No CrossRef data available.
Article contents
Music in a Vernacular Catholic Liturgy
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 January 2020
Extract
We are all accustomed to regard the music for the Latin rites of the Catholic Church as a glorious part (for at least seven centuries the main part) of the heritage of Western music. So of course, it is. But if its development be examined from the pastoral aspect, if we ask how far this music has assisted the majority of worshippers in understanding and participating in the liturgy as ‘the outstanding means whereby the faithful may express in their lives and manifest to others the mystery and the real nature of the true Church’, a very different picture results. To understand the need for changes in liturgical music today and the reasons why it has taken so long for this need to be openly admitted and changes officially sanctioned, requires a brief historical introduction.
- Type
- Research Article
- Information
- Copyright
- Copyright © 1965 The Royal Musical Association and the Authors
References
1 Constitution De Sacra Liturgia of the Second Vatican Council, article 2.Google Scholar
2 Epistolae 55, 18–19, quoted in J. Gélineau, Voices and Instruments in Christian Worship, London 1964, p. 82.Google Scholar
3 Solange Corbin, L'Eglise à la conquête de sa musique, Paris, 1961, ch. 8.Google Scholar
4 Paulinus Milner, O.P., The Worship of the Church, New York, 1964, 830.Google Scholar
5 Joseph A. Jungmann, S.J., The Mass of the Roman Rite (English translation of Missarum Sollemnia, Vienna, 1949), New York, 1951, i. 244.Google Scholar
6 Jungmann, J. A., op. cit., ii. 364.Google Scholar
7 Jungmann, op. cit., i. 143, n. 14.Google Scholar
8 Bull Quo primum tempore of Pius V.Google Scholar
9 Constitution Immensa of Sixtus V.Google Scholar
10 Theiner, A., Acta Concilii Tridentini, Zagreb, 1874, ii. 122.Google Scholar
11 Jungmann, op. cit., i. 155.Google Scholar
12 Jungmann, op. cit., i. 149.Google Scholar
13 Charles Davis, Liturgy and Doctrine, London 1960, p. 11, f.Google Scholar
14 Motu Proprio Tra le Sollecitudini translation pub. by Society of St. Gregory (undated).Google Scholar
15 Op. cit., art. 17 translation p. 7.Google Scholar
16 Decree Sacra Tridentina Symodus, 1905.Google Scholar
17 Bull Divino afflatu, 1911.Google Scholar
18 Tra le Sollecitudini, art. 7. transl. p. 10.Google Scholar
19 Charles Davis, op. cit., 14.Google Scholar
20 Decree Dominicae Resurrectionis Vigiliam, 1951.Google Scholar
21 Decree Maxima Redemptionis Nostrae Mysteria, 1955.Google Scholar
22 Encyclical Letter Musicae Sacrae Disciplina, translation published by Society of St. Gregory, London, 1959.Google Scholar
23 Op. cit. art. 36 transl. p. 37.Google Scholar
24 De Sacra Musica et Sacra Liturgia. Translation and commentary by J. B. O'Connell, London, 1959.Google Scholar
25 Op. cit., art. 13, transl. p. 25.Google Scholar
26 Op. cit., art. 33, transl. p. 55.Google Scholar
27 Text translated in Vatican II: The Liturgy Constitution ed. Austin Flannery, Dublin, 1964.Google Scholar
28 Op. cit., art. 14.Google Scholar
29 Op. cit., art. 21 and 34.Google Scholar
30 Op. cit., art. 36, sect. 1.Google Scholar
31 Op. cit., art. 36, sect. 2.Google Scholar
32 Op. cit., art. 22, sect. 1 and 2.Google Scholar
33 Thirty Psalms and Two Canticles pub. by the Grail (England), 1957, p. 50.Google Scholar