A New Idea for a Missalette: “Sing a New Song” by Rt. Rev. Abbot Marcel Rooney, O.S.B.

Sing A New Song, published by A-R Editions, Inc. in Middleton, Wisconsin, is a Catholic worship resource combining new music settings for the Entrance and Communion Antiphons of the Roman Missal with the Readings and Psalms of the Lectionary for Mass to provide a comprehensive and reusable resource for the Mass. The music settings are arranged and composed by Right Rev. Abbot Marcel Rooney, O.S.B. (former Abbot Primate and President of the Orate Institute), creating melodies accessible to average parishioners.

The masses are organized by the Roman Calendar, with Liturgical Years A, B, and C each represented within a separate volume. These hard-cover volumes have the benefit of being as long-lasting as the Roman Missal and Lectionary, eliminating the need for annual, soft-cover resources. The books include: The Order of Mass; music settings for the Order of Mass; antiphons, readings, and psalms for each Proper Mass; antiphons, readings, and psalms for additional masses; and over 150 selected traditional hymns

There are 4 principles upon which this new work is based:

Theological Principle   – The Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy (# 14) stated this: “Mother Church earnestly desires that all the faithful should be led to that full conscious, and active participation in liturgical celebrations which is demanded by the very nature of the liturgy…”

The General Instruction of the Roman Missal gives directives for the implementation of how we are to do this.  We may take as an example, the Entrance Antiphon in the Missal.  Since we have generally lacked music appropriate for the singing of this Antiphon (and it is intended to be sung, not merely recited), most liturgical leaders have fallen back on the habit of singing hymns for the Entrance to Holy Mass.  The good thing about that practice is that it succeeds oftentimes in involving many of the congregation in this opening element of Holy Mass.  But it is not the tradition of the Roman Church.  We have always reserved opening various liturgies with hymns to other liturgies, e.g., the Liturgy of the Hours.  Holy Mass always had an Antiphon and Psalm for this opening element.  This new Missalette is intended to address this lacuna of the last fifty years, and in a way that makes it possible for the largest number of people to participate as we begin Holy Mass.

Musical Principle  –  The Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy of the 2nd Vatican Council stated this in #116: “The Church acknowledges Gregorian chant as especially suited to the Roman liturgy;  therefore, other things being equal, it should be given pride of place in liturgical services.”   The Antiphons in the Missalette Sing a New Song are all based in Gregorian chant.  The composer has sung the chant for decades and his musical and prayer formation has been affected by the chant very profoundly.  The reader will note that each Antiphon even has the number of the Gregorian mode in which it is composed.  The author has provided a simple set of melodies embodying the eight ancient modal melodies and it is indicated at the beginning of each Antiphon.  The cantors verses will be sung in that mode, then, maintaining the spirit of the Antiphon itself.

Pastoral Principle – As has been stated already in regard to the directives of #48 of the General Instruction of the Roman Missal, the people are to pray and sing the Antiphons provided by the Church. The music composed for the Antiphons in this Missalette embody the belief that the people’s part should be kept to a small part of the original Antiphon, so that they can indeed participate fully.  The composer has had the opportunity to try out these Antiphons in  typical small town parishes, and with outstanding results, as regards the enthusiastic participation of the people, who pick up the melodies after only one or two repetitions.

Practical Principle  – It is a concern for anyone who cares about the environment, that as a normal practice our parishes, taken as a whole, are throwing away every year thousands and thousands of missalettes, and then buying new ones in time for the 1st Sunday of Advent.   One of the values of this Missalette is that the Sundays are not dated by the given year’s calendar, but by the liturgical year’s calendar.  That means that they can be used over and over again. This Missalette will be published in separate editions for the A-Year, B-Year, and C-Year.  That means that the greater part of the expense of the Missalette will be born only in the first three years a community uses them.  At the end of the year, the sacristan can box them up and save them for reuse three years later.  This will mean a very great saving for budgets, as also a saving of the environment.

To learn more about Sing A New Song, call Lance Ottman at 608-203-2569. Or click here.

 

 

Holy Resurrection Monastery Welcomed as a New Affiliate!

Holy Resurrection Monastery is a self-governing monastery sui juris under Catholic Canon Law.  There are currently five stavrophore (fully professed) monks, together with four rassophores (novices), and one postulant.  In 2011 they relocated from California to a monastery in the village of Saint Nazianz, Wisconsin (the town is named after one of the greatest Eastern saints, St. Gregory the Theologian, known in the West as St. Gregory Nazianzen).

Here, they strive to live the monastic life of prayer, work, and hospitality while contributing to the spiritual lives of their friends and neighbors (whether Eastern or Western Christians), especially through dedication to practical ecumenism. Abbot Nicholas is also responsible for overseeing the nuns of Holy Theophany Monastery, a dependency of Holy Resurrection Monastery.

