London Gregorian Workshop in May (with Dom Yves-Marie Lelièvre)

This is May 5-8, 2011, at St. James’s Catholic Church, London

Gregorian Chant Workshop
Instructor:  Dom Yves-Marie Lelièvre
Choirmaster, Abbaye Saint-Pierre de Solesmes, France
St. James’s Roman Catholic Church Spanish Place
22 George Street
London  W1U 3QY
5-8 May 2011
There are separate sessions for advanced singers (e.g., Schola Gregoriana of Cambridge) and the volunteer schola members (e.g., St. James’s and St. Mary Magdalen).
Please review the schedule and contact Candy Bartoldus (cbartold@gmu.edu ; mobile 0754 010 8204) to register for all or part of the workshop.
Advanced singers are invited, especially to sing the daily scheduled Liturgy of Hours and the Propers at the 6 PM Mass on 7 May.  
Voluntary donations to cover costs (5 Pounds) are welcome.
Thursday – 5 May
2-3.40 pm
Lower Sacristy
Advanced singers:  Introduction to the Graduale Triplex (Part I).  An introduction the fundamental principles of neumatic notation,. Suitable for singers with little knowledge of this book. 
3.40-4 pm
Lower Sacristy
Tea
4-5 pm  
Lower Sacristy
Advanced singers:  Rehearsal of music for the 6 PM Mass on Saturday 7 May, e.g., study Propers.
5 – 6 pm
Church
Vespers – All welcome
6 pm      
Church
Parish Mass – All welcome.  Dom Yves Marie concelebrant – No music
6.30 pm
Free Time (e.g., Dinner available locally by your own arrangements)
8.00 pm
Lower Sacristy
Get organized – warm up before Compline
8.30 pm              
Church
Compline (sung by attendees)–  All welcome
Friday – 6 May
8.30 am
Church
Lauds
9 am
Church
Mass –  Dom Yves Marie celebrates Mass.   All welcome to participate and to sing ordinaries.
10 am to 12 pm
Lower Sacristy
Beginners – Singing the Liturgy of Hours  – Stan Metheny will teach this session in preparation for Compline and Vespers. 
Noon
Lower Sacristy
Sext
2-3.40 pm
Lower Sacristy
Advanced singers – Introduction to the Graduale Triplex (Part II – Dom Yves Marie – A more advanced session on Graduale Triplex, suitable for those with prior experience of its use. [Starting where Dom left off on Thursday, and including discussion of the quilisma, oriscus, etc.]
3.40-4 pm          
Lower Sacristy
Tea
4-5 pm
Lower Sacristy
Advanced singers – The new Solesmes editions of the Antiphoner.. -. An introduction to recent editorial and performing practice at Solesmes.
5.15 pm
Church
Vespers  (sung by attendees).  All welcome
6 – 7.30 pm
Free time  (e.g., 6 PM Parish Mass, Dinner)
7.30 to 8:00 pm
Lower Sacristy
Advanced singers – Questions and answers.   Discussion.   Sing more chants.
8.30 pm              
Church
Compline – (sung by attendees).   All welcome
Saturday – 7 May
8.00 am
Church
Lauds
8.30 am
Church
Mass –  Father celebrates Mass.   Anyone welcome to sing ordinaries. 
9.15 am
Social Hall
Tea
10 am to 1 pm
Social Hall
Beginners Session  I
1 – 1.15 pm
Church
Sext –  All welcome.  Advanced singers encouraged to lead
1.15– 2.30 pm
Lunch
2.30 – 4.30 pm
Social Hall
Beginners Session  II – All welcome
4.30 pm
Social Hall
Vespers – All welcome.  Advance singers encouraged to lead.
(Note:  Wedding in Church)
5 – 6 pm
Social Hall
Tea and preparation for Mass
6 pm
Church
Mass – All welcome.  Advanced and Beginners participants sing under direction of Dom Yves Marie
Sunday – 8 May
10:30 Mass  –   Dom Yves Marie celebrate Mass – All are welcome!
St James’s website, including directions:
Lower Sacristy – Enter and walk to the front of the Church.  Entrance door on left.
Social Hall –  Pass through gate to the left of the main church entrance and walk through garden to the lower entrance.

To Sing Joyfully, with “Glee?” A response.

