SACRED MUSIC
Volume 118, Number 4, Winter 1991


WHY GO TO CHURCH?

 "Style" is a key term when discussing liturgy in contemporary America. 
Parish "liturgists" must always implement the acceptable liturgical style 
in their parishes (whether the faithful like it or not), and often they are 
forced to do it by a "worship committee" controlled principally by members 
whose agenda has been influenced by "Pastoral Music," "Modern Liturgy," 
other "establishment" publications, and local gatherings sponsored by the 
National Association of Pastoral Musicians (NPM).

 What is the prevailing liturgical "style" in American Catholic churches 
today? While it would take volumes to document the phenomenon properly, the 
American style of liturgy usually involves a number of factors. Mass, for 
instance, will generally have a celebrant (invariably called a presider), 
perhaps one or two con-celebrants, perhaps a deacon, an altar server or two 
(servers should be male but frequently are not), at least six Eucharistic 
ministers (never called extraordinary ministers anymore) to accommodate 
communion under both species, a "contemporary group" of four to twelve or 
more members to provide the "music" and always two lectors (usually women) 
who, because of a twisted concept of symbolism, are instructed to emerge 
self-consciously from the "assembly." The resulting "performance" is 
usually either vacuous or annoying (sometimes both); only rarely does it 
glorify God and edify the faithful. 

 What about the "music" itself? To put it charitably and simply, the 
American Catholic church music landscape is a vast wasteland. Latin, along 
with its enormous corpus of glorious church music, is not even considered. 
The pipe organ, orchestra, and any music worthy of the liturgy are scorned 
and opposed with frightful viciousness. Missalettes have been discarded as 
tacky. What is found instead is some combination of hymnals, usually "Glory 
and Praise" and one of the editions of "Worship." The preferred 
accompaniment is piano and/or guitar, and the amplification required to 
carry the sound in the wrong direction (that is, from front to rear) can be 
absolutely deafening (cf. Thomas Day's excellent book, "Why Catholics Can't 
Sing)."

 One of the most irksome consequences of the current American style is that 
the same two or three settings of the "Alleluia" are sung week after week, 
the same "Holy, Holy" is sung week after week, and the same "Lamb of God" 
is sung week after week. This effectively eliminates nearly two thousand 
years of certain categories of church music from our liturgies in favor of 
a few generally inferior contemporary compositions. (One could, of course, 
argue that the threefold mode six "Alleluia" is from the traditional 
Gergorian repertory, but this merely diverts attention from the real 
issue.) This is clearly a misapplication of liturgical norms, and is 
grossly unfair to musicians and congregations.

 Even suggestions to introduce the rosary or traditional devotions as a way 
of fostering a lively spiritual life in the parish are dismissed out of 
hand. Those who offer the suggestions are often made to feel incompetent or 
are ridiculed for not following Vatican II.

 The end result of all this is that the ordinary American parish has a 
musical program that is unworthy of the liturgy and a liturgy that is 
unworthy of the parish and an insult to the faithful. So why go to church?

 The Catholic Church's public liturgy, the Mass, should glorify God and 
edify the faithful. If this is indeed what the liturgy does, it would 
attract not only Catholics but non-Catholics as well. But what do we see 
happening in the Church? Declining attendance at Mass, fewer priests, 
reduced collections, diluted moral teaching, and on and on. Clearly, if the 
liturgy were doing its job properly, this would not be the case. Instead, 
we would have full churches, full seminaries, full collection baskets, and 
a people fortified in the Church's unchanging moral teachings.

 Liturgy should attract and be distinctive. The Church's liturgy as 
practiced in America today, however, is frequently unattractive and hardly 
distinguishable from a stage act. This is the fault of those who 
implemented the liturgical renewal and those who are now in control: the 
establishment. In short, implementation of the liturgical renewal in this 
country and elsewhere has resulted in unmitigated disaster. It has failed 
dismally. People no longer go to church, yet the establishment continues to 
propose more of the same insipid, fatuous programs as solutions to the 
problems they created in the first place.

 The faithful, the clergy, the church musicians--even the liturgists--do 
not want things this way. The American style is, rather, promoted by the 
establishment, represented by the U. S. Bishops' Committee on the Liturgy 
and National Pastoral Musicians, and American parishes adopt this style 
because they have no altrnatives. The establishment's best interests lie in 
keeping it this way, for little material profit can be made from promoting 
the authentic directives of the council and the continual requests of Rome 
regarding liturgy and sacred music.

 The establishment is the only game in town--a giant, unchallenged 
monolith. It needs to be challenged. It needs competition. "Sacred Music" 
is a step in the right direction, but aggressive action is also needed. 
Semi-annual or even quarterly conventions promoting good church music and 
sound liturgical practices should be sponsored in various parts of the 
country. The books and documents on the liturgy are published and 
available, and the Church has centuries of Catholic culture from which to 
draw for music, visual art, and inspiration. Parishes need to be alerted to 
alternative, legitimate resources and practices.

 As an additional step, pastors should have their parishes returned to 
them. Lay involvement in parish life can be good and fruitful, but today 
lay people virtually run the Church. One can even sa that the Church has 
become feminized. Pators should have their legitimate role restored, and 
the bishops should stand behind their brothers to give firm support and 
direction.

 Much needs to be done to bring the Church to the authentic renewal 
envisioned for so long by popes and councils. It is a daunting task, but it 
can be accomplished. If something is not done soon, however, not much will 
be left of the Church in this country by the next millennium.

								PAUL W. LE VOIR