{"id":46078,"date":"2019-03-01T08:20:07","date_gmt":"2019-03-01T14:20:07","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/praytellblog.com\/?p=46078"},"modified":"2019-03-09T20:47:06","modified_gmt":"2019-03-10T03:47:06","slug":"amen-corner-apprenticing-ourselves-to-the-antiphonal","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/praytellblog.com\/index.php\/2019\/03\/01\/amen-corner-apprenticing-ourselves-to-the-antiphonal\/","title":{"rendered":"<i>AMEN CORNER:<\/i> Apprenticing Ourselves to the Antiphonal"},"content":{"rendered":"\n<p><em>from&nbsp;&nbsp;<\/em>Margaret Daly-Denton, &#8220;Apprenticing Ourselves to the Antiphonal,&#8221; <em>Worship<\/em>  93 (January, 2019), 4-11:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>In a recent \u201cAmen Corner\u201d John D. Witvliet wrote of how the use of set texts in worship can be an unsettling, but ultimately enriching experience. Initial perplexity and discomfort can give way to new insight, as we find ourselves using \u201cexpressions and emotions we never would have imagined on our own.\u201d [1] This was my experience on first encountering the traditional Entrance Song, Resurrexi, for the Easter Sunday morning Eucharist in the Roman Catholic liturgy.<br><br>I have risen, I am with you once more, [alleluia].<br>O God, you laid your hand upon me, [alleluia].<br>How marvellous your wisdom, alleluia! [2]<br><br>I would hazard a guess that this antiphon, intended for singing as a refrain with verses from Psalm 139\u2014\u201dO Lord, you have searched me and known me\u201d\u2014is rarely sung, that it would be a cause of bewilderment to most Roman Catholics today, that many church musicians of all traditions would find it a strange choice, preferring a hymn such as, \u201cJesus Christ is risen today, alleluia.\u201d <br><br>Who is speaking in this antiphon? Who is being addressed? The church musicians of the past who disseminated this chant would have said, \u201cDavid, the psalmist, Jesus\u2019s ancestor, who also wrote \u201cYou will not let your Holy One experience corruption\u201d and that \u201csince he was a prophet, spoke of the resurrection of the Messiah\u201d (Ps 16:10, cited in Acts 2:25-31). They would have been quite at home with the antiphon\u2019s invitation to join in this joyful song addressed by the risen Christ to the Father. The liturgical Latin would have helped, because in verse 2\u2014\u201cYou know my sitting down and my rising up\u201d\u2014 the word for \u201crising up\u201d is <em>resurrectio<\/em>.<br><br>Maybe, though, this strikes us today as a rather tenuous claim. Our more sophisticated understanding of the honorific nature of the attribution of the psalms to David inhibits us from sharing our forebears\u2019 confidence that in a psalm such as this they could hear the voice of Christ. The gospels do mention Jesus\u2019s awareness of his Father\u2019s profound knowledge of him ( John 10:15) and of humanity in general (Matt 6:4). However, rather than ask if Jesus might have known and prayed Psalm 139, we need to take a broader view: that the New Testament writers, in quoting, alluding to and echoing the psalms more than any other part of the Hebrew Bible, were making the point that Jesus is the answer to all the hope and expectation for a definitive intervention of God in the world that was bound up with the memory of David and the promise made to him (2 Sam 7:12-16). We are familiar with the instances in the gospels where Jesus prays the psalms, his intonation of Psalm 22 on the cross, for example (Mark 15:34; Matt 27:46). The synoptic accounts of the crucifixion include further details\u2014the mockery of the bystanders, the sharing out of his clothes\u2014making it clear that Psalm 22 is Jesus\u2019s prayer. It would seem from John 19:23-25 that the later the gospel, the more detail there is from the psalm. One can sense a developing interpretive tradition, even more so when the author of Hebrews cites the risen Jesus as saying \u201cI will tell of your name to my brothers\u201d (Heb 2:12, citing Ps 22:23). The same author claims that Christ came into the world singing a psalm: \u201cSee, God, I have come to do your will\u201d (Heb 10:5-7, citing Ps 40:6-8). To give just one more example, Paul, who seems to know little about the historical details of Jesus\u2019s life, let alone his personal prayer, puts Psalm 69:9\u2014 \u201cThe insults of those who insult you have fallen on me\u201d\u2014on his lips (Rom 15:3). So, an antiphon such as the <em>Resurrexi<\/em> can insert us into a line of continuity going right back, not only to our Christian origins, but to the Israelite tradition of prayer in which Jesus was formed. When, as people \u201craised with Christ\u201d (Col 3:1), we sing, \u201cI have risen . . .\u201d we experience the liturgy\u2019s capacity for gathering up our prayer into the psalm-shaped prayer of Jesus.