In Jeffrey Tucker’s eloquent article about identifying the priorities of the reformed liturgy he acknowledges an undisputed truth concerning the principal instrument required for fit praise to God at worship:

Liturgical music is produced by the human voice alone, and we need to embrace liturgical prose rather than someone else’s poetry as the core substance of what we sing. We are about as far apart from this ideal as we’ve ever been, and a major part of the reason is that we no longer believe in our ability to sing anything at all. Forget style and text for a moment and just think about singing in general.

Allow me to caricature that statement with no malevolent intent at all. Jeffrey builds at hat rack with one exact length of peg upon which to hang a specific, ideal hat: liturgical prose. This project “works” in concept quite efficiently, except that while he fabricated his rack, other concepts skulked around, however they were not about the efficiency of the rack, but the nature of hats, that is to say the function and fashion of the hats. Hats representing, of course, singing.

“No one wants to hear me sing!”….Can we somehow arrange to ban those words from the human language? I wonder if this is darn-near universal that people claim that their voices are awful. People are telling themselves that they cannot do something that they can do. If every one of this people were at a party where “Happy Birthday” was being sung, they would all join in (without music, I might add!) and sing the pitches and the text with gusto. That’s singing, isn’t it?

As much as Jeffrey’s kind gesture to the flight attendant makes sense, I think he stretched her reaction into the first of a series of propositions to advance a theory: we are no longer a singing society. At first blush, I didn’t buy his theory on general principle. I mean, using a constant pitched hum to quiet a noisy classroom of choir students, or chanting “Dominus vobiscum” in a crowded nave full of First Communion parents chatting at full bore to the ceiling with the intent, again, to A. quite them; B. focus them; C. remind them they’re in a darned church for cryin’ out loud, well that makes sense. But to suggest that the sky cap, the taxi driver, the secretary and gardener could make this world a better place by breaking out their inner opera singer in the workplace, and then taking their sensible reactions as proof that we no longer sing? The theory’s erroneous. We should have just stuck with the function of the one hat we wish to hang on the one hat rack.

To be sure, these people don’t sound like American Idol, and that’s probably good insofar as Church music is concerned.

Let’s just press “pause” at “American Idol.” Consider that a decade and a half ago who would have imagined that a gargantuan industry would have been founded upon the mere idea that people by the gazillions would weekly tune into a show designed to capitalize on the Warhol principle that there are contenders for genuine stardom in the world of SINGING everywhere in the hinterlands? In point of fact, it almost proves that singers can be found under every rock in the countrysides. To further make my point, I can name this phenomenon in one note: karaoke. (Just think, we once thought “karaoke” was some little cultural oddity happening in Japanese cocktail lounges. Now you can’t walk down Main Street that is bereft of a KARAOKE BAR.) And to belabor my point, how many little burgs everywhere have their own provincial “Deadwood’s Idol” variety extravaganzas?

Oh say can we sing? You betcha, Margie, by the footlights’ early light.
I can’t resist going further, sorry. What also has always been part of the singing culture since time immemorial in America, or at least before Lowell Mason? Choral singing, of course. Like it’s closest academic, co-curricular cousin, team sports, the art form thrives stronger than ever. In my neck of the woods, a mini Bible Belt, no one raises an eyebrow if any of our middle or high school choruses sings repeated sacred songs, In Latin or Hebrew even, in a manner that would make Capella Sixtina red with envy. Put this reality in a petrie dish with singing “reality shows” and you get “GLEE” or better yet, “THE SING OFF.”

Why are people so alarmed by the prospect of singing?

What confounds the issues surrounding the “prospect of singing” isn’t we cannot sing; “Oh, no one wants to hear me sing!” The principle issue is “why would we sing?”

It is not something we make on our own. That leads us to believe that singing is only for the stars and the professionals, people who inspire the awe of large audiences.