In early 1995, several faithful Byzantine men came together and were initially received by His Grace, Bishop George (Kuzma), Eparch of the Ruthenian Byzantine Catholic Eparchy of Van Nuys, California.  In 2005, at their request and with the approval of the Holy See, they were received under the holy omoforion (jurisdiction) of His Grace, Bishop John Michael (Botean), Eparch of the Romanian Catholic Eparchy of St. George in Canton, Ohio.  Bishop John Michael’s diocese covers the entire territorial United States and was recently extended to include some Romanian Catholic communities in Canada.

Speaking of Abbot Nicholas, he gives excellent reflections on what the Eastern churches can bring to the West.  Here is a sample from one of his homilies:

“…about the Byzantine Tradition I can say this. Mystery for us is not about just what we do in church, it is how we see everything, how we see reality. Every Christian is part of the hidden life of the Sacred Trinity. Every Christian is a mystic. Being a mystic means being a liturgical being, nothing more. Everything we do is, or ought to be, at least wrapped in the mystery of the direct experience of God. I can’t say this enough . . this sense of mystery is not just a feature of how we do church or how we do mass or how we do liturgy. It colors even how we see sin . . . not so much as a moral crime, but as a failure to worship, not the exercise of a defiant human will in opposition to God, not an exercise of freedom, but a failure to be who we deep down in our hearts want to be.”

Their liturgical services (Divine Liturgy as well as the Divine Office) are in English with some Greek, Romanian, and Slavonic sprinkled throughout. Visitors are welcome to come on private retreats alone, as couples, or in small groups.

Holy Resurrection Monastery
300 S 2nd Ave
PO Box 276
St. Nazianz, WI 54232
Telephone: (920) 881-4009
Email:  monks@hrmonline.org

Sister Servants of the Eternal Word – New Affiliate!

The Sister Servants of the Eternal Word are a new community of religious women in Irondale, Alabama, founded by Mother Mary Gabriel in 1987 with the apostolate of retreats and catechesis.  Before founding their community, Mother Mary Gabriel was a Dominican Sister of the Congregation of St. Cecilia in Nashville, Tennessee.  She taught and administered schools at both the elementary and high school levels and served as vicar of her community, all of which prepared her for the joys and the crosses that are inevitable when beginning a new foundation.

Recognizing that there is a great need in our time for catechesis and also for places that foster greater union with Our Lord through prayer, their community presents retreats in their Casa Maria Retreat House, offering formation in the Catholic Faith within the context of beautiful liturgies and Eucharistic devotion.  The truths of the Faith are authentically taught and ample opportunities are offered for reception of the sacraments and prayer, including daily Mass and the Rosary, as well as time for private prayer.  They also operate a bookstore, providing educational and inspirational Catholic materials and religious items.

The members of the community wear the habit as a visible sign of consecration and as a witness to the life of poverty.  Their habit reflects their Franciscan and Dominican heritage, consisting of a long white tunic with a brown cape, scapular, and veil.  They wear a rope cincture with three knots on their right side symbolizing their three vows of poverty, chastity, and obedience (as worn by St. Francis) and a fifteen-decade rosary at their left side in honor of the Dominican tradition of praying the Holy Rosary.  They also wear a crucifix on a cord around their necks, so that, as Mother Mary Gabriel has said, “No one can look at us without thinking of Christ.

They are eagerly awaiting the completion of the fourth and final phase of their building project, which will most importantly include their long-awaited large chapel. With 20 sisters in permanent vows and 5 in temporary vows, they will welcome the larger space in which to worship Our Lord.

Mother Mary Gabriel passed on to her eternal reward on July 23rd, 2017.  When she was asked about her numerous accomplishments, studies, and her earned degrees, she simply replied, “The letters after your name are worthless without the ‘st’ [Saint] before it.

Our Lady of the Mississippi Abbey Welcomed as a New Affiliate

The IRL is pleased to welcome Our Lady of the Mississippi Abbey as a new Affiliate Member. The Abbey is a cloistered, monastic community of 20 nuns of the Cistercians of Strict Observance (Trappist), striving to follow Jesus Christ through a life of prayer, silence, simplicity and ordinary work.

The Abbey was founded in 1964 when 13 nuns left the Mount Saint Mary Abbey in Wrentham, MA, to found an new community near Dubuque, Iowa.  Situated on a bluff overlooking the  Mississippi River, the nuns support themselves though the Trappistine Creamy Caramels they make themselves and sell by mail.

Seven times a day the nuns gather in the Abbey to sing God’s praises. All of their liturgies are open to the public. Four small guest houses are available for individuals or small groups wishing to make a private retreat in a beautiful, peaceful setting.

Stay in your cell, and your cell will teach you everything.

– Sayings of the Desert Fathers