Address of Pope Francis to Participants in the International Conference on Sacred Music

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Address of Pope Francis to Participants in the International Conference on Sacred Music Address of Pope Francis to participants in the International Conference on Sacred Music Clementine Hall Saturday March 4, 2017 Dear brothers and sisters, I am delighted to meet all of you who have come to Rome from different countries to participate in the conference on “Music and Church: Cult and Culture, fifty years after Musicam Sacram,” organized by the Pontifical Council for Culture and the Congregation for Catholic Education, in collaboration with the Pontifical Institute of Sacred Music and the Pontifical Liturgical Institute at the Atheneum of St. Anselm. I cordially greet you, beginning with Cardinal Gianfranco Ravasi, whom I thank for his introduction. I hope that the experience of encounter and dialogue over the course of these days, in common reflection on sacred music and particularly on its cultural and artistic aspects, will be fruitful for your ecclesial communities. Half a century after the Instruction Musicam sacram, the conference has chosen to explore, from an interdisciplinary and ecumenical perspective, the current relationship between sacred music and contemporary culture, between the musical repertoire adopted and used by the Christian community and prevailing musical trends. Also of great importance was its reflection on the aesthetic and musical formation of both clergy and religious and the laity engaged in the pastoral life, and more directly in the scholae cantorum. Indeed, the first document issued by the Second Vatican Council was the Constitution on the Liturgy, Sacrosanctum Concilium. The Council Fathers keenly perceived the difficulty of the faithful of participating in a liturgy whose language, words and signs they did not sufficiently understand. To implement the essential features outlined by the Constitution, Instructions were issued, including the one on sacred music. Since then, although new documents of the Magisterium have not been produced on the subject, there have been several significant papal interventions which have guided reflection and pastoral efforts. The premise of the aforementioned Instruction is still very timely: “Liturgical worship is given a more noble form when it is celebrated in song, with the ministers of each degree fulfilling their ministry and the people participating in it. Indeed, through this form, prayer is expressed in a more attractive way, the mystery of the liturgy, with its hierarchical and community nature, is more openly shown, the unity of hearts is more profoundly achieved by the union of voices, minds are more easily raised to heavenly things by the beauty of the sacred rites, and the whole celebration more clearly prefigures that heavenly liturgy which is enacted in the holy city of Jerusalem” (Musicam sacram, n. 5). Several times the document, following the Council’s directives, highlights the importance of the participation of the entire assembly of the faithful, called “active, conscious, and full,” and also underlines very clearly that “the true solemnity of liturgical worship depends less on a more ornate form of singing and a more magnificent ceremonial than on its worthy and religious celebration” (n. 11). It is, therefore, first of all a matter of participating intensely in the mystery of God, in the “theophany” that takes place in every Eucharistic celebration, in which the Lord makes himself present among his people, who are called truly to participate in the salvation realized by the crucified and risen Christ. Active and conscious participation consists, therefore, in knowing how to enter deeply into this mystery, in being able to contemplate, adore and welcome it, in perceiving its meaning, particularly through religious silence and the “musicality of the language with which the Lord speaks to us” (Homily at Santa Marta, December 12, 2013). It is in this perspective that we base the reflection on the renewal of sacred music and its valuable contribution. In this regard a dual mission emerges which the Church is called to pursue, especially through those who, in various capacities, work in this field. On the one hand, it is a matter of safeguarding and promoting the rich and varied heritage inherited from the past, using it in a balanced way in the present, and avoiding the risk of a nostalgic or “archaeological” vision. On the other hand, it is necessary to ensure that sacred music and liturgical chant are fully “inculturated” in the current artistic and musical languages; that they are able, that is, to embody and translate the Word of God in songs, sounds, and harmonies that make the hearts of our contemporaries throb, also creating an appropriate emotional atmosphere that disposes one to faith and arouses a welcoming and full participation in the mystery that is celebrated. Certainly the meeting with modernity and the introduction of vernacular languages into the Liturgy has raised many problems: of musical languages, forms and genres. At times, a certain mediocrity, superficiality and banality have prevailed to the detriment of the beauty and intensity of the liturgical celebrations. That is why the various actors in this field, musicians and composers, conductors and singers in scholae cantorum, and those involved in the liturgy, can make a valuable contribution to the renewal — especially in quality — of sacred music and liturgical chant. To facilitate this process, we need to promote proper musical formation, also for those who are preparing to become priests, in dialogue with the musical trends of our time, with organizations representing the different cultural spheres, and with an ecumenical attitude. Dear brothers and sisters, I thank you again for your commitment in the field of sacred music. May the Virgin Mary, who in the Magnificat sang of God’s merciful holiness, accompany you. I encourage you not to lose sight of this important objective: to help the liturgical assembly and the people of God to perceive the mystery of God and participate in it with all the senses, both physical and spiritual. Sacred music and liturgical chant have the task of giving us the sense of God’s glory, of his beauty, of his holiness which enwraps us like a “luminous cloud.” I ask you please to pray for me and I warmly impart the Apostolic Blessing. .
