Gregorian chant, the proper chant of the Church, is a sacramental that truly enables the faithful to unite themselves to Christ and to His redemptive mission. But most importantly, Gregorian chant carries on the song of Christ on earth. Let us learn to savor the unique beauty of Gregorian chant that is more of Heaven than of Earth. (Fr. Yves Le Roux, SSPX)
In this Edition of The Angelus: Sacred Music and Gregorian Chant
Gregorian Chant: Reflections & Considerations of a Vocal Pilgrim
— Andrew Childs
A Path into the Realm of Silence: Sacred Music and Approaching the Divine
— Fr. Ian Andrew Palko, SSPX
The Rich Symbolism of Gregorian Chant
— Julian Kwasniewski
Sacred Music at Mass
— David Conder
Speak Now or Forever Hold Your Lohengrin: Ecclesiastical efforts to promote chant and polyphony in wedding music
— Sharon Kabel
The Mother of God In Polish Catholic Hymns
— Angeline Tan
Music at Low Mass
— Michael J. Miller
Gregorian Chant at the University of Paris: Jerome of Moravia’s Tractatus de Musica
— Joseph Ahmad
CULTURE:
Bearing False Witness: Debunking Centuries of Anti-Catholic History
— By Rodney Stark, Reviewed by Brendan D. King
FAITH:
Problematic Post-Conciliar Liturgical Music
— Archbishop Marcel Lefebvre
SERMON On the Mystical Meaning of the Alleluia and the Tract
— Ascribed to Hugh of St. Victor, translated by Zachary Thomas
LITURGICAL STUDIES: The Most Sacred Heart of Jesus: New Emphases and Omissions for “Modern Man”
— Matthew Hazell
THEOLOGICAL STUDIES: Music Subjected to a Materialistic Influence
— By Fr. Thibault de Maillard, translated by Mary Molline
INTERVIEW My Path to Tradition
— George and Demi Garza
QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS
— Fr. Paul Robinson, SSPX
THE LAST WORD
— Fr. Yves le Roux