<br><br>The <em>Resurrexi<\/em> comes from what is known as the Antiphonal (or Antiphonary). In the Roman Catholic liturgical books of recent centuries, the Antiphonal has been included in the Missal. The treasure that is the Western church\u2019s song book\u2014a collection of psalms, antiphons and other chants appropriate to all the seasons and feasts of the year, intended for singing at the Eucharist\u2014has been largely lost in practice, except perhaps in monastic communities. From <em>The Apostolic Constitution<\/em> (VIII, 13, 1) we know that Psalm 34:9 (\u201cTaste and see that the Lord is good\u201d) was sung as a communion song. Jerome, writing in the fourth century, confirms this (<em>Commentary on Isaiah<\/em>, 1. II). The existence of an actual collection with psalms appointed for particular days could perhaps be traced back to the fifth century, as the pilgrim Egeria mentions the singing of appropriate psalms at various Holy Week liturgies in Jerusalem (<em>Pilgrimage of Egeria<\/em>, XXV, 4\u20135). However, the earliest actual manuscript antiphonals with musical notation are early medieval. The Antiphonal fell into disuse in churches that accepted the Reformation, as vernacular hymnody replaced the Latin chant. While to some extent psalm singing was retained in metrical form, the disappearance of the antiphons often meant that significant connections between the psalms and the New Testament no longer found liturgical expression. Then, four centuries later, in the early stages of their liturgical renewal, Roman Catholics, generally choosing to replace the chants in the Antiphonal with more accessible songs, gratefully adopted chorale-style hymns from other traditions to supply their need for vernacular material. Even when a responsorial form of Entrance and Communion Song, structurally modeled on the Antiphonal, was subsequently found to be more appropriate to these processional moments, the Antiphonal\u2019s texts tended to be side-lined in favour of new compositions. This was, to some extent due to the translation of the Antiphonal in ICEL\u2019s 1969 Roman Missal which did not tend to light composers\u2019 creative fire. For its revised Sacramentary of 1998, ICEL involved an international group of liturgists, biblical scholars, people with a flair for poetic language, musicians, and experts on the Christian reception of the psalms in the production of a fresh translation of the Antiphonal, designed for singing. Sadly, though, the 1998 Sacramentary, approved by conferences of bishops throughout the English-speaking world, was rejected by the Vatican. It is to be hoped that Pope Francis\u2019s recent <em>Magnum Principium<\/em>, restoring the responsibility for liturgical texts to the local church, may pave the way for this resource to be taken out of moth balls, used, and shared with the wider Christian community.<br><br>Even if the singing of the <em>Resurrexi<\/em> might be too much to ask, I still think that there is much to be learned from \u201capprenticing ourselves\u201d (Witvliet\u2019s expression) to the Antiphonal, letting it surprise us, stretch us, and even discomfort us. I would love to think that more composers might do settings of texts from it and that musicians might at least consult it for guidance on their choice of entrance and communion songs. Writers of new texts for these liturgical moments might even consider using what the Antiphonal offers as the starting point for their own creativity. After all, the <em>Resurrexi<\/em> is not a literal quotation from the psalm, but a Christian adaptation. As I see it, there is a twofold challenge: to restore the psalmodic element that has traditionally distinguished these chants and to highlight the connection that the Antiphonal so frequently makes between the psalms and the New Testament to help worshipers experience psalmody as the \u201cvoice\u201d of Jesus and make it their own.<br><br>This would be a genuine continuation of the way the Psalter was mined as a resource and imitated as a model for the composition of new songs during the late Second Temple period. We know from copies of the psalms found among the Dead Sea Scrolls that the so-called \u201chistorical\u201d titles added to various psalms to connect them with events in David\u2019s career (e.g., for Psalm 3 \u201cA Psalm of David when he fled from Absalom his Son\u201d) were in place by the time of Jesus. This shows that the psalms were being heard as the \u201cvoice\u201d of an idealized David, a holy man who in every eventuality turned to God in prayer (2 Sam 15:31). In the Judaism that was the matrix for early Christianity there was ongoing composition of \u201cPsalms of David,\u201d all of it intended to bring to expression the prayerfulness of this \u201cman after [God\u2019s] heart\u201d (1 Sam 13:14). Extra-biblical \u201cPsalms of David\u201d found in the Cave 11 cache of Dead Sea Scrolls, composed about 1,000 years after his lifetime, imagined his prayers when anointed by Samuel and when he had defeated Goliath. A series of psalm-like poems composed in the late first century BCE and attributed to David\u2019s son Solomon were even included in some early Christian manuscripts of the Bible. In continuity with this tradition Luke has Jesus, son of David, praying his filial adaptation of Psalm 31:5, \u201cFather, into your hands I commit my spirit\u201d (Luke 23:46). And then Stephen making that prayer his own, adapts it even further, addressing it to the glorified Jesus (Acts 7:59).