Recommended publications
  • Vinnola's Mapelli Broflier's Grocery Store Across Did, He Would Invest It, and We Would Go Afto* Seven Months in Italy, the Kalian Market from the Civic Center
    The D enver Catholic R egister Voi. LXVIl No. 40 October 9,1991 Colorado's largest Weekly 36 Pages 25 Cents Project life; Ekiding fedeial funding o f abortion By David Myers still going through both the Senate and the House which Register Staff need to be addressed by the conununity and brought to One signature can mean the difference between the attention of the Legislature. destroying or saving a life. For example. Title X, a bill which would overturn Thousands of signatures can save a multitude. regulations that keep family planning and counseling Project Life, a letter-writing campaign which began out of clinics that perform abortions, currently is being in the Archdiocese of Denver in Jime, recently cel­ debated. ebrated the defeat of a bill which would have made “If, for instance, a Planned Parenthood clinic is abortions free and legal on military bases overseas. getting federal funds for family planning, then they According to Mimi Eckstein, Director of the Resj>ect cannot use those funds for abortion,” Eckstein ex­ Life Commission for the Archdiocese of Denver, the plained. national campaign was designed “to pressure our legis­ “Planned Parenthood is infuriated because they are lators into voting against any kind of funding of abor­ making $47 billion from abortions yearly,” she added. tions, in the United States or overseas.” Because the organization no longer could advise “Our cards and letters were one of the main reasons about and perform abortions in the same building, they the bill was voted down in committee,” she said. would be forced to build a separate facility.
    [Show full text]
  • L'o S S E Rvator E Romano
    Price € 1,00. Back issues € 2,00 L’O S S E RVATOR E ROMANO WEEKLY EDITION IN ENGLISH Unicuique suum Non praevalebunt Fifty-third year, number 11 (2.638) Vatican City Friday, 13 March 2020 Pop e’s video message for Day of Prayer and Fasting Close to those in quarantine On Wednesday, 11 March, a Mass was celebrated by Cardinal Angelo de Donatis at the Shrine of Our Lady of Divine Love for the Day of Prayer and Fasting. For the occasion, Pope Francis sent a video message in which he addressed his prayer to the Virgin. The following is a translation of Pope Fra n c i s ’ video message. O Mary, You shine continuously on our journey as a sign of salvation and hope. We entrust ourselves to you, Health of the Sick, who, at the Cross, united with Jesus’ pain, keeping your faith firm. You, Salvation of the Roman people, know what we need, and we trust that you will provide for those needs so that, as at Cana of Galilee, joy and celebration may return after this moment of trial. Help us, Mother of Divine Love, to conform ourselves to the will of the Father and to do what Jesus tells us. He who took our suffering upon Himself, and burdened Himself with our sorrows to bring us, through the Cross, to the joy of Resurrection. Amen. We seek refuge under your protection, O Holy Mother of God. Do not despise our pleas — we who are put to the test — and deliver us from every danger.
