The Possibly Ancient Papyrus, Baby Boomers, and Liturgical Art

Martin Marty takes to task his generation for reinventing Jesus in its own image, this latest sensational time with a possibly ancient piece of papyrus.

If he is right, then what does this say about our liturgical art? Do our hymns, for example, sometimes address political concerns rather than true praise? What does Marty’s thesis say about the recent decades’ love for the grotesque in painting? And about churches-in-the-round?

And doesn’t every high school theater production of Godspell run the danger of encouraging this way of thinking about our own, personal, Jesus? Will future generations, particularly if they become an overwhelming political force, co-opt the governance of some ecclesial bodies in their turn, by exactly the same means, a complete makeover of traditional Christology?

We can put this kind of media event into perspective by noting that each such unearthing of non-canonical ancient Christian texts receives publicity in direct proportion to attention being given to particular controversial issues in the contemporary world. In the long perspective of Christian history of twenty centuries, my generation and I are virtual kids, with only a half-century of observation behind us. But we can see ancient textual interests and contemporary itches matching almost decade by decade.

Thus: when in the 1950s-plus “we” were seeking precedent for social justice on Christian fronts (count me in!), Jesus got pictured as an East Harlem Protestant social worker. Then came a time when best-sellers and their publicists proved that Jesus worked wonders because he and his followers were chewing mushrooms which gave them hallucinatory and thus divine-revelatory visions. Just in time to match the world of hippies and consciousness raisers. They came and went. Remember the Passover Plot? It had its moment in a time when such plotting mattered. Recall the books on “Jesus the Zealot,” based on discoveries from times of old to match the most radical Liberation Theology of our time? This dagger-carrying Jesus came and went.

Sr. Maria of the Cross, OP, 1937-2012

“While Sr. Maria was talented in many different areas, she will always be most known for The Summit Choirbook, a 15 year labor of love. Sr. Maria also wrote numerous Mass ordinaries. She adapted the entire Dominican rite gradual for chanting in English as well as an adaptation of the antiphonarium. She composed music specifically for singing in English for the Sacred Triduum, Easter Sunday and the Easter Octave, drawing on the chants used for the Latin texts in the Dominican rite. This is what is used at our monastery but has never been published. She translated and wrote her own arrangements for a collection of Polish hymns for the liturgical year–The John Paul II Songbook. This book is also used by the monastery but was never published because Sr. Maria always said it wasn’t complete. Sr. Maria wrote three different sets of psalms tones for use at the Office. Her first set, written around 1967 is used by several Dominican monasteries along with the antiphons of Sr. Mary of the Pure Heart, OP, (RIP) West Springfield, MA. Sr. Maria of the Cross had a great love for the chant and for the chants of the Ukrainian rite and taught our community to sing these as well.
May she rest in peace. More.

Hymn Tune Introit: 25th Sunday

Despite the many excellent settings of this coming Sunday’s Entrance Antiphon, some congregations will not yet have the means to sing it in free-composed chant:

I am the salvation of the people, says the Lord.
Should they cry to me in any distress,
I will hear them, and I will be their Lord for ever. 

However, every congregation in the world can sing the following, because they already know the tune. I’ve rearranged the antiphons for nearly all of the Sundays of the year, setting them to a single metrical scheme. 
I am my peoples’ saving power.
I hear their cries in their distress
Forever I will be their Lord.
Eternal is my faithfulness
 The same tune, such as Duke Street, could conceivably be used every single week, or, for variety, different tunes may be used, perhaps seasonally, such as Conditor Alme Siderum during Advent, Jesu Dulcis Memoria during Lent, and Lasst Uns Erfreuen during the Easter Season.
The goal of the Hymn Tune Propers project is to give access to sung propers to those congregations that might otherwise miss out on the proper texts of the Mass altogether. It is a compromise solution, a bridge to Gregorian chant itself, but one that can be started immediately, in every parish.

Jesus’ Wife

I recently read an extremely poorly-written article about a piece of papyrus. Apparently, according to the article, because someone in the 4th century wrote down, “Jesus said to them, ‘My wife…'” the world is supposed to open itself up to every gnostic speculation that ever crossed anyone’s mind, from the defamation of the holy memory of St. Mary Magdalene, to the penitential excesses of a fictional Opus Dei albino monk.

The problem with all of this speculation, besides the obvious crying need for journalistic reform, not to mention basic liberal arts education, is that the Bible already clearly speaks about Jesus’ wife. Jesus is the husband of the Church. The Church is the bride of the Lamb.