<br><br>It is such a short step from all of this to the Antiphonal. Take, for example, its provision for the First Sunday of Lent when we listen to the synoptic accounts of the temptation of Jesus in the desert. The Entrance Antiphon for Psalm 91\u2014 \u201cHe will call to me and I will answer with freedom, honour and length of days\u201d\u2014recalling Jesus\u2019s riposte to the tempter, is strongly redolent of resurrection, God\u2019s answer to Jesus\u2019s faithful prayer. The Communion Antiphon\u2014\u201c We do not live on bread alone, but on every word that comes from the mouth of God\u201d\u2014sung with lines celebrating the scriptural word from Psalms 19 or 119, again recalls Jesus\u2019s reply to Satan while committing us to make greater appreciation of the Scriptures part of our Lenten observance.<br><br>Apart from encouraging us to craft our liturgical song in psalm-inspired patterns, the Antiphonal stretches us in another way. It helps us to catch the spirit of a liturgical day or season. Take, for example, the Entrance Song for the Evening Eucharist on Holy Thursday. Most music directors would pick a hymn referring to the Last Supper, the institution of the Eucharist or perhaps Jesus washing the disciples\u2019 feet. The Antiphonal proposes, \u201cWe should glory in the cross of our Lord Jesus Christ, in whom is our resurrection, our salvation and our life\u201d (Gal 6:14), sung with verses from Psalm 67 ( \u201cMay God be gracious to us and bless us\u201d ). This reminds us that we are embarking, not just on this Eucharist of the Lord\u2019s Supper, but on the whole Easter Triduum. It also makes the point that every liturgy celebrates the entire paschal mystery.<br><br>Another example is the Entrance Song for the Third Sunday of Advent, the mid-point of this season of expectation. There may well be some Anglicans who would enjoy a break that day from hearing that God is \u201cwroth very sore\u201d with their iniquities, as their Advent Prose (<em>Rorate Caeli<\/em>) tells them. [3] The Antiphonal would invite them to sing the \u201cRejoice\u201d that gave this Sunday its name, <em>Gaudete<\/em> Sunday: \u201cRejoice! The Lord is near\u201d (Phil 4:4-5) with verses from Psalm 85 or 96. Again, those same Anglicans are likely to be in repentance mode for their \u201cLenten Prose\u201d (<em>Attende Domine<\/em>) on the Fourth Sunday of Lent, whereas the Antiphonal would allow them to sing another \u201cRejoice!,\u201d the one that has given the name <em>Laetare<\/em> to this Sunday halfway through Lent. On <em>Laetare<\/em> Sunday, those in the final forty days of their preparation for baptism look forward with intensified joy to becoming new-borns in the waters of baptism, like those blissful babies at the breast described in the <em>Laetare<\/em> antiphon drawn from Isaiah 66:10.<br><br>Were we to sing the Entrance Antiphon for the Second Sunday (Octave) of Easter we would sense again the presence of those new-born children of God, if not in our assembly, surely in others all over the world, This antiphon, based on 1 Peter 2:2, exhorts the newly baptised, and all Christians, to keep on longing for the pure spiritual milk that will make them thrive in Christ.<br><br>We could benefit from reconsidering many of our choices for Entrance and Communion Songs in the light of the Antiphonal. The idea has developed that these songs should refer to the liturgical action in process. So, we have all these \u201cgathering songs\u201d in which we tell ourselves how comfortable and cosy it is to be \u201cone body.\u201d I recall a dear friend, the eminent English liturgist J. D. Crichton (1907\u20132001), referring in conversation to the proliferation of \u201cself-regarding songs\u201d being sung at the Eucharist. Then there seems to be an idea that at communion we should sing about nothing else but the bread broken and the cup outpoured. Some of the communion antiphons in the Antiphonal do, but generally there is a far greater variety and richness than what most communities experience.