prepareformass

Member since March 2, 2009

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Video of the week
Video of the week
Song and lyrics of 'The Summons', or 'Will you come and follow Me'. I love this song very much and a
Video of the week
Ego - Lego Parody: Me vs. You
Not much needs to be said here. For this one I bought Lego figures off ebay. Now that the shoot is o
Mark 4:35-41 - Discipleship 101: Dive In
The Calmed Storm
Feast of Corpus Christi - "We cannot live without Sunday"
A reflection by Fr. Tom Rosica, csb, on the Solemnity of the Body and Blood of Christ - Corpus Chris
Mercy Me (Easter) Bring the rain
"Draw Me Lord" by Selah
For God So Loved This World
Splendor of Truth
Video of the week
Gregorian Chant , et lux in tenebris...
And the light shineth in darkness: and the darkness did not comprehend it.//et lux in tenebris lucet et tenebrae eam non conprehenderunt............ /erat lux vera quae inluminat omnem hominem venientem in mundum/...That was the true light, which enlighteneth every man that cometh into this world./ Gregorian Chanthttp://www.solesmes.com/GB/gregorien/...--more Catholic music videos here athttp://beam.to/GloriaVideos-http://beam.to/Catholique-http://beam.to/catholic-vocation-media-Gregorian Chant is a musical repertory made up of chants used in the liturgical services of the Roman Catholic Church. In fact, the liturgical tradition which the Church has given us is a vocal, monophonic music composed in Latin using sacred texts from the Ancient and New Testaments. This is why Gregorian Chant has often been called a "sung Bible". Linked intimately to the liturgy in this way, the goal of the Gregorian melodies is to favor spiritual growth, reveal the gifts of God and the full coherence of the Christian message.What we call Gregorian chant today first appears distinctly in the Roman repertory of the fifth and sixth centuries. Its implimentation and perhaps some of its composition was in the hands of a group of ministers in a service specially dedicated to the Roman basilicas, the schola cantorum. Gregorian chant also appears to have been an aural music, that is, transmitted by ear and committed to memory - like all other music of the world at the time. (less)