Husbands, love your wives,
even as Christ loved the Church
and handed himself over for her to sanctify her,

cleansing her by the bath of water with the word,
that he might present to himself the Church in splendor,
without spot or wrinkle or any such thing,
that she might be holy and without blemish.
So also husbands should love their wives as their own bodies.
He who loves his wife loves himself.
For no one hates his own flesh
but rather nourishes and cherishes it,
even as Christ does the Church,
because we are members of his Body.
For this reason a man shall leave his father and his mother
and be joined to his wife,
and the two shall become one flesh.
This is a great mystery,
but I speak in reference to Christ and the Church.
Jesus speaks of Himself as the Bridegroom in every single Gospel. Just 5 verses before the end of the entire Bible, we read 
And the Spirit and the bride say, Come. And let him that heareth say, Come. And let him that is athirst come. And whosoever will, let him take the water of life freely.

Sequence for Our Lady of Sorrows

 The Stabat Mater
(One of the five permitted sequences, sung on September 15th)

On the Cross her Son was dying.
Mary stood beneath Him crying,
Sharing in His saving cross.
As He hangs, her soul is grieving,
and a sword her heart is cleaving
and she weeps the bitter loss.

O, the sad, afflicted Mother
of the Son beyond all others:
only Son of God most high.
Full of grief, her heart is aching;
watching Him, her body, quaking,
trembles as her offspring dies.

Who would see Christ’s mother crying
at the bitter crucifying
without tears of sympathy?
Who could see her depth of feeling—
thoughts of many hearts revealing—
and not share her agony?

Pardon for our sins entreating,
She saw Him endure the beating.
All our guilt on Him was cast.
She stood by in contemplation
When her Son, in desolation
Breathed His spirit forth at last.

Font of love, O Blessed Mother,
lend me tears to mourn my Brother.
Never let my ardor dim.
Let my heart be burning freely,
Christ my God be pleased to see me
all on fire with love for Him.

This I ask, O Holy Mary,
that His wounds I too may carry:
fix them deeply in my heart.
Mine the burden He was bearing;
let me in His pain be sharing;
of His suffering take a part.

Let me join in your lamenting,
through my life weep unrelenting
tears for Jesus Crucified.
Let me stand and share your weeping,
all the day death’s vigil keeping,
glad to stand close by your side.

Queen of all the virgin choir,
judge me not when I aspire
your pure tears to emulate.
Let me share in Christ’s affliction—
death by bitter crucifixion—
and His wounds commemorate.

Let me taste the pains He offered,
drunk with love for Him who suffered.
May His wounds become my own.
On the day of Christ’s returning
may my heart be lit and burning.
Virgin, aid me at His throne.

May His Cross be interceding
and His death my vict’ry pleading.
May He hold me in His grace.
When my flesh by death is taken,
may my soul to glory waken
and in heaven take a place. Amen.

History, In Reverse

 A few years ago at the March For Life in Washington DC, I was walking with a few families from my parish, including several children in our Youth Classical Schola. People sing and pray aloud all throughout the March. We passed an older Religious Sister, who sang We Will Know They Are Christians By Our Love. Then we passed some students at one of the new Catholic colleges, who were singing Renaissance polyphony. Then a couple of 9 year olds and I sang the simple tone Salve Regina.

Another year, another March For Life, and our Schola had learned the Solemn Tone of the Salve as well. One of our Schola families passed the Dominican friars singing their own version of the monastic tone. As our young singer recounted it later, he had tried to join in with them but couldn’t, because the friars used “too many horizontal episemas.”
All of which goes to show that we live in a strangely backwards time, in which the young people alone have the knowledge to pass on the ecclesial heritage. It is like sitting around the campfire hearing stories of the old days–but the only ones who know the stories are the children.

Prayer Request

“At this hour in two days’ time”, the Holy Father said, “I will be on a plane bound for Lebanon. I rejoice at this apostolic trip which will enable me to meet many members of Lebanese society: the civil and ecclesiastical authorities, Catholic faithful of various rites, other Christians, and the Muslims and Druze of the region. I thank the Lord for this rich variety, which will be able to continue only if people live in permanent peace and reconciliation. For this reason I exhort all Christians of the Middle East, both those born there and the newly arrived, to be builders of peace and architects of reconciliation. Let us pray to God that He may fortify the faith of Christians in Lebanon and the Middle East, and fill them with hope. I thank God for their presence and call upon the entire Church to show solidarity, that they may continue to bear witness to Christ in those blessed lands, seeking communion in unity. I thank God for all the individuals andinstitutions who, in many ways, help them to do so. The history of the Middle East teaches us the important and sometimes primordial role. played by the various Christian communities in inter-religious and inter-cultural dialogue Let us ask God to give that region of the world its longed-for peace, and respect for legitimate differences. May God bless Lebanon and the Middle East. May God bless you”.