    [Show full text]
  • Address of His Holiness Benedict Xvi to Members of the Pontifical Academy of Sciences on the Occasion of Their Plenary Assembly
    ADDRESS OF HIS HOLINESS BENEDICT XVI TO MEMBERS OF THE PONTIFICAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES ON THE OCCASION OF THEIR PLENARY ASSEMBLY Clementine Hall Friday, 31 October 2008 Distinguished Ladies and Gentlemen, I am happy to greet you, the members of the Pontifical Academy of Sciences, on the occasion of your Plenary Assembly, and I thank Professor Nicola Cabibbo for the words he has kindly addressed to me on your behalf. In choosing the topic Scientific Insight into the Evolution of the Universe and of Life, you seek to focus on an area of enquiry which elicits much interest. In fact, many of our contemporaries today wish to reflect upon the ultimate origin of beings, their cause and their end, and the meaning of human history and the universe. In this context, questions concerning the relationship between science’s reading of the world and the reading offered by Christian Revelation naturally arise. My predecessors Pope Pius XII and Pope John Paul II noted that there is no opposition between faith’s understanding of creation and the evidence of the empirical sciences. Philosophy in its early stages had proposed images to explain the origin of the cosmos on the basis of one or more elements of the material world. This genesis was not seen as a creation, but rather a mutation or transformation; it involved a somewhat horizontal interpretation of the origin of the world. A decisive advance in understanding the origin of the cosmos was the consideration of being qua being and the concern of metaphysics with the most basic question of the first or transcendent origin of participated being.
    [Show full text]
  • The Holy See
    The Holy See ADDRESS OF HIS HOLINESS POPE FRANCIS TO OFFICIALS OF THE VATICAN SECRET ARCHIVE Clementine Hall Monday, 4 March 2019 [Multimedia] Dear Brothers and Sisters, I welcome you; I am pleased to receive you. I thank Msgr José Tolentino de Mendonça for the courteous greeting he addressed to me on behalf of all of you. I greet Msgr Sergio Pagano, Prof. Paolo Vian, the new Vice-Prefect, and you archivists, writers, assistants and employees of the Vatican Secret Archive, as well as the professors of the Vatican School of Paleography, Diplomacy and Archives Administration. The occasion of your visit — at such a short time since my meeting with you and with the Apostolic Library last 4 December — is part of the joyful occasion, which was precisely the day before yesterday, of the 80th anniversary of the election on 2 March 1939 as Supreme Pontiff the Servant of God Pius XII, of venerable memory. The figure of that Pontiff, who was at the helm of the Barque of Peter at one of the saddest and darkest moments of the 20th century, in turmoil and largely destroyed by the last world war, with the consequent period of the reorganization of nations and post-war reconstruction, this figure has already been examined and studied in many aspects, at times debated and even criticized (one might say with some prejudice or exaggeration). Today he is appropriately being reexamined and indeed placed in the proper light for his multifaceted qualities: pastoral, first and foremost, but also theological, ascetic, diplomatic. At the behest of Pope Benedict XVI, you Superiors and Officials of the Vatican Secret Archive, as well as of the Historical Archives of the Holy See and of Vatican City State, from 2006 to today 2 have been working on a joint project of cataloguing and preparing the voluminous documentation produced during the Pontificate of Pius XII, a part of which has already been made available for consultation by my venerated Predecessors St.
    [Show full text]
  • Transformed by Hope, Let Us Rebuild Our Tomorrow!
    Transformed by Hope, Let Us Rebuild Our Tomorrow! A Pastoral Letter to the People of God in the Archdiocese of San Antonio on the challenge of the COVID-19 pandemic From the Most Rev. Gustavo Garcia-Siller, MSpS Archbishop of San Antonio Transformed by Hope, Let Us Rebuild Our Tomorrow! – A Pastoral Letter to the People of God in the Archdiocese of San Antonio on the challenge of the COVID-19 pandemic http://www.archsa.org/ Scripture texts used in this work are taken from the New American Bible, Revised Edition, copyright © 2015, 2010, 1991, 1986, 1970, Confraternity of Christian Doctrine, Inc., Washington, DC. All rights reserved. United States Conference of Catholic Bishops, 2015. Images: cover, Our Lady of Guadalupe – San Fernando Cathedral – San Antonio, TX; last page, St. Anthony of Padua; back cover, coat of arms of the Archdiocese of San Antonio. Design – Juan Carlos Rodríguez Copyright © 2020 The Roman Catholic Archdiocese of San Antonio All rights reserved. No portion of this book may be reproduced in any form without permission from the publisher, except as permitted by U.S. copyright law. For permissions contact The Roman Catholic Archdiocese of San Antonio. 2 Table of Contents I. A Time of Distress ................................................................. 5 An Existential Crisis ....................................................................................................... 10 A Crisis of Faith .............................................................................................................. 12 II.
