This last sunday I was shocked to hear our church use only protestant hymns during communion. As most of you know I have vehemently spoken out against this very practice and you can imagine I have done so at church as well, but clearly to no avail. I have spoken to the higher ups, to the priest, to everyone in between and last sunday I was actually called an extremist for suggesting we use Orthodox hymns....in an Orthodox church. Let me reiterate the dangers in allowing such practice into the church. By singing these hymns we are invariably accepting them, by accepting them we are telling our youth, and other laity, that there is no real difference between Orthodox and protestant. Logically we can conclude that at some point in the youths development they will likely say, why not be protestant? Its much easier and you can attain the same result as you can in Orthodoxy, with less struggle. We cannot validate these hymns because we validate the source which will inevitably lead more dilution of Orthodoxy and people may inevitably leave Orthodoxy for the path of least resistance. I know that to some of you this may seem "extreme" but let me remind you of the spiritual void in Europe, the birthplace of protestantism. Protestantism has slowly widdled itself down to its least common denominator. To the point where people believe you dont need church at all, in fact only 20% of Europeans even go to church. Introducing this to our people could be potentially lethal, especially to our youth. So I ask you to report this to a bishop the moment you see anything like this. If that bishop refuses to listen, contact another. I would suggest contacting HG Bishop Anba Youssef. We need a call to arms, not to physical arms but ones of spiritual warfare, this is OUR church we cannot let it fall to worldly ideology.
Comments
Ioannes. I sent you a PM.
Ifahmy, singing Protestant songs during our Liturgy - especially as the faithful process up to receive the Body of Our Lord - in highly inappropriate. Ioannes is not being extremist in the least.
I was waiting for Ray to chime in.
Let's face the facts. This is not an isolated case. It is just more blatant. We shouldn't be surprised when we see dozens of conferences, who in the name of ecumenism, look for "a new approach to offer Jesus". It is a complete denial of the thousands of years Orthodoxy has offered Jesus with an exponentially better track record. We shouldn't be surprised when the latest trend is not only Protestant music in Coptic services, but Protestant theology in Coptic blogs calling for the removal of clergy and episcopal ranks, describing travelogues of Protestants and not late antique monastic journeys, showing memes that insult Coptic clergy or endorse songs that actually ridicule Coptic hymns, references to Protestant preachers instead of the patristic fathers, etc. (the list goes on and on). We shouldn't be surprised when fail to recognize that the increase of Protestantism has an inverse relationship with Coptic hymnology, Coptic agpeya, Coptic tasbeha, and Coptic discipleship. We shouldn't be surprised that this is nothing new either. If one were to evaluate all the Arabic songs that have been sung since the 60's in Church services, one will be so hard pressed to find one song that is not border-line Protestant.(The next time you hear an Arabic song, see if you hear the word "Trinity" or "Theotokos". Odds are you won't because it is a protestant song.) Why should we be surprised it is happening in English? It is just 50 years behind Arabic. Like Ray said, you would think we learned our lesson.
Ioannes, you couldn't be more accurate in your description of the hypocrisy of modern Protestantism. I have said "allahu Akbar" and received the evil eye. It kills me when I have to explain that "God is Great" is no different than saying "God the Great" which is the first phrase in the reconciliation prayer in the Liturgy of St Basil. We throw out Coptic liturgical texts with deep theological meaning and time-proven liturgical phrases for touchy-feely phrases about how Jesus loves me. Even the Muslim liturgical phrase "Allahu Akbar" is theocentric, not egotistically androcentric. Even the entire fatiha of the Quran is theocentric. I'd rather be an ignorant muslim than a hypocritical, lackadaisical, self-centered, traveling-the-easy-way-out, enjoying-the-wide-road, complaining-that-Orthodoxy-doesn't-suit-me, wanting-the-grass-on-the-other-side-of-the-fence, more-interested-in-secular-Middle-Eastern-politics-than-the-salvation-of-the world, anti-intellectual, rather-listen-to-Taylor-Swift-than-the-liturgy, looking-for-ways-to-make-the-liturgy-sound-like-Taylor-Swift, rather-cut-my-hand-off-than-explain-the-meaning-of-Homosious, Miaphysitism, hypostasis, prosopon, nature and essence, Anti-Origenism, Anti-Apollonarianism, or even-care-to-know-why-it-matters, modern day Copt.
Ineffable drink! You can never be taken away, and you ceaselessly pour yourself into the lips of my soul, and copiously flow in the source of my heart. Shining garment, which burns demons. Purifying sacrifice! You bathe me with unceasing holy tears, copiously shed from your presence among those to whom you come. I give thanks to you because for me you have become an unfading day and a sun on the side of its setting. You have nowhere to hide yourself, and with your glory you fill universes. You have never hidden yourself from anyone, but we ourselves always hide from you, until we wish to come to you. For where can you hide, if there is not place where you can rest? Or why would you hide yourself, you who do not despise anyone, do not fear anyone? Create now out of me a tabernacle for yourself, meek Lord, and live in me, and until my death do not leave, do not separate yourself from me, your servant, so that I too, at my death and after my death, will abide in you and reign with you, God Who reigns over everything.
Remain Lord and do not leave me alone, so that when my enemies come, who constantly seek to devour my soul, they will find you in me, and run away for good and not defeat me, because they will see you, stronger than all, inside, dwelling in the mansion of my humble soul. Truly, just as you remembered me, Lord, when I was in the world, and when without my knowledge you yourself chose me, and separated me from the world, and placed me before the face of your glory, so even now protect me through your unchanging, perfectly stable abiding in me, so the every day, contemplating you, I, mortal one, may live, so that, possessing you, I, poor one, may always be rich. This way, I would be more powerful than any king; and partaking of you and drinking you, and hourly being clothed in you, I would enjoy unutterable blessed delight. Since you are every good and every adornment and every delight, and to you belongs the glory of the holy and consubstantial Trinity, which is glorified in the Father, the Son and Holy Spirit, and is known and honored by the whole community of the faithful now and always and for ever and ever. Amen”
Invocation to the Holy Spirit by St Symeon the New Theologian
What are some orthodox hymns your church/you would suggest singing during communion?
Some excellent posts here, especially Rem and Ray's respective masterpieces. On the subject of how this stuff crept in and ruined the Catholic Church please read The Banished Heart: The Origins of Heteropraxis in the Catholic Church
http://www.amazon.com/The-Banished-Heart-Heteropraxis-Fundamental/dp/0567442209/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1413372015&sr=8-1&keywords=heteropraxis
It's a study of how this kind of "contemporary" stuff and the phronema that accompanies it destroyed the Catholic Church and made it the "clown mass" "liturgical dance" monstrosity it is today. It could very well be the Coptic Church in 50 years if we leave Orthodoxy and persist in trying to "contemporize" the Church.
If it will take such a long time to undo the things mentioned, what are the people to do? Is beauty an issue?
Sometimes I really feel the same way. If the Copts end up definitively accepting Protestant praxis - that is to say issuing official statements to the effect that it is okay under certain circumstances and in certain places - I will know that the church is no longer Orthodox and I'll have no choice but to leave. God forbid that ever happens. In the meantime, I'm going to fast, pray, and fight as hard as possible for my beloved Coptic Church.