
				
				
				“Inculturated Liturgy Challenges Preaching to Flower”
				
				by Bruce Barnabas Schultz, O.P
				
				
				Associate Pastor, Our Lady of Lourdes, Atlanta, GA
				
				
				 
				
				Black Catholic worship as we know it today 
				became possible in the mid-1960s when the Constitution on the 
				Sacred Liturgy was issued by the Second Vatican Council 
				(1962-65).  The constitution opened worship to local languages 
				and encouraged “inculturation” of the liturgy.  The first U.S. 
				Mass in English featured a hymn, “God Is Love,” by Fr. Clarence 
				Rufus Joseph Rivers, the first African American to be ordained a 
				priest for the Archdiocese of Cincinnati, who received a 
				10-minute ovation.  Fr. Rivers pioneered what he termed 
				“Soulfull Worship” and soon was joined by other composers and 
				choir directors to bring a new musical wind into Catholic 
				rites.  These pathfinders showed how prayer in African American 
				congregations could be both authentically Catholic and Black – 
				by deftly blending traditional hymns and Gregorian chant with 
				Spirituals, Gospel, and jazz as well as new compositions written 
				expressly for Catholic worship.
				 
				
				The composer and liturgist Rawn Harbor 
				quotes Fr. Rivers in Let It Shine!  The Emergence of African 
				American Catholic Worship: “The other parts of the Mass need 
				to be brought up to the relative level of excellence that we are 
				beginning to achieve in our musical performance.” This 1978 
				observation called for preaching, proclamation and prayer to 
				match the poetic power of the “soul-touching music”.  In his 
				Let It Shine! essay, Harbor draws from Black Catholic 
				liturgical thinkers in identifying 23 “performance values” to 
				spur transformation of African American Catholic worship, 
				including
				 
				
				·        
				
				The whole range of African American culture is brought to bear 
				on the liturgy;
				
				·        
				
				The Black experience is taken seriously, and Black culture, 
				spirituality and religiosity are broadly defined;
				
				·        
				
				Use of the wisdom, scholarship and expertise of Black Catholic 
				theologians and pastoral leaders to develop a Black hermeneutic
				
				 
				
				The 8th performance value 
				speaks directly to music:
				 
				
				The liturgical artistry and skills of the 
				traditional Black Church are readily
				
				utilized to fashion the varied components 
				of a liturgical event – that is, it makes use of poetic and 
				dialogical oratory; it incorporates a broad range of religious 
				music (spirituals, hymns, anthems, gospel, metered music; it 
				makes conscious appeals to the emotions and feelings of the 
				assembly; it engenders a sense of enjoyment and psychosocial 
				satisfaction among the assembly; it displays interactive 
				familiarity between ministers and the rest of the assembly; and 
				it strives toward good drama). [pp. 127-8]
				 
				
				Another scholar of African American 
				Catholic liturgy, Fr. J-Glenn Murray, S.J., notes:
				
				
				“What makes our worship uniquely Black is our indomitable and 
				uncanny ability to ‘sing the Lord’s song in a strange land’! 
				(Psalm 137:4)” [“The Liturgy of the Roman rite and African 
				American Worship,” Lead Me, Guide Me:  The African American 
				Catholic Hymnal, vol 1, 1987]
				 
				
				The 
				African American Catholic “religious experience is shaped by 
				African factors as well as by those on these shores,” according 
				to Plenty Good Room: The Spirit and Truth of African American 
				Catholic Worship (U.S. Catholic Bishops, 1991), whose 
				principal author was Fr. Murray.  This unique blending mirrors 
				the mélange present in African Diaspora culture in general and 
				in a whole range of music – jazz, blues, gospel, mambo, and 
				reggae, to name a few.  Robert Farris Thompson in his Flash 
				of the Spirit:  African & Afro-American Art & Philosophy 
				writes about a Black Atlantic performance style that has grown 
				out of the collision of West African and Western Eurocentric 
				musical patterns, a performance style “informed by the flash of 
				the spirit of a certain people specially armed with 
				improvisatory drive and brilliance.” Thompson explains:  “Since 
				the Atlantic slave trade, ancient African organizing principles 
				of song and dance have crossed the seas from the Old World to 
				the New. There they took on new momentum, intermingling with 
				each other and with New World or European styles of singing and 
				dance.  Among those principles are
				 