<br><br>Greater recourse to the Antiphonal would solve the continued use of hymns that reflect the highly individualised understanding of eucharistic communion of the past and that, in certain cases, were clearly composed for adoration, as distinct from participation. Often their strophic form, requiring a hand-held text, also makes it difficult for communicants to join in the singing. The communion antiphons proposed in the Antiphonal include nothing remotely like, \u201cI received the living God and my heart is full of joy,\u201d let alone \u201cSweet Sacrament Divine.\u201d Instead we find, to give just a few samples: for Passion Sunday, a reminder, as we share the eucharistic cup, of Jesus\u2019s prayer, \u201cIf I must drink this cup . . . Father, your will be done\u201d; for Ascension, \u201cI, the Lord, am with you always until the end of the age\u201d (Matt 28:20); for the Twelfth Sunday in Ordinary Time, \u201cThe eyes of all look to you to give them their food in due time\u201d (Ps 145:15). The Antiphonal sometimes links in with the Lectionary. So, for the three Sundays of Lent (in Year A, or every year in communities that have catechumens), when the three Johannine stories\u2014the Samaritan woman, the man born blind, and the raising of Lazarus\u2014are read, an excerpt from each forms the communion antiphon.<br><br>At the moment, to find what the Antiphonal offers for a particular day, one has to look up the proper for that day in the Roman Missal where one will find only the antiphons. ICEL\u2019s Antiphonal, which includes suggestions for psalm verses to be sung with the antiphons, exists as a thirty-five page section of the 1998 Sacramentary. Since this was circulated as part of ICEL\u2019s consultation process among R.C. Bishops\u2019 Conferences and their advisors in countries where the liturgy is celebrated in English, it should not be difficult to obtain. However, as mentioned above, the Antiphonal shares the \u201cfate\u201d of the Sacramentary. Chant settings of the antiphons only, such as those of Fr. Columba Kelly, have been published (<a href=\"http:\/\/www.saintmeinrad.edu\/the-monastery\" rel=\"nofollow\">http:\/\/www.saintmeinrad.edu\/the-monastery<\/a> \/liturgical-music\/downloads\/) but without the psalms verses can scarcely function as real entrance and communion processionals. Paul Ford\u2019s 1999 book <em>By Flowing Waters<\/em> (<a href=\"https:\/\/litpress.org\/Products\/2595\/By-Flowing-Waters\" rel=\"nofollow\">https:\/\/litpress.org\/Products\/2595\/By-Flowing-Waters<\/a>) is an unofficial, plainsong version of the <em>Graduale Romanum<\/em> and the <em>Graduale Simplex<\/em> providing settings of the antiphons and psalm verses. The publication by Liturgical Press (2005\u20132007) of <em>Psallite<\/em>, a music resource for the Sunday Eucharist inspired by the Antiphonal\u2014and, no doubt, by the monastic liturgy at Saint John\u2019s Abbey, Collegeville, Minnesota\u2014is a welcome development. This timely initiative on the part of The Collegeville Composers\u2019 Group provides more popular settings of antiphons <em>and<\/em> psalm verses for the Entrance, Responsorial Psalm, and Communion. In a telling write-up, it has been hailed as a \u2018one-of-a-kind music program.\u2019 Surely, though, such liturgically apt provisions for psalm singing at the Eucharist are exactly what should be happening all over the church.<br><br>One of our daily newspapers in Ireland concludes its radio advertisements with the line, \u201cBefore you make up your mind, open it!\u201d So, Christians of all traditions, before you make up your minds about what to sing as an entrance or communion song, get hold of the Antiphonal and open it!<br><br><br>Pray Tell<em>&nbsp;is pleased&nbsp;to feature the first article from each issue of<\/em>&nbsp;Worship,<em> the \u201cAmen Corner.&#8221; Sincere thanks to editor Bernadette Gasslein and<\/em>&nbsp;Worship<em> for their gracious reprint permission. Subscribe to <\/em>Worship <a href=\"http:\/\/journalworship.org\/Home\/Subscribe\">here<\/a>.<br><br><br>References<br>[1] John D. Witvliet, \u201cAmen Corner: The Mysteries of Liturgical Sincerity,\u201d Worship 92 (2018): 196\u2013203 (201).<br><br>[2] From the ICEL Sacramentary 1998.<br><br>[3] In the Antiphonal <em>Rorate Caeli<\/em> (Isa 45:8) is appointed for the Fourth Sunday of Advent, with Psalms 19:2-7 or 72.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>&#8220;I think that there is much to be learned from \u201capprenticing ourselves\u201d to the Antiphonal, letting it surprise us, stretch us, and even discomfort us.&#8221;<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":28,"featured_media":46096,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_jetpack_memberships_contains_paid_content":false,"footnotes":""},"categories":[3118,3286],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-46078","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-ars-celebrandi-new-ws","category-amen-corner"],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v27.5 - 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