But I believe I’ve just illustrated, if not proven, that a great multitude of “us” believe we can be stars, we can be professionals, we can inspire awe in large audiences at the local high school musical!
Jeffrey’s article then lists many scenarios present in affecting the fulcrum of “FACP” (Full, active, conscious participation, or lack thereof.) But those scenarios show only the “effect” of cause and effect at play in those situations.
Let me illustrate why the one hat rack, one type of hat theory cannot serve as a remedy for unwillingness to communal singing. Yesterday afternoon our parish had one of the two annual “Annointing Masses” in the late afternoon. Attendance was at an all time high, near as I could tell.
We chanted the English Introit from Bruce Ford’s TAG as a simple prelude. The congregation, filled with seriously ill, elderly and otherwise infirm people and their caregivers, then rose and belted out that most heretical bane of our Catholic gestalt, “Amazing Grace.” (Don’t go there right now, if you can avoid it please.) The celebrant then cantillated the “In Nomine.” AMEN! They sang. “The Lord be with you.” “AND ALSO WITH YOU!” And so it went throughout the next hour or so. So much so, that our little trio schola (my organist, wife and myself) could gently fold in harmonies to the full throated singing of the congregants, all the way to the final “In Nomine.”
Let me add to this that we have, at our place, gone completely “unplugged” for Lent for both our schola and even our ensemble. It has, as Jeffrey suggests, been a complete revelation and boon. We may never go back to any amplification without a tactical or strategic need. For true chant and choral music it’s perfection. For congregational singing, it also provides a clearer sense of balance between the organ and singers, etc.
The balance of Jeffrey’s article seems to regain its foothold, the hat rack stands tall and the hats fit nicely, “all things being equal.”
But, it is my experience that American catholic worshippers who come to Mass with intent beyond their individual and privatized notions of what constitutes their obligation to “hear Mass sung,” they will respond accordingly and well. I think this reality can be seen at daily Masses more regularly at Sunday Masses. These are intentional communities at worship. This can be seen on Thanksgiving Day Masses. People who take an hour plus to really offer up Eucharist while the bird is basted and roasting, are vibrating in tune to a higher frequency than the casually minded, casually clothed bunch who are thinking about brunch during the Sunday consecrations. The faithful who come to the Mass of the Lord’s Supper and Mandatum on Holy Thursday, don’t stop chanting “Pange lingua” even if they’re weeping at the “funeral procession” of the sacrificed Lord to the altar of repose. They are purposefully engaged.
I think it would be safe to say that if you’re still reading this, you would count yourself among the perpetually, purposefully engaged. But insofar as being exemplars, enablers or enthusiasts of the singing parishioner, we can only do our calling and tasks to the best of our abilities, and continue to hone our understanding, our will, our humility and our patience that the other aspects and ministers serving the Mass, which we sing (and not sing “at”) will inspire our faithful believers to not even think, when they are blessed with “The Lord be with you,” ….”Oh, no one wants to hear me sing.” Oh yes, there’s at least some One. We call Him Lord.
This response is not meant to contend with Jeffrey’s thrust of prioritization within the reformation of worship practices. In fact, I rather think my observation argues for the efficiency of Dr. Mahrt’s “paradigm” that which is at the center of the orbiting “all things being in equal measure, according to their roles.”

Colin Mawby’s Warning about Command-and-Control Music

Distinguished composer and organist Colin Mawby has been sending around the following message, which contains an analysis of the potential mess being created by the growing centralization of control of Catholic music.

Vivace! 089 April 2011

Censorship

I am deeply concerned about the system that has been put in place by the English Hierarchy’s “Department for Christian Life and Worship” for the vetting of new church music. It now has to be approved by an anonymous panel, presumably of musicians, which is organised by the Episcopal Department for Christian Life and Worship. New music has to be submitted by the publishers and not the composers.

The Department has made an agreement with ICEL, the translating body, that it will only give permission for the publication of its copyright material on foot of a certificate signed by Bishop Alan Hopes, the Chair of this anonymous panel, that the music has been approved. Bishop Hopes appointed the panel without any public consultation and apparently on advice from within the Department. There is a right of appeal but appeals have to be submitted to Bishop Hopes – he who appointed the panel! This is reminiscent of the long discredited and now abandoned English procedure where complaints against the police were investigated by the police.

The anonymity of this panel totally destroys any credibility it may have had. It wishes to be seen as a “critical friend”: mind-boggling episcopal spin! The only place for anonymous criticism is the waste paper basket.

No consideration has been given to the effect of this on publishers. Every adverse panel decision is an attack upon their musical judgement. I know personally of one revered Anglican publisher whose confidence in Catholic music has been destroyed by this procedure.

The Department has produced a system that is totally dysfunctional. What’s going to happen to photocopied music which doesn’t use ICEL copyright texts? What’s going to happen to a publisher who refuses to accept this procedure? Are we really going to see ICEL suing for breach of copyright and dragging these sacred texts through the courts? What sanction does this panel have if non-ICEL texts are used? So many composers write their own words. What’s going to happen to new music on CDs?

I raised with the Department the question of conflict of interest – where a member of the panel submits a work of his or her own for approval. I was assured that “the chair will be informed and take appropriate action”. No indication of who who will give the information and what the “appropriate action” will be. (A censorship panel was originally set up in the 1960s and collapsed partly because of this problem.)