    [Show full text]
  • Download/Fedora Content/Download/Ac:100224/C ONTENT/Econ 9495 757.Pdf Persson, T
    FONDAZIONE “CENTESIMUS ANNUS – PRO PONTIFICE” — 11 — © Copyright 2017 – Libreria Editrice Vaticana 00120 Città del Vaticano Tel. 06 69 88 10 32 – Fax 06 69 88 47 16 www.libreriaeditricevaticana.va www.vatican.va ISBN 978-88-209-8095-5 Inclusive Growth and Financial Reforms: Global Emergencies and the Search of the Common Good Edited by Giovanni Marseguerra Anna Maria Tarantola LIBRERIA EDITRICE VATICANA “CENTESIMUS ANNUS – PRO PONTIFICE” FOUNDATION Board of Directors SUGRANYES BICKEL Dr. Domingo (Chairman) BORGHESE KHEVENHUELLER Dr. Camilla (Vice Chairman) GONZI Dr. Lawrence LONGHI Dr. Gianluigi RICE Dr. James E. RUSCHE Dr. Thomas SANSONE Dr. Francesco TARANTOLA Dr. Anna Maria (Delegate of the Board for the Scientifi c Committee) VANNI D’ARCHIRAFI Dr. Francesco Comptrollers FRANCESCHI Dr. Giorgio PIZZINI Dr. Flavio PORFIRI Dr. Massimo Secretary General TILIACOS Dr. Eutimio Scientifi c Committee MARSEGUERRA Prof. Giovanni (Coordinator) PABST Prof. Adrian (Secretary) ABELA Prof. Andrew V. Ph.D BONNICI Prof. Josef COSTA Prof. Antonio Maria DEMBINSKI Prof. Paul ESTRADA Prof. Francis G. GARONNA Prof. Paolo GARVEY Prof. George E. GIOVANELLI Dr. Flaminia NOTHELLE-WILDFEUER Prof. Ursula PAMMOLLI Prof. Fabio PASTOR Prof. Alfredo PEZZANI Prof. Fabrizio ZANUSSI Prof. Krystof VOLUME’S ABSTRACT The book collects contributions presented and discussed during International Conferences and Consultations organ- ized by the “Centesimus Annus – Pro Pontifi ce” Foundation (CAPPF) in the two-year period 2015 – 2016. In particular, articles here reported derive from two International Confer- ences held in the Vatican (“Rethinking Key Features of Eco- nomic and Social Life”, 25-27 May 2015, and “Business initiative in the fi ght against poverty. The Refugee Emergency, our Chal- lenge”, 12-14 May 2016) and an International Consultation held in Malta (“A Dialogue on Finance and the Common Good”, 29-30 January 2016).
    [Show full text]
  • From Humble Servant to Simple Pilgrim Pages 3, 8-9
    March 10, 2013 Think Green 50¢ Recycle Volume 87, No. 10 Go Green todayscatholicnews.org Serving the Diocese of Fort Wayne-South Bend Go Digital TTODAYODAY’’SS CCATHOLICATHOLIC Interregnum The task of filling the “sede vacante” begins From humble servant to simple pilgrim Pages 3, 8-9 BY CAROL GLATZ First Communion CASTEL GANDOLFO, Italy “Dear friends, I am happy to preparation (CNS) — Pope Benedict XVI, be with you, surrounded by the who began his papacy describing beauty of creation and by your Children prepare himself as a “humble servant in friendship, which does me such the Lord’s vineyard,” described good,” he told them. to receive Jesus his retirement as a time of being “You know that for me, today Page 10 a “simple pilgrim, who begins is different than the days that have the last stage of his pilgrimage on gone before. You know that I am this earth.” no longer supreme pontiff of the The 85-year-old pope arrived Catholic Church — until 8 o’clock in Castel Gandolfo Feb. 28 about I will be, but not after that.” Intellect and Virtue two-and-a-half hours before the “I am a simple pilgrim who end of his pontificate. begins the last stage of his pil- Reflection on Bishop D’Arcy He planned to spend about two grimage on this earth,” he told Page 11 months at the papal villa south of them. “But with all my heart, with Rome before moving into a former all my love, with my prayers, with monastery in the Vatican Gardens.
