An Easter Hymn to ENGELBERG

I noticed that the hymn tune ENGELBERG is on the liturgy schedule for the Colloquium, and it reminded me to find this hymn text from among its mothballs.

One of the things I admire most about the excellent Charles Wesley is his ability to paraphrase Scripture in a hymn. We see that in his Christ the Lord Is Ris’n Today:

Where, O death, is now thy sting?
Where thy victory, O grave?

Another hymn writer who excelled at Scriptural and even Patristic paraphrase was F. Bland Tucker, a Southerner who may or may not be a relative of Jeffrey Tucker but who is very smart, so perhaps. Tucker set in hymn form not only the anaphora of the Didache (Father, We Thank Thee Who Hast Planted) but also St. Paul’s magnificent Hymn to the Philippians, from the second chapter of that Letter (All Praise to Thee, for Thou, O King Divine). This latter outstanding hymn, overlooked for some reason at ordination time, for which it would be perfect, is best sung to ENGELBERG.

In the text below I’ve tried to include Scriptural and liturgical references, and some paraphrases in verses 2 and 4. The first line of the fourth verse consciously riffs on Wesley’s brilliant employment of a hymn convention: the list. (Other hymns using this include George Herbert’s poem Come, My Way, My Truth, My Life, and Ye Watchers and Ye Holy Ones, which lists the 9 choirs of angels in its first verse.) I offer an homage to Wesley, who in one of the marvels of hymn writing history, expressed the entire Easter mystery in seven Scripturally rich monosyllables:

Vain the stone, the watch, the seal

Please feel free to sing the hymn below at your parish this Eastertide.

Let Easter alleluias fill this place
for God has sanctified the human race,
fulfilling all the pledges of His grace,
Alleluia!

Why seek the Living One among the dead?
The Lord was raised in glory as He said.
That we might follow where our Master led,
Alleluia!

The path of glory shines before our eyes:
the Christian road that leads beyond the skies.
By crucifixion and by death we rise,
Alleluia!

The stone and soldiers kept their watch in vain,
And Christ, once raised, shall never die again.
All praise and honor to the Lamb once slain.
Alleluia!

Come quickly, Jesus, prove your promise true.
Bring all creation into life anew:
a living sacrifice of praise to You,
Alleluia!

The Follies are Back!

I’m not sure how it was in the “old days,” but being into sacred music and chat surely is tons of fun these days. That’s not the point of course. The point is rather serious: singing music at liturgy that has an integral relationship with the text and an organic relationship with the liturgical action.

That said, the task of getting from here to there can be the great fun experience of your life. Choir rehearsals are a wonderful outlet for social energies. Exploring the gigantic repertoire is always an adventure. Sharing “war stories” from parish life can make for strong social bonds. And laughter is always there too. It is a necessary feature simply because the task itself is so serious and monumental.

Well, at the Sacred Music Colloquium we have lots of fun in addition to the educational experience. Some years ago, we codified a night of fun we called the follies. Various acts were put together that were hilarious and wonderful, a time in which we made fun of ourselves and what we were all doing together. Some of us never laughed so hard.

Some of the acts are legendary. Who can forget “Power Chant” (if you were there you know what I mean). 

Then over the years, the Colloquium became so busy that we sort of just let it drop. There were other priorities: another lecture, another rehearsal, another seminar, and so on. This was probably a mistake in retrospect but we had a hard time finding room for the follies.

This year we were determined to change that. We carved out a place in the week and said: this is the night. And so, yes my friends, the follies are back!!! They will take place on Thursday night this year. Group or individual acts are more than welcome. No need to plan just now. You can put it together at the last minute. Sometimes that spontaneity is the best way.

I can’t wait to see you all there, and laugh with you.

A Firm Foundation

I recently had the joy of reconnecting with a group of very close friends- a small, non-denominational house church community that my wife and I were a part of when we lived in Massachusetts. I’ve written about them before, in relation to how singing with this group influenced my thinking in regards to Gregorian Chant. The founding members of this community had grown up in the Church of Christ tradition, where unaccompanied congregational singing is the norm- one of the primary identifying aspects of their worship culture. Singing and praying with them, in their “native style,” provided food for thought about issues like simplicity is music, the need for accompaniment, the nature of musical notation, and the degree to which traditions of musical practice shape and identify a religious tradition.

I could go on and on about the lessons learned and wisdom gained from my experience with this wonderful group of people (and I do have several article-seeds in my head already). But for right now I’d like to address how reconnecting with them this past weekend and singing with them again has brought to mind some thoughts regarding the transient nature of contemporary religious music, and the difficulty that this transience presents in the life of a modern Christian.

