I wonder what decisons are made in other parishes re the Old Testament Readings:
- How many?
Which ones and why?
Who makes the decision?
One blessing is that, contrary to last year, we will have four Psalmists/Cantors!!!
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Unbelievably, a number of years ago on Good Friday we heard about the High Priest, Anus. Yes, really. The choir was in stitches.alan29 wrote: Fri Feb 02, 2024 10:21 amThe very difficult issue we suffer from is that readers are very reluctant to practice, so when everyone else - cleaners, sacristan. servers, flowers and musicians are at the top of their game ..... readers are often ill-prepared and stumble and mispronounce (I am still recovering from a Good Friday several years ago when we heard about the actions of someone called Pontius Pilartay.)
Did you get to the bottom of why they pronounced it that way?Southern Comfort wrote: Sun Feb 04, 2024 6:19 pmUnbelievably, a number of years ago on Good Friday we heard about the High Priest, Anus. Yes, really. The choir was in stitches.alan29 wrote: Fri Feb 02, 2024 10:21 amThe very difficult issue we suffer from is that readers are very reluctant to practice, so when everyone else - cleaners, sacristan. servers, flowers and musicians are at the top of their game ..... readers are often ill-prepared and stumble and mispronounce (I am still recovering from a Good Friday several years ago when we heard about the actions of someone called Pontius Pilartay.)
The Reader ministry is one area that we also need to brush up on. In truth, not one of the readers, myself included, have ever received any guidance, instruction or training. I suspect that we are noy alone in that.alan29 wrote: Fri Feb 02, 2024 10:21 am The very difficult issue we suffer from is that readers are very reluctant to practice, so when everyone else - cleaners, sacristan. servers, flowers and musicians are at the top of their game ..... readers are often ill-prepared and stumble and mispronounce (I am still recovering from a Good Friday several years ago when we heard about the actions of someone called Pontius Pilartay.) Mentions of this problem go down like a lead balloon at planning meetings.
One of my aims over the last few years is to slowly build up and develop the Triduum Liturgies so that we use what's good, approriate and, eventually, familiar.alan29 wrote: Fri Feb 02, 2024 10:21 am We tend to keep things much the same from year to year as much of the sung stuff is specific to those liturgies.
I once worked in a parish where you couldn't be on the rota for reader or the rota for minister of communion until you had done the training that the PP prescribed. This worked very well. His rationale was that if you couldn't be bothered to be as good as possible then you shouldn't be ministering at all — disrespect to God and to the people whom you're serving. The training was not arduous, in fact less demanding than what was being offered by the diocese at the time (but no longer — most dioceses don't seem to bother anymore).alan29 wrote: Fri Feb 02, 2024 10:21 amThe very difficult issue we suffer from is that readers are very reluctant to practice, so when everyone else - cleaners, sacristan. servers, flowers and musicians are at the top of their game ..... readers are often ill-prepared and stumble and mispronounce. Mentions of this problem go down like a lead balloon at planning meetings.
I once worked in a parish where you couldn't be on the rota for reader or the rota for minister of communion until you had done the training that the PP prescribed. This worked very well. His rationale was that if you couldn't be bothered to be as good as possible then you shouldn't be ministering at all — disrespect to God and to the people whom you're serving. The training was not arduous, in fact less demanding than what was being offered by the diocese at the time (but no longer — most dioceses don't seem to bother anymore).alan29 wrote: Fri Feb 02, 2024 10:21 amThe very difficult issue we suffer from is that readers are very reluctant to practice, so when everyone else - cleaners, sacristan. servers, flowers and musicians are at the top of their game ..... readers are often ill-prepared and stumble and mispronounce. Mentions of this problem go down like a lead balloon at planning meetings.
As it should be!Southern Comfort wrote: Fri Feb 09, 2024 7:28 pm I once worked in a parish where you couldn't be on the rota for reader or the rota for minister of communion until you had done the training that the PP prescribed. This worked very well. His rationale was that if you couldn't be bothered to be as good as possible then you shouldn't be ministering at all — disrespect to God and to the people whom you're serving. The training was not arduous, in fact less demanding than what was being offered by the diocese at the time (but no longer — most dioceses don't seem to bother anymore).
That, like one of SC's recent posts on this thread, is worthy of the "Wickedness of Face Cream" thread viewtopic.php?p=6282#p6282, which sadly hasn't had any entries for a while and could do with some. It reminded me of a time when I was driving with a friend into London and, after we crossed Richmond Bridge, she asked which park was on our left. When I answered "the Old Deer Park" she had visions of senior citizens with Zimmer frames!High Peak wrote: Wed Mar 27, 2024 2:26 pm At the last singers rehearsal on Sunday, I spotted thet we would have been singing "Like the (old?) dear yearns for running streams...." at the Vigil.