				
				·        
				the
				dominance of a percussive performance style (attack and 
				vital aliveness in sound and motion); 
				
				·        
				a 
				propensity of multiple meter (competing meters sounding all 
				at once);
				
				·        
				overlapping 
				call and response in singing (solo/chorus, voice/instrument 
				– "interlock systems of performance); 
				
				·        
				inner 
				pulse control (a "metronome sense", 
				keeping a beat indelibly in mind as a rhythmic common 
				denominator in a welter of different meters); 
				
				·        
				
				suspended accentuation patterning (offbeat phrasing of 
				melodic and choreographic accents); 
				
				·        
				and, 
				at a slightly different but equally recurrent level of 
				exposition, songs and dances of social allusion (music 
				which, however danceable and "swinging", remorselessly contrasts 
				social imperfections against implied criteria for perfect 
				living).”  [page xiii]
				 
				
				These 
				very qualities, which Thompson identifies above, are present in 
				the sacred song of African American Catholic worship.  Plenty 
				Good Room notes:  “The ‘soul’ in African American liturgy 
				calls forth a great deal of musical improvisation and 
				creativity.  It also calls forth a greater sense of 
				spontaneity.  The African American assembly is not a passive, 
				silent, nonparticipating assembly.  It participates by 
				responding with its own interjections and acclamations, with 
				expressions of approval and encouragement.”  
				 
				
				The 
				liturgy in Black Catholic congregations can be the rich 
				flowering imagined by the liturgical pioneers.   “African 
				Americans are heirs to the West African musical aesthetic of the 
				call-and-response structure,” notes Plenty Good Room, 
				“extensive melodic ornamentation (e.g., slides, slurs, bends, 
				moans, shouts, wails, and so forth), complex rhythmic 
				structures, and the integration of song and dance.”
				
				The 
				late Sr. Thea Bowman,  F.S.P.A., the godmother of inculturated 
				African American liturgy who is being brought forth for the 
				process of canonization,  notes in the introduction to Volume 1 
				of Lead Me, Guide Me that Sacred Song is
				 
				
				·        
				
				holistic:  challenging the full 
				engagement of mind, imagination, memory, feeling, emotion, voice 
				and body;
				
				·        
				
				participatory:  inviting the 
				worshipping community to join in contemplation, in celebration,  
				and in prayer;
				
				·        
				real:  celebrating the 
				immediate concrete reality of the worshipping community – grief 
				or separation, struggle or oppression, determination or joy – 
				bringing that reality to prayer within the community of 
				believers;
				
				·        
				
				spirit-filled:  energetic,  
				engrossing, intense; and
				
				·        
				
				life-giving:  refreshing, 
				encouraging, consoling, invigorating, sustaining.
				 
				
				
				Plenty Good Room also notes that 
				“African American Catholic worship may be greatly enhanced by 
				spirituals and gospel music, both of which are representations 
				of this aesthetic.  But classical music; anthems; African 
				Christian hymns; jazz; South American, African-Caribbean and 
				Haitian music may also be used where appropriate.  It is not 
				just the style of music that makes it African American, but the 
				African American assembly that sings it and the people whose 
				spirits are uplifted by it.”
				 
				
				
				          Just as the Negro spiritual proclaims –  "Plenty good 
				room, plenty good room. ... Choose your seat and sit down." – 
				Black Catholic worship is inclusive and welcoming of all styles 
				of music.   The music in some African American Catholic parishes 
				is so strong and vibrant, that it challenges the preacher and 
				the presider to elevate their preparation and delivery of the 
				spoken Word of God, drawing from the deep wells of the Black 
				cultural experience, Scripture scholarship and Church 
				tradition.  Gospel lyrics, lyric poetry and prose, memorable 
				sermons and historic events – all have given me good ground for 
				preaching recently.  For example, recently I’ve quoted from the 
				preaching in the hush arbor by lay evangelist “Baby Suggs, Holy” 
				in Toni Morrison’s Beloved, the narrative poems “Judas 
				Iscariot” and “Simon of Cyrene Speaks” by Countee Cullen, and 
				the sermonic poems in James Weldon Johnson’s God’s Trombones, 
				in particular “The Creation.”  Father Clarence Rivers’ challenge 
				to the liturgy in 1978, still holds today:
				 
				
				
				“the other parts of the Mass need to be brought up to the 
				relative level of excellence that we are beginning to achieve in 
				our musical performance.”