The music that we sang together as a group tended toward the “Praise and Worship” style (the CoC people call it “Devo music” as in “Devotional,” and as opposed to traditional “hymns”). Songs like Greatest Commands, I am a Sheep, Hide Me Away, and so forth. There were also plenty of good-old traditional Protestant hymns and some old-timey Gospel songs. My wife and I taught the group some of the Catholic Folk songs we knew from growing up, and even a couple chant hymns that we happened to know. I even wrote a few songs. The specifics of all of this aren’t all that relevant. The point is- we sang together. We became very close, like family in many ways. And the music we sang, and even the way we sang it, was unique to that time and place and situation.

I want to be clear about something before I go on here: I would not change anything at all about my time with this community, and (despite the typical opinion about the above-mentioned genres prevalent in this blog’s readership, and also notwithstanding the point I’m about to make below) I found a great deal of depth and meaning in this group’s music-making.

But here’s the problem with that experience: it was transient, fleeting. Of course, all mortal things are. But, in reference to music, there is a specific problem created here. The musical experience of worshiping with that group does not exist anywhere else in the world. Any attempt to recreate it on purpose would be futile, resulting in a pale copy at best. All of us who were a part of that group will forever have an unfillable longing for what we experienced there.

We were all reminded of this when we were able to reconnect this past weekend. We talked, we prayed, and we sang. And then some of us got in airplanes and flew back to places like Texas and Arkansas, knowing it would be a long time (if ever) before we were all in the same room again.

And all of that is okay. We all need, at various times in our lives, to develop prayer-practices that speak to our needs, and to build communities that strengthen us for the Christian journey. We need to step outside our own traditions and see how other people have understood the Gospel. And we also need to know that our individual lives are fleeting, and that God calls us to mission, not to comfort.

Now I ask: what would happen if “regular Sunday worship” – that is, whatever the normative congregational gathering for a community (whether Roman Catholic Mass or Episcopal Eucharist or non-denominational sermon-and-sing-along) – what would happen if that service was replaced with this sort of build-as-you-go, community-specific worship and music?

I think that (apart from some grumbling curmudgeons like those of us who hang out at the Chant Cafe) it would look amazing… for a while. But what happens when the children who grow up there move away to other places? What happens when the demographic of the community shifts, and the style of music and liturgy changes as a result?

We don’t have to wonder- we’ve all seen it happen. Kids move away and can’t find a parish that “feels right,” and eventually stop going altogether. Newly married couples from different communities, even with a shared denominational background, have a hard time finding a church they want to raise their children in. Long-time community members drift away as the liturgy drifts away from them. (If it gets really bad, some kids who grow up this way end up turning against the whole thing, and spend their adult lives promoting traditional sacred music on underground web logs.)

I’ve seen this in my own life and in the lives of other people who grew up in the same Folk Mass parish as I did. Most of the “contemporary” liturgies in that town have turned from Haas and Haugen to Protestant Praise & Worship (from Breaking Bread hymnals to Spirit & Song). I have literally heard people I grew up with lament the lack of “traditional Catholic songs,” by which they mean “The Servant Song” or “You Are Mine.”

Now, one would hope that someone’s faith and religious identity would not be quite so tied up with preference and style. But we all know that isn’t true. Even the people who claim to promote Traditional Sacred Music for “legitimate” reasons tend to have an underlying preference which makes it difficult for them to participate in completely valid but off-putting liturgical experiences. The fact of the matter is that, for many people, if they cannot find a way to experience liturgy in a way that connects with their aesthetic preferences, they simply will stop attending altogether.

This pastoral understanding of the intersection between people’s liturgical desires and their need for the grace and formation provided by the traditions of the Church is one of the strongest arguments against an abrupt and unprepared shift from current common practice to a program of Traditional Sacred Music. But it is also one of the strongest arguments for moving toward one, however long and difficult the transition is. Only a widespread implementation of the Church’s own native music can provide a solid-enough liturgical foundation for our increasingly mobile and rootless population.

When faith is difficult, when it is hard to see or feel the grace of God in life, or when the shenanigans of the Church’s imperfect ministers makes the whole enterprise seem pointless, it is often the comfort and the familiarity of the music and the ritual that gives people something to hold on to while God works in their lives. If cultural trends cause parish music to change every few years, or even every generation, we are abandoning people to their own ability to remain steadfast in the faith- a feat worthy of sainthood, not a burden to be placed on every believer.

The spontaneously ordered, personalized prayer forms and musical styles that have come to dominate Christian music are not without value, and the human need for comfort and familiarity is not a trait to be scorned by serious-minded musicians. Indeed, it is precisely that need which should be a driving force in the spread of a Universal liturgical culture. And it is precisely the value found in personal expressions of faith that argues for giving these practices their own space and time, apart from the primary Sunday Liturgy.

