RULES SUCK

RULES SUCK!!!!

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These are excerpts from Kersten commentary.

Katherine can be found here at the Star Tribune:
http://www.startribune.com/bios/10645201.html

Thursday, December 30, 2010

KK Tells us why her church is cool

"

Tonight at St. Agnes Catholic Church in St. Paul, 60 singers will assemble in the choir loft for midnight mass. Violinists, oboists and trumpeters -- many from the Minnesota Orchestra -- will tune their instruments.

Then, as Christmas arrives at the stroke of midnight, the glorious strains of Mozart's monumental Coronation Mass will rise in the baroque splendor of this onion-domed, gilt-and-marble church in Frogtown, as bells peal in the frosty air.

Worshipers and visitors will have to pinch themselves to remember they're in Minnesota, and not in a cathedral in Vienna or Munich.

A chance to hear the Coronation Mass -- among the grandest music ever written -- would seem a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to many Minnesotans.

In fact, the Twin Cities Catholic Chorale performs classical-era masses of Mozart, Haydn, Beethoven and others at St. Agnes at 10 a.m. almost every Sunday from October until June.

Though the music is magnificent in the concert hall, says director Robert Peterson, it's different and more meaningful in the context of the Latin mass. There, it's performed to give glory to God -- just as its composers intended it to be.

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart would surely be astounded to learn that, in 2010, St. Paul, Minn., is one of the last places on earth where music lovers can still experience his music this way.

"A handful of European churches perform these masses in a worship service on rare occasion," says Peterson. "But we do 30 of them a year."

"If music is supposed to lift up your soul, to give you a glimpse of heaven, this music will do that," says parishioner Keith Kostuch, who was incredulous to discover St. Agnes' cultural treasure when his family moved here recently.

"When the chorale, the organ and the orchestra power in on some of the numbers, it's chilling -- you just get goosebumps. I've seen visitors weep. They're moved and enthralled -- overwhelmed, really."

The chorale's singers, all talented amateurs, range from a gifted high school student to a senior medical doctor. Some members actually moved to the Twin Cities to join, says Peterson. The vocal soloists and instrumentalists are top-rank professionals.

Peterson became the chorale's director in 2005, when its founder, the Rev. Richard Schuler, retired. Schuler was a distinguished organist and musicologist, as well as St. Agnes' longtime pastor.

He launched the chorale in 1974, after he and the church choir returned from a European singing tour determined to reproduce the orchestra-accompanied Latin masses they had heard in famous churches there.

Peterson, who conducted choirs at Edina High School and Macalester College for decades, was bowled over when he first heard the Chorale in 1999.

"I was used to having three months to rehearse my choirs to perform a work of this scope. I couldn't imagine preparing a major work in one week, then putting down my baton to get ready for another the next week, and so on for 30 Sundays."

St. Agnes is the perfect setting for what one chorale fan calls "the greatest hits of Western civilization."

The church building, begun in 1909, was lovingly constructed by Austro-Hungarian immigrants who came to work on the railroad and lived in Frogtown, close to the tracks.

They modeled the church on Kloster Schlaegel, a monastery near Aigen, Austria. It's filled with old-world beauty and craftsmanship: a gorgeous marble altar, Tyrolean statues, and Stations of the Cross in German.

The experience of perfectly harmonized art, architecture and music can transport visitors.

"It's like taking your music history textbook and opening it about the years 1750 to 1800 -- the height of the classical era," explains Peterson.

"Everything is integrated. There's Latin in the choir loft and on the altar, and reverent rituals that have been part of the church for centuries: candles, bells, incense, vestments and altar servers, and the ninth-century Gregorian chant of the 'Schola Cantorum' which sings the 'proper,' or parts of the mass that change daily.

"It all comes together to help people appreciate this great mystery," Peterson concludes.

Both Catholics and non-Catholics can appreciate the results. The chorale includes Catholic and non-Catholic members, and the church has greeters who help people unfamiliar with the Latin liturgy to feel at home.

No work provokes more emotion than the great "Mass in E Minor" by Heinrich von Herzogenberg. This huge work, composed in 1894, was once presumed lost, but a complete score turned up in the mid-1990s.

Performed by more than 100 musicians, the music almost lifts listeners out of their pews. The chorale is the first to perform it in North America.

"People today have a real thirst for the transcendent," says the Rev. John Ubel, St. Agnes' current pastor. "I believe the way in which we celebrate the Eucharist here speaks to that."

But each Sunday's performance costs several thousand dollars. The chorale is primarily supported by donations to its nonprofit, and may die unless new donors are found.

