A major point of the liberalization of the older use of the Roman Rite is that it permits us to understand the new use of the Rite in its proper context. The world was not reinvented in 1970. The ordinary form divorced from its parent in the extraordinary form takes on a distorted shape. However, when the ordinary and extraordinary forms are celebrated back to back, you begin to see a pull at work that leads to greater continuity between old and new.
This is what was illustrated at the Byrd Festival with Masses for the twentieth Sunday of the year in both forms: vigil (ordinary) and Sunday morning (extraordinary form). The propers were the same. The ordinary was the same. The Gradual was sung at both. Neither Mass used any “hymns” (in the sense in which we think of that term) and yet the people sang and were involved at every step of both Masses.
This morning was the extraordinary form with its far more elaborate ceremony, held at the Dominican parish Holy Rosary in Portland. There are a few other notable differences: the positioning of the Asperges, the silent Canon, the Pater sung by the celebrant alone, the presence of a deacon and subdeacon with appointed roles (as versus concelebrants). But to someone who had just encountered the Mass, they would have certainly seemed like two somewhat different forms of the same Rite—precisely as Benedict XVI has said. This is in contrast to the usual impression people have of the OF and EF as two separate planets.
The celebrant for today’s Mass was Fr. (and Dr., Dr.) Richard Cipolla of St. Mary’s, Norwalk. His homily spoke of the liturgy as a contribution to the social order by what he called (in light of Josef Pieper) “leisure,” which is to say, not something that is work (toil designed for physical sustenance alone) but rather something we take time out of the course of our lives to love and embrace because it is beautiful and true. He explained why it is essential to treat the Mass as not only faith but art, not something ordinary but extraordinary.
As an example, he pointed to chant as pure joy—a “festival of neumes”—and likened polyphony to a waterfall that yields beautiful rainbows of color. We knew precisely what he meant because we had been listening to the children chant the Gregorian propers and the adult choir sing Byrd’s Mass for Three Voices.
I must say a word about this Mass setting. Three voices doesn’t sound like many. But there is something magical about the way Byrd scored this Mass. It sounds like many more. He does so much with so little, with impressive cascades of entrances throughout. His use of the ranges of the voices and their combinations to illustrate the text were well brought out by Cantores in Ecclesia.
From the singer’s point of view, this is a very satisfying setting. Every note matters. If one thing is out of place, you certainly sense it. But of course nothing was out of place with Cantores.
Sunday, August 17, 2008
Making the ordinary extraordinary
UnknownMore recent articles:
The Solemnity of St Joseph, Patron of the Universal Church 2025Gregory DiPippo
From the Encyclical Quamquam pluries of Pope Leo XIII on St Joseph, issued on the feast of the Assumption in 1889. It is providential that the conclave to elect a new pope should begin on this important solemnity; let us remember to count Joseph especially among the Saints to whom we address our prayers for a good outcome of this election. The spe...
Why the Traditional Mass Should Remain In LatinPeter Kwasniewski
In spite of attempts to suppress it, the traditional Latin Mass is here to stay. It may not be as widespread as it was in the halcyon days of Summorum Pontificum, but neither is it exactly hidden under a bushel, as the early Christians were during the Roman persecutions. In many cites, gigantic parishes run by former Ecclesia Dei institutes are pac...
An Illuminated Manuscript of St John’s ApocalypseGregory DiPippo
In honor of the feast of St John at the Latin Gate, here is a very beautiful illuminated manuscript which I stumbled across on the website of the Bibliothèque national de France (Département des Manuscrits, Néerlandais 3), made 1400. It contains the book of the Apocalypse in a Flemish translation, with an elaborately decorated page before each chap...
Gregorian Chant Courses This Summer at Clear Creek Abbey Gregory DiPippo
Clear Creek Abbey in northwest Oklahoma (diocese of Tulsa: located at 5804 W Monastery Road in Hulbert) will once again be hosting a week-long instruction in Gregorian chant, based on the course called Laus in Ecclesia, from Monday, July 14, to Friday, July 18. The course will be offered at three different levels of instruction:1) Gregorian initiat...
The Feast of St Vincent FerrerGregory DiPippo
The feast of St Vincent Ferrer was traditionally assigned to the day of his death, April 5th, but I say “assigned to” instead of “kept on” advisedly; that date falls within either Holy Week or Easter week so often that its was either translated or omitted more than it was celebrated on its proper day. [1] For this reason, in 2001 the Dominicans mov...
Good Shepherd Sunday 2025Gregory DiPippo
Dearest brethren, Christ suffered for us, leaving you an example that you should follow His steps; Who did no sin, neither was guile found in His mouth; Who, when He was reviled, did not revile. When He suffered, he threatened not, but delivered Himself to him that judged Him unjustly; Who His own self bore our sins in His body upon the tree: that...
The Gospel of Nicodemus in the Liturgy of EastertideGregory DiPippo
By “the Gospel of Nicodemus”, I mean not the apocryphal gospel of that title, but the passage of St John’s Gospel in which Christ speaks to Nicodemus, chapter 3, verses 1-21. This passage has an interesting and complex history among the readings of the Easter season. For liturgical use, the Roman Rite divides it into two parts, the second of which...
“The Angel Cried Out” - The Byzantine Easter Hymn to the Virgin MaryGregory DiPippo
In the Byzantine Divine Liturgy, there are several places where the priest sings a part of the anaphora out loud, and the choir makes a response, while he continues the anaphora silently. In the liturgy of St John Chrysostom, which is by far the more commonly used of the two anaphoras, the priest commemorates the Saints after the consecration and ...
The LavaboMichael P. Foley
Lost in Translation #124 After the incensation, the priest goes to the Epistle side and washes his hands, reciting Psalm 25, 6-12: Lavábo inter innocentes manus meas: et circúmdabo altáre tuum, Dómine.Ut audiam vocem laudis: et enarrem universa mirabilia tua.Dómine, dilexi decórem domus tuae: et locum habitatiónis gloriae tuae.Ne perdas cum impii...
Spinello Aretino’s Altar of Ss Philip and JamesGregory DiPippo
At the very end of the 14th century, the painter Spinello di Luca Spinelli (1350 ca. - 1410 ca.), usually known as Spinello Aretino (from Arezzo) was commissioned to make a frescoed altarpiece for the Dominican church of his native city. The altar itself no longer exists; it was dedicated to the Apostles Philip and James, whose feast is traditional...