Lay people need to be given the tools and the sense of permission needed to develop these prayer and worship experiences for themselves, instead of relying on Mass and professional ministers to provide it for them. This way, their prayer life can adapt to the changing circumstances of their life, and can move with them wherever they go. And at the same, we need to provide a firm foundation for faith- a Sanctuary against the ravages of a changing culture, a refuge wherein “Even the sparrow finds a home, and the swallow a nest for herself, where she may lay her young.”

Chanting the Gospel

Whispers in the Loggia provides the link to the Bishop McFadden’s funeral Mass, which is currently taking place.

The transitional Deacon, Rev. Mr. Dan Richards, is chanting the Gospel beautifully as I write. It is interesting that this lovely plainchant follows the Celtic Alleluia–a combination that reflects our complicated liturgical times.

Eternal rest grant unto them, O Lord, and let perpetual light shine upon them. May the souls of the faithful departed, through the mercy of God, rest in peace.

Go ahead and chant – It’s Ascension!

There are many ways to begin introducing the chanted Propers into your parish’s liturgical life, and it seems CMAA has been building something of a cottage industry devoted to exploring these possibilities.

Due to the cyclical and holistic nature of the Propers, and the aversion to treating Gregorian Chant as “just another option among many,” there hasn’t been (that I’ve noticed) much discussion about occasional use of the Propers. This is understandable, but there are times when, even in the context of a non-Propers-oriented program, one or more of the Proper chants are a particularly good fit, and could be introduced as a special choir piece. While this may run the risk of reinforcing Gregorian Chant as either “for special occasions” or “one more choice among many,” I have to think it’s better than never singing these pieces at all.

The Feast of the Ascension (tomorrow and/or this Sunday) seems to me to be one of those times where the text and the style of the chants from the Gradual Romanum seem to be a perfect fit, even in a conventional “contemporary” parish liturgical setting where the texts of the lessons provide the “theme” for musical selections.

The Ascension is an event in which the Apostles (and we with them) witness the marriage of Heaven and Earth as Jesus, in His living body, is lifted from this world to His Throne. The angels come to testify to this event, asking the twelve why they are standing there “looking at the sky.” The earthy heavenliness of unaccompanied chant provides a particularly apt aural framework for experiencing this event in our present time. The otherworldliness of Chant, especially Chant in Latin, is evocative of the voice of the angels (especially since the Introit and optional Offertory are both the words of the Angels themselves).

Gregorian chant is unmetered, that is, there is no forward movement of rhythm (or of harmony, for that matter). The musical effect of this is that Chant feels set apart from Time- we do not experience the passage of time with Chant the way we do in metered music. This characteristic of Chant evokes the words of Jesus in the first reading, “It is not for you to know the times or seasons that the Father has established by his own authority.”

Another characteristic of Chant, it’s very nature as anonymously composed music of the Church (as opposed to music written by an identifiable individual) evokes the epistle’s sanctuary not “built by human hands.”

If you are of a mind to do some Chant, and have been trying to find a way to “work it in,” Ascension might provide the perfect opportunity to try out a little Chant in your community, and gauge its reception.

Viri Galilaéi, quid admirámini aspiciéntes in caelum? Hic Jesus, qui assúmptus est a vobis in cælum, sic véniet from Corpus Christi Watershed on Vimeo.

Come to Chant Class Tonight!

Teaching an online class tonight in Gregorian notation.

Gregorian Notation II:  This course builds on the fundamentals learned in Gregorian Notation I. We’ll introduce more neumes, the flat sign, bar lines, and more.  Register here. 

Truly, there is no reason everyone can’t be learning to read the traditional notation.   Big secret:  hardly anyone learned this in school.  So why not an online class brought to you in the comfort of your living room. Or dorm room.  Or houseboat.  Aside from the knowledge you gain, it is a great way to meet new people on a Tuesday night.  You’ll be learning something that will serve you as your serve the Church. And it is fun.

In a shameless bit of self promotion, I’ll share some comments from students: 

  • “Arlene presented an informative and accessible introduction to the potentially daunting subject of Gregorian notation. The riches of Gregorian chant remain elusive to most of us, but Arlene teaches in such a way that anyone can gain the keys to this historical, liturgical treasure. Wonderful class!”

  • “Thank you Prof. Oost-Zinner! I learned a wealth of knowledge about reading Gregorian notations and nooms ;). I am going to get a pitch pipe this week! Thank you again for all of your help and excellent instruction!”