Choirmasters
are not normally pleased to include children in the regular choir because their
vocal abilities are limited by their undeveloped voice organs, and they do not
harmonize with the adult singers. Should
they be formed into separate choirs? Of course, whenever that is possible; however, our experience
is that this becomes a practical difficulty since the time required to sing
an entire Liturgy makes an enormous demand on choirmaster and children.
Best results have occurred when youth choirs are rehearsed for specific
holidays, and led to sing portions of the sacred services.
Rehearsal
Time - A Challenge
Nobody
needs to be reminded that time is a rare commodity.
We must not, therefore, sacrifice the precious time we have together;
we must set fixed priorities for what we attempt. Worship always heads the list.
Nothing is more relevant to the youth of our parishes than to know, to
love, and to praise the Lord within the Orthodox community.
If we do not permit children to be taken from the holy service and made
to sit in classrooms for Christian education, we also ought not utilize the
precious time for church school in order to rehearse the young people for singing.
Here is another case where strict priorities must be adhered to, and
classroom time must be protected at all costs.
I feel we gain little by utilizing learning time in order to sing, although
it can be argued that such singing is a form of learning; however, each time
we forsake curriculum we treat Christian education as something secondary, negotiable,
and of relative importance, showing to teachers and pupils that what they are
about is only of nominal significance.
When
and What Should the Children Sing?
When
during our worship should the children sing alone?
When they are just starting, and might feel awed by crowds, it could
be possible to give them a place during the Hours preceding the Liturgy, perhaps
singing the special hymns of the day or the season.
Those parishes where the congregation actually assembles on time and
even a quarter hour prior to the Introit would probably encourage the young
people to try their voices then. Another
such moment is during the communion of the clergy.
What
shall they sing? I have a simple, personal, and rather homely test for church
music, and that is: Do the people sing it on the way home from church?
If not, we are not infecting
our people with the joy of the Lord.
As a kid, I sang church hymns all week long; of course, all
in Slavonic, but with great gusto.
They filled my soul with meaning.
Here is a challenge for all our aspiring church musicians who enjoy talking
about styles, composers, and chants: What
will be sung in the car on the way home?
Will your listeners sing what you have sung, or instead turn on the radio?
It's not enough for us to deplore rock music, acid rock, punk music,
and all the rest; rather let us find ways to challenge its effects by presenting
the Lord's holy Gospel in a manner
that our children will internalize
and make part of their daily lives, having the tunes in their heads drowning
out the noises of the world.
Inspiration From
the Suffering
Church of Russia
One
lesson we might adapt from the suffering Church of Russia.
Visitors there must be impressed with the way those dear believers enjoy
devotion. They are caught up in
the liturgical cycle something like the way young Americans are drawn by rock
concerts. I do not feel the analogy
to be disrespectful, for Orthodox believers over there are as emotional for
spiritual nourishment as teenagers over here are for the sensual.
One quickly realizes that the Church there is indeed alive in the Spirit
of Christ. Each holy day does more
than merely come about; God's people go forward to greet it.
Singers
in Russia share the joy by encouraging true antiphonal singing, by two separate
choirs. At certain moments, select
groups sing: male, female, or mixed, in sextets or octets, will come forward
to sing a special hymn of the feast which is obviously well rehearsed, and the
presentation is its own reward. Could
we capture such a spirit here in the land of earthly delights? Would it be possible
to rekindle that love for praising the Lord which our ancestors knew and our
spiritual relatives in captivity still manifest? Herein lies a challenge for
us all.
Summer camps and Bible classes frequently feature singing, and we must be grateful for that, but we must also discover ways to relate those summertime experiences to the local parishes. How do we integrate our youngsters into the singing, praying experience of the church? Somehow this must be done.
Choir
- An Anchor During
Stormy Years of
Growth
Finally,
during those years of tumult which every young person lives through, from adolescence
well into his adult, mature years, Christ is both challenge and problem, refuge
and the One refused. Sometimes
it is not much more than the choir which holds a person to the Church during
the stormy years. Living choirs
are those ever in search of young, new members.
Bless the directors who go out in search of new talent, ever on the watch
for young singers. How deplorable
are those parishes where children who sing in the school choirs and choruses
are not encouraged to take part in the church choir, those closed shops, where
only the privileged few are allowed to parade into the lofty area "reserved",
in every sense, for the select few. And
it's not enough merely to announce rehearsals.
Youngsters must be invited, or they will not feel welcome.
Let us break up those elitist cliques for the sake of our young people
before they simply disappear.
Questions
For Discussion:
2. Discuss the feasibility of developing a children's singing group in your parish, taking into account the need for the "natural" director someone who enjoys working with children, rehearsal time, the extent of the singing, i.e. special holidays, special parts of the services, engendering parish support for their endeavors.
Fr. Vladimir Berzonsky is pastor of the Holy Trinity Orthodox Church, Parma, Ohio, a feature column writer for The Orthodox Church newspaper and the author of several Orthodox publications.
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Department
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