Has the service of the Midnight Praise during the month of Kiahk gone too far in praising St. Mary? It seems that focus at times almost completely shifts away from the mystery of the Incarnation and our role in it and focus purely on the glory of the Theotokos.
I hear a lot of complaints of people turning to Protestant music. My question is, why aren't the orthodox composing and creating new hymns. It seems that our liturgical services have reached a completely static state, incapable of composing new music, words and hymns with Orthodox theology and ethos in English as well as Arabic. Maybe that's why people are turning to Protestant hymns? Has the church become static?
Thanks
Comments
About Protestant songs, I don't see any connection about people leaving orthodoxy because of our hymns.
How do we address this? And the problem only seems to get worse with the older generations. Maybe this is only a phenomenon limited to my church or more exaggerated here, I would love to reach out to them and get them to taste the true beauty of Orthodox praise.
My advice is to get them to literally 'taste' it, before you attempt to get them to gulp it down.
Why not hold a short (1 hour or even less) tasbeha completely in English? You could maybe just do the 4 hooses? And when they get keener do everything except for the long hymns and Theotokia. And then you could add Khen o shot and Marenonh. And then add the Theotokia. And then add some Coptic, eg in the 4th hoos Psalm 150. Etc.
A good time to hold this would be after youth meeting or even better on any other day a number of youth tend to congregate at church for any meeting/bible study during the week.
Even if you spend 5 years just doing the 4 hooses, you will gradually build up an army of people who are keen on tasbeha. These people may then naturally seek to attend your church's real tasbeha. In which case, you will never need to lengthen the mini-tasbeha beyond 1 hour, because hopefully people will be 'graduating' from your mini-tasbeha to the full tasbeha.
Btw your church's full tasbeha *must* have 50% English for this to be feasible.
Also try to encourage the few youth who are interested/popular older youth servants to make running this mini-tasbeha their 'service', this will attract more youth and make the interested youth more committed to the cause.
You can also introduce individual hymns eg Neknai o panoti, Aripsalin, 4th hoos, into Sunday school classes/youth meeting/communion during the liturgy. Even if it's alongside the worst forms of Protestant music, at least it's better than nothing, if your mini-tasbeha doesn't end up working out. You can get boys (and girls) to play the cymbals and triangles while singing these hymns, they will probably enjoy the novelty of this, and it's not something they get to do while singing the Protestant hymns. Once you change the culture, you can try reintroducing your mini-tasbeha.
May God strengthen you, and in whatever you do, obviously get the support of your parish priest, which should in most cases be easy.
those are all really good tips. I'll try to apply those.
(this is an introductory video)
(this is a continuation)
These videos that we made were for those who do not know Coptic but wish to understand and participate more in the praises. Keep in mind that the second video may have a few errors regarding the rites but we are working on correcting it soon... it is a work in progress...
Btw 5 out of 8 people moving from a meeting to tasbeha is quite a good figure. This suggests that the problem you have is the different from that in most parishes. That is, there are often a lot of people involved in the life of the church, but unfortunately do not embrace the full Orthodox spiritual life, but are rather captivated by secularised ("Protestant") ideas. Whereas, in your parish, it seems that many people view it as social, but those few who view it as spiritual fully embrace an Orthodox spirituality.
I don't know how to change that sort of culture, as I don't have experience with that. As stated above, I have mainly encountered the opposite problem.