Tonight, the chorale will give its only real concert of the year. At 11:15, before midnight mass, it will perform traditional carols you'd likely hear in a church in Bavaria.

"When I conduct the chorale, I feel a real connection with God," says Peterson. "When I finish the last 'Dona Nobis Pacem,' I feel a sense of peace and completeness. The music helps me to pray in a different way. I hope it's the same for others, and that they are brought closer to God by this great music."

"As Monsignor Schuler always said, 'To sing in church is to pray twice.'"

24 comments:

  1. I'd bet they have many immigrants attending.

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  2. I guess I'm not surprised to learn that KK digs St Agnes. Both my daughters went to high school there in the late '90s, and back then, as now, it was very conservative in it's interpretation of Catholicism. All of which is fine with me, a conservative take on the catholic church is not a bad thing, per se.

    And the music program was excellent back then also. At the time , it was lead by a guy named White(whom my girls referred to as "Senior Blanco"), and, while he was pretty much of a jackwagon personally, he did know his stuff musically. Under his instruction, both girls qualified for state choir, and St Agnes regularly qualified more kids per school for state than any other during Senior Blancos tenure. Unfortunately, the jackwagon part of his personality eventually created so many enemies that Mr White was forced out of St Agnes, despite the strong program he had built up.

    It's comforting to read that good music is still alive and well at St Agnes.

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  3. Happy New Year people! The best to all of you

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  4. Seems like liberals can't stand organized religion, unless of course it is Islam or supports gay marriage.

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  5. Being a non-liberal, I don't mind organized religion unless it's used to spread misinformation or hatred. Unfortunately, most major religions are guilty of that.

    Pat Robertson causes as much hatred as any radical member of the Muslim religion.

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  6. And hypocrisy .. never, ever forget the hypocrisy.

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  7. "Being a non-liberal"

    That's the funniest thing you've said all year Greg!

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  8. "Seems like liberals can't stand organized religion"

    LOL! Oh don't start, dtroll. Someone who's head is firmly planted sooooooooooo far up his own a&& couldn't possibly know much except how dark, dank and smelly his world is.

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  9. The D2 scale of political preference:

    D2 Conservative = George Will is a liberal.

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  10. Why is it the radical right extremists and/or fascists of this country have hijacked the term conservative?

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  11. "Seems like liberals can't stand organized religion, unless of course it is Islam or supports gay marriage."

    Monnty, I forgot to add illegal immigration. Liberals love it when the Catholic Church supports the massive flood of illegals coming into this country because it increases their dwindling membership.

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  12. "Seems like liberals can't stand organized religion"

    "Liberals love it when the Catholic Church supports the massive flood of illegals coming into this country"

    OK einstein, which is it: do your definition of "liberals" love organized religion - like the catholic church - or don't they? Do try to make up your mind.

    Ya know, you're such a maroon. You argue like a 4th grader. You sure you're not 10 years old sitting in your moms basement in your underwear, trying to act like an adult? Honestly......

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  13. "Why is it the radical right extremists and/or fascists of this country have hijacked the term conservative?"

    Why is it the radical right extremists and/or fascists of this country have hijacked the terms of political discourse in the country?

    Fixed it.

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  14. "OK einstein, which is it: do your definition of "liberals" love organized religion - like the catholic church - or don't they? Do try to make up your mind."

    Monnty, liberals can't stand organized religion unless it benefits their agendas such as Man on Man marriage and open borders, or if it isn't Christianity.

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  15. "Why is it the radical right extremists and/or fascists of this country have hijacked the term conservative?"

    Why have homo's hijacked the term "gay". My 9 year old doesn't even know it's original meaning.

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  16. "...because it increases their dwindling membership. "

    Um .. I think the Catholic Church is growing D2.

    http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/life/religion/6873775.html

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  17. "My 9 year old doesn't even know it's original meaning. "

    That's because he's constantly reminded of your sexuality by friends, neighbors, relatives, etc.

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  18. "Um .. I think the Catholic Church is growing D2."

    If it really is, it's because of illegal immigration. Not many Mexicans are Lutherans you know.

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  19. "Not many Mexicans are Lutherans you know. "

    Is that because people like you don't make them feel welcome D2?

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  20. "Monnty, liberals can't stand organized religion unless it benefits their agendas such as Man on Man marriage and open borders, or if it isn't Christianity."

    Monnty, morons(neocons like you dtroll) can't stand organized religion unless it benefits their agendas such as ethnicity, gender and sexual orientation discrimination, or if it is Christianity in name only, used as justification of their deep seated prejudices.

    Fixed it.

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