The papal liturgist has said that Catholics should “never fight” over
liturgy.
Speaking at a conference of liturgists and musicians,
Mgr Guido Marini, the papal master of liturgical ceremonies, told choir
members, directors and priests that when Catholics fight over
liturgy, “We distort the very nature” of the Mass, in which we should
seek to be “one body before the Lord.”
Mgr Marini was speaking at a conference opening a three-day jubilee
for choirs.
Hundreds of people involved in providing music for the
liturgical celebrations in Italian dioceses and parishes – such as
singers, organists and musicians – attended, as did directors of
diocesan liturgy offices and schools of sacred music.
During a brief question-and-answer period after his talk on the role
of the choir, a participant asked Mgr Marini what she termed “an
uncomfortable, practical question.”
“Many times, in our parishes, the priest wants the choir to perform
songs that are inappropriate, both because of the text” and because of
the moment the song is to be performed during the service, she said.
“In these situations, must the choir master follow the wishes of the
priest even with the knowledge that by doing so, the choir is no longer
serving the liturgy, but the priest?” she said to applause.
Asked for his advice, Mgr Marini smiled, cast his eyes upward and
rubbed his chin signaling his awareness that it was a hot-button topic.
He said he felt “sandwiched” “between two fires, between priests and
choirs.”
Acknowledging the difficulty of such a situation, he said he sided with the priest.
There are situations where priests may not be giving completely
correct guidance, he said, and there are directors that could be doing
better. But in either case, conflict and division should be avoided and
“humility and communion be truly safeguarded,” he said.
This, like with all disagreements, he said, requires that all sides
be very patient with each other, sit down and talk, and explain the
reasons behind their positions.
But if no conclusion or final point is reached, then “perhaps it is
better also to come out of it momentarily defeated and wait for a better
time rather than generate divisions and conflict that do no good,” he
said to applause.
Just like the grain of wheat, he said, “sometimes all of us must die in something” knowing that it will bear future fruit.
Mgr Marini responded to the question after delivering a 50-minute speech, in which he received a standing ovation.
Titled, “The Role of the Choir in Liturgical Celebrations,” the
monsignor outlined five fundamental elements of the liturgy and how
choirs should help serve each of those aspects.
The liturgy is the work of Christ and it should express the Savior’s
living presence, he said.
Choir members, therefore, must be people who
have Christ present in their hearts.
While much care must be given to the artistic and technical aspects
of liturgical music’s performance, the hearts of those who perform must
be cared for as well so that they are men and women of faith who feel “a
burning love for Christ” and find their life’s meaning in him, he said.
He also asked that choirs help the liturgy in its purpose of
gathering everyone together to conform themselves more closely to God
and his will.
The Mass is about overcoming individual distinctions so that “it is
no longer I who live but Christ who lives in me,” he said. That means
the choir should help everyone in the assembly be an active participant
during the moments of song including by stirring people’s emotional or
spiritual feelings.
Choirs must help the liturgy by inviting all of creation to lift its
gaze toward God on high, he said.
People should feel elevated and pulled
out of the mundanity of the ordinary and everyday — not to escape from
it, but so as to return renewed to one’s everyday life after Mass.
If song is not “a bridge over eternity” then it is not doing its job,
he said.
Song must not be worldly and unworthy, but must in some way be
the “song of angels”.