Originally posted by Chris:
..... So, if Christ was indeed a nut, we have a religion based on the teachings of a nut in the Catholic Church....
..... So, if Christ was indeed a nut, we have a religion based on the teachings of a nut in the Catholic Church....
As for Beethoven's views on Christ....Since he did not leave us a written summary of his religious views, any views based on his writings will be largely conjecture. Looking at his Missa Solemnis would be, I believe, at least as illuminating.
Yes, an atheist could certainly write a mass. But there are a couple of things to consider here. Beethoven took a great deal of time and care in writing his Mass. This was not something dashed off in order to pay the rent. "My chief design when writing the Mass," he wrote,"was to arouse religious emotion in singers and auditors alike, and to render this emotion lasting." There is certainly feeling enough in his Mass - the Gloria is glorious and the Credo appropriately affirming. But there is more than vaguely 'religious' feeling in the Mass. In writing of the Credo, Vincent d'Indy in his essay on the Mass points out: "The first division, an expostition of faith in one God, in itself comprises two affirmations: 'I believe in one God, the Father Almighty,' and 'in one Lord Jesus Christ.' Both are established in the principal key of B-flat major, with a transition to the subdominant; after which the two Persons are reunited, on consubstantialem Patri (one in being with the Father), in the tonic."
The author gives other examples where certain important parts of the prayers are underlined, so to speak, using particular emotion or key changes. So would an antheist really bother to pay such attention to the details? And further, would a person who was brought up a Catholic and had rejected the Faith make sure his music expressed the particulars, empphasizing articles of faith he no longer believed? I've written too much to quote any further examples, but the music was written, as Beethoven himself said, to 'arouse religious feelings'. Would this not serve to convince the hearer of the validity of what is being sung?
Beethoven wasn't a church-going Catholic, but I don't believe that necessarily means he didn't believe in Christ's divinity.
Mary
[This message has been edited by MCS (edited 08-22-2001).]
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