Chanting as an Offering

Chant Exsultet Easter

chanting at the Easter Vigil

“Chant calls us out of chronological time, in which ‘now’ can never be located, and into the eternal now, which is not really found in time.” —David Steindl-Rast in The Music of Silence: Entering the Sacred Space of Monastic Experience (HarperOne, 1995).

David Steindl-Rast reminds us that when we use this ancient voice of praise and prayer to God, we stand in the presence of ancient angel choirs. We change the way we address God and each other. The words become notes. The message we chant sounds different. The chant itself is soothing and comforting. 

The music takes us to another place and another time. The sounds open our world to a new dimension. Chanting slows the words of the message. The squirrels running in the cage in our heads slow down and grow quieter. Sometimes, time seems to stand still, and we feel at peace. We are home.

The chant that deacons most often sing is the Exsultet, which is sung after the newly lit Christ candle is brought back into the church at the Easter Vigil. This music becomes part of my body long before Lent begins, even if I am not the deacon designated to sing this lengthy Canticle.

Jason Pennington, the music director at one of my previous churches, describes the Exsultet as “one of the most difficult chants in the Church’s treasury of song, sung at the opening of the Great Vigil. It is the culmination of the events of the Holy Triduum, as the congregation holds their candles in the shadow of the one Paschal Candle. The choir, not yet allowed into the stalls, stands in the nave with the faithful as that most beautiful of Canticles is intoned, promising us all the immeasurable gift of salvation.” 

I keep a note from Jason from our last Easter together, when I began experiencing more mobility issues and standing for a long time became more difficult.

“She endured excruciating physical pain to stand for the lengthy Canticle, drawing each breath to acclaim its message of life. She paced it well, taking her time and savoring every phrase as if it were the very first. This was a beautiful gift of ministry, a Holy Spirit gift that put ministry before self. And isn’t that exactly the lesson to be learned at the Mandatum not two nights before: ‘I give you a new commandment, that you should love one another.’ Joanna’s lovely, quiet chanting voice trembled with pain yet was filled with joy. This was Easter.”

I keep Jason’s note as a reminder for me and others that chanting is always an offering, never a performance.

Joanna. https://www.joannaseibert.com/