It is also not generally realised that ICEL charges publishers for the reproduction of copyright texts, and that its work is financed by the money it earns. This raises the thorny question of whether the reproduction of sacred texts should be subject to copyright fees. (ICEL even charge interest if a publisher is late in payment!) This is similar to the 16th-century practice of the sale of indulgences to finance the building of St Peter’s Basilica – a procedure roundly and rightly condemned by Martin Luther.

I urge all publishers and composers to follow the courageous example of Kevin Mayhew Publishers and refuse to have anything to do with this iniquitous system. Censorship is never a long-term solution to any problem. It is also totally wrong.

Colin Mawby KSG

What is the Reform Priority for Catholic Music?

Everything seems like a top priority for Catholic music these days. We need changes in what we sing, how we think about the role of music, the way music is financed, and where we get it.

But aside from all of these, there is the extremely serious matter of how we go about singing at all. This might be the most important challenge we face. Without getting this right, plainchant and therefore truly liturgical music, will forever be on the shelf and we will forever continue with our current habit of picking random songs to sing to replace Mass texts and judging their suitability by gauging their seeming popularity.

The short summary is that we need to start believing that liturgical music is produced by the human voice alone, and we need to embrace liturgical prose rather than someone else’s poetry as the core substance of what we sing. We are about as far apart from this ideal as we’ve ever been, and a major part of the reason is that we no longer believe in our ability to sing anything at all. Forget style and text for a moment and just think about singing in general.

Here is an example of what I mean. I was just on the flight and I was sitting at the back fo the plane where the flight attendant makes those long announcements about how to bail out of the plane, use your floatation device, not to smoke in the lavatory, and the like. It is a memorized piece of prose.

After she finished, I said to her, jokingly: “you know, that would be much more noble if you sang it and then people might listen more carefully.”

She laughed and said, “Oh no one wants to hear my singing voice. It’s awful.”

I suddenly realized that I’ve heard some version of the same from a hundred people. I kept trying this experiment all day, with the taxi driver, the baggage claim guy, the secretary at the Church office, a grounds keeper, and anyone else I bumped into. Each time I suggested that he or she should sing something. Each time, the reaction was the same: “oh you don’t want to hear me sing.”

Can we somehow arrange to ban those words from the human language? I wonder if this is darn-near universal that people claim that their voices are awful. People are telling themselves that they cannot do something that they can do. If every one of this people were at a party where “Happy Birthday” was being sung, they would all join in (without music, I might add!) and sing the pitches and the text with gusto. That’s singing, isn’t it?

To be sure, these people don’t sound like American Idol, and that’s probably good insofar as Church music is concerned. In any case, it is not about what we think of as popular performance. We aren’t making recordings here. The results of their singing are not going to be downloaded from iTunes. They aren’t up for some award program. Their only real audience is God.

Why are people so alarmed by the prospect of singing? It has something to do without our consumption-based culture. Music is something we get from CDs, MP3s, video games, movies. It is not something we make on our own. That leads us to believe that singing is only for the stars and the professionals, people who inspire the awe of large audiences.

The best people are able manage these days is a soft version of karaoke, and this is pretty much what our churches are giving people the opportunity to do. We add every conceivable contraption to keep people from taking charge of their own music. We have some (few) real organists but rather than let them solo so we can listen to the beauty the instrument produces, we make them pump out loud hymns in the hope that we can produce a vague text underneath.

We ask pianists to pound away so that if we fail to make a sound, at least something is happening and the church doesn’t fall quiet. We drag out every high-school band member to blow and blast to keep from hearing ourselves. We add guitars, drums, amplifiers, and more, just to bury the sound of our own voices as much as possible.

What if we just unplugged it all and created a scenario in which the failure to sing would in fact result in total silence? This would change matters dramatically. It would be like telling people who had been carrying on escalators all their lives to walk up stairs for once. They would stand at the bottom and look up, mystified why they aren’t moving. Eventually they would figure out that they have to put their feet into motion if they want to get up the stairs. Insofar as the escalators do the work, they have no need to. But when they stop, they walk. That is precisely what unplugging the machine would do.

Well, we need to get off the machine. We need to unplugged so that we can sing, really sing. Once the machines are gone, we are of the rigid system of metrics that has defined music at Mass. That is, most all the music we sing is crammed into a metered structure that is conventional in pop music but not possible when singing the actual texts of the liturgy. The tones and structure of chant are designed to accommodate prose of varying lengths, which means that the melody is free and follows the rhythm of the language itself , making the music a prism that reflects the light of the Word.

