exploration.

What happened in the Middle Ages was that a kind of heresy had taken hold of Orvieto, and was extremely divisive for the Church there. There were political overtones to the division as well, and a papal legate was killed.

One of the confusions of the heresy had to do with the Eucharist and whether the Blessed Sacrament was really the Body and Blood of Christ. So as often happens, the Lord provided a Eucharistic miracle, in which blood appeared on the corporal in which a host was being carried. Popular piety once again united around the Blessed Sacrament, and to this day, Corpus Christi is celebrated with great solemnity and processions through the streets of the city.

The miracle led to the promulgation of the Feast of Corpus Christi, and throughout the churches of Orvieto there are a number of depictions of St. Thomas’ offering of his written office of the feast to the Holy Father, as well as of the Lord’s speaking to St. Thomas from the crucifix, assuring him that he had spoken well of the Blessed Sacrament.

I’m glad I was able to follow the beloved Pope Emeritus’ prescription for the festal year, and to experience this extraordinary city. Yet on the way back from Orvieto to Rome, I had a nonviolent but still somewhat unsettling experience having to do with pickpockets, the 64 bus from Termini, and police, that makes me realize once again how the Lord takes care of His Church in all sorts of ways. The widespread problems of civic corruption in Rome cannot divide the Church if she is being carefully reformed and guarded, as Pope Francis and his coworkers are doing daily and with tremendously edifying courage. Cathars are one kind of mob, but there are others. May the Lord continue to bless us and keep us safe.

Looking for more Colloquium Coverage? Check out NLM!

For you readers at home following the Chuch Music Association of America’s annual Colloquium in Indianapolis here at the Café with my videos and Mr. C’s posts, I’d encourage you to check out one of the CMAA’s other sites, New Liturgical Movement, where you can find pictures of all our liturgies to get a small taste for one of the most beautiful parts of the Colloquium. I’d encourage you to check it out every day this week for all the fantastic photos you could want from the Colloquium Masses and other liturgies!

Here’s a small selection of his photos from this week, check out New Liturgical Movement every day for more photos of our all beautiful liturgies!

Colloquium Vlog – Day 3

And we’re into day three for the 2014 Colloquium! Another full day with organ recitals, more rehearsals, preparations for solemn vespers tomorrow afternoon, and crazy architecture professors spreading the love around for sacred architecture!