Light in the darkness: hymns for Ordinary Time

Read Kate’s latest for The Tablet – Light in the darkness: hymns for Ordinary Time.

We are roughly in the middle of the first section of Ordinary Time in the Church’s year at the moment, the first of the two sequences of Sundays that can be expanded or contracted to make sure that the big dates fall at the right time.

The readings in them can be sequential from Sunday to Sunday; the Gospel usually is, but the First and Second readings can dodge around a bit, and the Responsorial Psalm is a reaction to the First Reading, so that too can come from anywhere (including the odd canticle). This first batch of Ordinary Time, after Christmas, before Lent, is much shorter than the second one (after Pentecost, before Advent), and this year it has only five Sundays, with an early Easter; but because the First Sunday of Ordinary Time is always overtaken by the Baptism of the Lord, the count starts at two. And it’s Year A, so the Gospels are mostly Matthew.

Choosing hymns for these Sundays is an interesting job.

Read the full article

Our choir after a holiday

Read Kate’s latest for The Tablet – Back in the swing after the choir’s summer holiday.

During the month of August, our choir, like many others, was technically on holiday. Some people have even been actually away on holiday for a week or two.

Mostly we’ve seen each other around on Sundays, of course, except when someone daringly goes to a different Mass, which can feel surprisingly restful. It is wonderful to have time to concentrate on what is happening without having to worry about when the next piece of music is coming up and whether everyone is ready for it.

Choirs need holidays, partly for practical reasons (it’s too hard to assemble a full group every Sunday during the main holiday month), but it also means that the congregation gets a month off, either as a respite for those who don’t like singing, or so that they realise how much difference the choir makes, as well as how much work is involved. The choir is there simply to support and lead the congregation, not to be a concert, but it’s still quite hard work, especially for the choir leader and the person who chooses the music week by week and now has to cope with the infelicities of the new lectionary, which are very wearing.

Read the full article

RSS
Follow by Email
LinkedIn
LinkedIn
Share
Instagram