This is beautiful and abstract imagery but in order to make it happen, we need that very practical thing, which is the ability to make the music with our voices alone. It’s been so long since we have done that, and some people have never done that, that it is going to be an act of courage going forward.

As time has moved on, I’ve come to appreciate the absolute brilliance of the chants in the forthcoming 3rd Edition of the Roman Missal. The chants are in English. People say that the music isn’t brilliant and perhaps that’s true but all the chants are all brilliant in the sense that they make it possible for people to actually sing on their own for the first time. This is the step that is absolutely essential. There can be no progress without that.

You say that chants in in the Missal are boring? Fine. If your parish is singing them, it is time to move on but this time with a good foundation. There is a wealth of glorious music awaiting them in the Gregorian books. And it is also true that once you get the hang of plainchant and the sense of how it is so prayerful and beautiful, pop music just doesn’t work any more to accomplish the end.

Right now, we have the strange situation in which perhaps 5% of parishes sing music from the Gregorian books at one or two Masses, while the rest are stuck in this cage of metered hymns that nothing to do with liturgical texts and, to the extent that the texts are actually sung, it is to songs that are designed to fit within that same framework – all of it sustained by a elaborate apparatus of accompaniment that tries to sound as fancy and comforting as possible.

How are we to bridge this great divide? How can the large majority of parishes reduce their dependency on the apparatus so that that Mass can be sung in total with integrity and with the voice that God gave us becoming the primary voice again? The Missal chants actually do provide that vehicle to make this possible.

As I’ve talked to groups about this entire problem, I’ve noted that most Catholic musicians cannot even imagine what kind of thing will emerge from this emphasis. They don’t have a model in mind. They’ve never heard it, never experienced it. And yet this is the very thing that that has been pushed by so many documents on music – namely that we sing the Mass. This has been the dream of liturgical reformers for longer than a century. There have been so many fits and starts and the dream has remained largely elusive.

But the introduction of the new Missal this Advent offers a chance for a new start. We only need to sing what we are given, and sing it on our own, and a large part of the battle for sacred music will be accomplished. The rest will require training and focus but at least we will have the essential skill in place. We must walk before we can run.

In paradisum-beyond….

About a week ago I received a call from a woman in San Jose. She said she and her siblings were graduates of our parochial school and their mother was active in support roles back in the day. The daughter said her mother was failing in hospice care and she had expressed on prior occasions that, if at all possible, could students from the school contribute musically to her funeral. Somehow she’d heard that we’d revived a bell choir, and would their involvement be possible. The kids had already done their first funeral for a toddler sister of a current first grader, and comported themselves with dignity in every aspect. Upon the elderly mother’s death and notice by her daughter, I called our principal, the class teacher and the pastor. My concern over the use of the bells during Lent was assuaged by the pastor, so we confirmed the choir’s involvement. They already had a significant amount of repertoire appropriate for the processionals and ordinary, but I arranged three additional pieces, including the clip below, for this occasion. They’d only rehearsed this arrangement of mine of “In paradisum” once. So, as you watch and listen, you’ll notice they’re quite fixed upon the music sheets.
But what matters for me, my school colleagues and the pastor, is their inchoate witness to our Catholic Faith and their dedication to fulfill a ministerial role at the funeral of an elderly lady whose only connection was the tendon of tradition of our school. This isn’t perfection, but it gives me hope for paradise for all our sakes.
Sorry the beginning is abrupt. The celebrant mixed up the commendation a bit, so our 8th grade teacher pressed record a nanosecond late.

Dealing with Frustration at the Slow Pace of Change

Mostly I write with a sense of optimism about our liturgical future. There are so many wonderful signs: Summorum, the new English Missal, the formation of thousands of scholas, a new generation of priests who “get it” as regards the liturgy, growing support from Rome, as well as cultural change at the heart of Catholic life. All of these are fantastic, and I’m deeply grateful to be alive to see it all happening.

And yet, nearly every day I receive notes from people who are still despairing because their own local parish offers nothing that resembles the sights and sounds of Catholicism. There is no chant, the hymns are embarrassing, the musicians and liturgy directors are clueless, the pastor does nothing or is part of the problem, and every week brings another teeth-gritting moment. Many are at their wit’s end.

We should all be sympathetic to their plight. In fact, it is not unreasonable to presume that this is the norm in the overwhelming majority of parishes. It is hard to be optimistic when all the good trends are an abstraction while the bad trends date very far back in history and are the only present reality you experience week to week.

