Chant Feeds the Soul

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The Holy Father, in his Ad Limina address to the US Bishops in 1998, reminded them: "The use of the vernacular has certainly opened up the treasures of the liturgy to all who take part, but this does not mean that the Latin language, and especially the chants which are so superbly adapted to the genius of the Roman Rite, should be wholly abandoned. If subconscious experience is ignored in worship, an affective and devotional vacuum is created and the liturgy can become not only too verbal but also too cerebral. Yet the Roman Rite is again distinctive in the balance it strikes between a spareness and a richness of emotion: it feeds the heart and the mind, the body and the soul."

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This page contains a single entry by Paul Rex published on December 22, 2003 11:44 PM.

Cathedrals Optimized for Chant was the previous entry in this blog.

Why were the liturgical texts sung at all? is the next entry in this blog.

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