    [Show full text]
  • World Congress of the Apostleship of The
    Print ADDRESS OF HIS HOLINESS BENEDICT XVI TO PARTICIPANTS IN THE WORLD CONGRESS OF THE APOSTLESHIP OF THE SEA Clementine Hall Friday, 23 November 2012 Venerable Brothers, Dear Brothers and Sisters, I welcome you with joy, at the end of your work in the 23rd World Congress of the Apostleship of the Sea. I cordially greet Cardinal Antonio Maria Vegliò, President of the Pontifical Council for Migrants and Itinerant People, grateful for his courteous words, as well as the collaborators of that Dicastery and those working in this specific area. These have been intense days for you, delving into important themes, such as proclaiming the Gospel to a growing number of seafarers who belong to Eastern Churches, helping Christians and non-Christians alike, seeking to make ecumenical and interreligious collaboration ever more solid. Confronted with the hardships faced by workers in the maritime industries, such as fishermen — and their families — there is a growing need to face these problems with "an integral vision of man, reflecting the different aspects of the human person, contemplated through a lens purified by charity" (Encyclical Caritas in Veritate, n. 32). These are only a few of the many points which the Apostleship of the Sea has at heart and which were discussed at your Congress and, especially, are well attested by the long history of this worthy initiative. In fact, already in 1922, Pope Pius XI approved its Constitutions and its Rule, encouraging the first chaplains and volunteers in their mission to "expand the maritime ministry"; and, 75 years later, Blessed Pope John Paul II confirmed this mission in his Motu Proprio Stella Maris.
    [Show full text]
  • An Early Harbinger of Pope Francis' Vision of the Church
    Cultural and Religious Studies, June 2019, Vol. 7, No. 6, 325-331 doi: 10.17265/2328-2177/2019.06.004 D DAVID PUBLISHING The Pact of the Catacombs: An Early Harbinger of Pope Francis’ Vision of the Church Hector Scerri University of Malta, Msida, Malta Fifty-four years ago, the Pact of the Catacombs was signed by a small group of churchmen, determined to make a difference. It was the time of the Second Vatican Council. It was the closing phase of that momentous experience in the Church’s life―a transforming event about which many still talk about, half a century later. A handful of bishops―40 out of an impressive 2,000-plus contingent meeting in St Peter’s Basilica―decided to assemble at the dead of night in the Catacombs of Domitilla, outside Rome. During that eventful night of 16 November 1965, they dreamt of a poor servant church. In that holy place, beneath the earth’s surface, where many generations of early Christians met to pray and to bury their loved ones, those 40 modern-day bishops met in heartfelt prayer to celebrate the Eucharist. They also signed the Pact of the Catacombs as they committed themselves to the ideals of Vatican II. The group of like-minded courageous shepherds was led by Archbishop Helder Camara of Recife, Brazil, the revered champion of the downtrodden poor and marginalized. Those gathered made a common pledge to live according to the daily manner of ordinary people, with regard to housing, food, means of transport, and such routine needs.
    [Show full text]
  • The Holy See
    The Holy See ADDRESS OF HIS HOLINESS BENEDICT XVI TO THE GENDARMERIE AND THE FIRE BRIGADE OF THE VATICAN CITY STATE Clementine Hall Friday, 11 January 2013 Mr Commandant, Dear Officials, Commissioners and Inspectors, Dear Gendarmes and Firemen, I am very pleased to welcome you today to the Apostolic Palace and to spend this moment with all of you who serve the Successor of Peter, offering your valuable service in Vatican City State, day and night. I greet you with deep cordiality, starting with Dr Domenico Giani, your Commandant whom I thank for his words expressing your sentiments, outlining the intentions that motivate your commitment. I address my grateful thoughts to Cardinal Giuseppe Bertello and to Bishop Giuseppe Sciacca, respectively President and Secretary General of the Governorate, who never let the Gendarme Corps or the Fire Brigade go without the necessary support. I warmly greet Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone, my Secretary of State, and thank him for coming to this meeting. I address a word of appreciation also to Fr Gioele Schiavella and Fr Sergio Pellini, for their ministry on behalf of the spiritual development of the whole of the Gendarme Corps. I offer a very affectionate greeting to each one of you, dear Gendarmes! This occasion gives me the opportunity to express to you my deep esteem, my warm encouragement and especially my profound gratitude for the generous service you carry out with discretion, competence, and efficiency and not without sacrifice. Almost every day I have the opportunity to meet some of you on duty at various posts and to note personally your professional cooperation to guarantee the surveillance of the Pope, as well as the necessary order and safety of those who live in the State 2 or who are taking part in the celebrations and meetings held at the Vatican.