Long experience tells me that a person’s attitude toward the state of affairs in the Catholic Church is determined by their own experience on the ground level. For this reason, it’s a good idea not to dismiss anyone’s perspective on what the real problems and solutions are; one never knows for sure how we might act and believe if we walked in another’s shoes. And truly, it was not that many years ago when I dreaded going to Mass because the music was so offensive. It made me so mad that it would take until Thursday to get over it, and the whole process would start again on Sunday. These were dark times.

And yet consider this. Even if parish situations are terrible today, the knowledge that change is happening elsewhere can really lift the spirits. What if this were 1966 or so? In these years, most parishes were more or less peaceful but a terrible storm was building right outside the window. For many decades after, we saw very but decline. Standards not only fell but were destroyed. The rules and norms that governed liturgical life for centuries were suddenly thrown out and replaced by improvisation and a near-universal touch/feely ethos.

To be a priest or serious musician in those times was more than a struggle. It was a daily occasion for despair. These were people who had adopted liturgy as their lifetime vocation – and there is only one life. During the whole of their lives, they saw nothing but decline and face little but attacks.

We often hear caricatures of crabby traditionalists who could do nothing during all this time but mutter and complain, but we should be loath to condemn them for this. They were put through a trial most of us can’t even imagine. When they looked at a crucifix, they could identify, and this fact was made all the worse by the reality that their torment seem to be happening at the hands of the Church they had embraced as their true love.

Many in this generation just left. The heros are the people who stuck it out and prepared the way for the current reform. They saw the need to offer a model, to teach and train. They consoled themselves with the hope that some future generation would reap the benefits, all while knowing that they were not likely to see the fruit of their efforts in their lifetimes.

There are hundreds of such people, but let me just mention two that serve as great inspirations to me. The first is Msgr. Richard Schuler, who stood virtually alone in the United States standing for high quality music in his parish (St. Agnes in St. Paul, MN) and never relented in singing the propers of the Mass. It was treated terribly and widely regarded as the last of a dying breed. He kept the Church Music Association of America going despite having no money and very little help. He was a dreamer and an idealist but mostly he had that rare thing: faith that beauty and truth would eventually carry the day. He was ordained in a time of peace and stability in the Church but ended up fighting every day of his life against the trends of his time. But he never gave in, and always did the best that he could with what he had. We all owe him a huge debt.

Another case in point is the legendary chant director Mary Berry of the U.K. Upheaval also defined her life and she had to reinvent even her own vocation in order to survive. But thanks to amazing tenacity and a great deal of creativity, she managed to teach and inspire several generations of students. She did more than that: she entrenched chant (Latin and English) as part of the musical scene during a period in which it might otherwise have disappeared. She was the most generous person, happy to lead anyone to the beauty of liturgical chant. And when she was asked about her struggles, she would always demur and change the subject over to hopeful things. When people would attempt to drag her into controversies, battles, and internecine splits she would refuse. She had a light in front of her that she followed always, and that light was that of Christ. And you know what? The Catholic world is filled with her students today – students not only of music but students of life who have replicated her example. Some of them are in very high positions in Church today, helping to bring reform with gentleness and a loving and generous spirit.

What both of these great people had in common was the willingness to take up a cause themselves, regardless of what people around them or in the press said about them. Grousing and complaining was not their way. Their lives were light, not heat. They love the work. It was the source of their joy. They knew what they had to do and they did it, even though they received few if any personal accolades for their work. This is humility. This is a form of piety. And this is something that we should all hope to emulate. And look what they have left! It’s incredible how the life of one man and one woman can make such a difference in this world. And consistently with the poetic drama of the Christian faith itself, their glory as individuals is only obvious to us and to the world after their deaths.

To be surrounded entirely by decline is a very difficult way to live a life. Despair is a universal human temptation. We should avoid it, refuse it. But how much easier should it be for us in our time than it was for them in their time? If Msgr Schuler could build up a world world-class music program in one parish that became a light to the world, and if Mary Berry could teach thousands and leave behind generations of brilliantly trained scholars and singers, and do all of this in the 1970s and 1980s (!) surely there are things we can all do right where we are. This is the task of our generation. It is our calling. And looking back at the past, we should realize that it is a much lighter burden than theirs.

I too would love to see change sooner rather than later. We’ve waited decades and decades for this. In this time, great men and women have lived hard lives and died before the reform came. Let’s let them be our inspirations as we go forward in our own times to do what we must.