    [Show full text]
  • Australian Bishops to Attend the Apostolic Exhortation Ecclesia in Oceania to Be Promulgated in Rome
    Australian Bishops to attend the Apostolic Exhortation Ecclesia in Oceania to be promulgated in Rome Four Australian bishops have been invited to attend Pope John Paul II's promulgation of the post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortation "Ecclesia in Oceania" in Rome. The promulgation will take place during a private audience at 11.30 AM on Thursday, 22 November, in the Clementine Hall of the Apostolic Palace. Archbishop Barry Hickey, of Perth, and Bishop Michael Putney, of Townsville, who are members of the Post-Synodal Council for Oceania of the General Secretariat, as well as Bishop John Gerry, Auxiliary of Brisbane, who is a member of the Executive Committee of the Federation of Catholic Bishops Conferences of Oceania (FCBCO) will attend. Bishop Peter Connors, of Ballarat, was invited but is unable to attend. Others attending will include officials of the Roman Curia, and the President of the FCBCO, Bishop Soane Foliaki SM, (CEPAC). It is expected that Australian priests and seminarians currently in Rome will attend as well as other Bishops from Australia who will be in Rome on that date. Archbishop Hickey said "It was a privilege to serve on the Post-Synodal Council. We worked hard and effectively, so we look forward to the Promulgation which will be a source of inspiration and challenge for the Church in Oceania". Bishop Putney stated "It was a privileged task to try to incorporate all the insights of the Synod into a document for the consideration of the Holy Father. I am sure his response to the work of the Synod will give the Church in Australia great encouragement at the beginning of the new millennium." St Paul Publications will print the Apostolic Exhortation as soon as possible after 22 November.
    [Show full text]
  • L'osservatore Romano
    Price €1,50. Back issues €3,00 L’OSSERVATOREROMANO WEEKLY EDITION IN ENGLISH Unicuique suum Non praevalebunt Fifty-fourth year, number 21 (2.698) Vatican City Friday, 21 May 2021 Fifty-five million people forced to flee “Let us #PrayTogether today for victims of the climate crisis and continue to work so that the earth may truly be a common home where everyone can have their place. #L a u d a t o S i We e k ” @Pontifex Regina Caeli Inno cent blo o d At the Regina Caeli on Sunday, 16 May, Pope Francis noted his concern over the recent “terrible and unacceptable”deaths of in- nocent people, especially chil- (Rodi Said/Reuters dren, in the Holy Land. “Let us pray constantly that the Israelis and Palestinians may find the path of dialogue and forgiveness, to be patient builders of peace and justice, opening up, step af- To the Meter Association General Audience Interview: John Kerry ter step, to a common hope, to a coexistence among brothers and Fighting child abuse Persevering in prayer The climate crisis sisters”. PAGE 8 PAGE 7 PAGE 3 WELLS ON PA G E 6 page 2L’OSSERVATORE ROMANO Friday, 21 May 2021, number 21 To the faithful of Myanmar Be peacemakers where there is war, violence and hatred On Sunday morning, 16 May, Pope Fran- and abandoned. Yet in the same difficult moments…At times it is a sower of fraternity, someone who cis presided over a Mass for peace and rec- moment, he looks up to heaven. Je- prayer that God hears more than works to rebuild what is broken onciliation in Myanmar with Rome's sus lifts his eyes to God.
    [Show full text]