Email @ireland.com
Find your ancestorsNo carols should be used in church until Christmas Eve and carol services should be restricted to the Christmas season only, Fr Vincent Twomey has said. The former professor of moral theology at St Patrick's College Maynooth said that "singing Christmas hymns before Christmas . . . is absurd."
He continued that "the Irish church does not know how to celebrate Advent properly" referring to the weeks before Christmas. "It [ advent] should be a time of fasting and prayer, like Lent, though not so rigorous, so that we can truly break into festive joy on Christmas night and sustain it for the following 12 days, days which today in Ireland are marked mostly by the sales."
Part of the feeling of Christmas as an anti-climax was "due to the fact that we have anticipated it too early. This applies in particular to the phenomenon of pre-Christmas parties," he said.
Instead, Advent should be "a time of prayerful waiting for the coming of the Lord. Some fasting is also recommended. More serious is the Irish practice of holding carol services or concerts during Advent. This amounts to singing Christmas hymns before Christmas, which is absurd.
"Piped music in shops and stores, as well as radio programmes, play these carols before Christmas for the same purpose: to create the right 'atmosphere'. No carols should be used in church until Christmas Eve. And carol services should be restricted to the Christmas season. Instead, Advent services with suitable music could be introduced, which would also help people to prepare properly for the Feast of the Nativity."
A former doctoral student of Pope Benedict, whose latest encyclical Spe Salvi he has described as a tour de force, Fr Twomey underlined the significance of the crib at this time of year. Writing in the current issue of the Word magazine, of which he is editor-in-chief, he said the crib should be at the heart of Christian prayer in this season.
"We must find time at Christmas for prayer - and this includes contemplating the Christmas crib."
He also called for a more open and welcoming attitude towards those who might be lonely at Christmas time.
© 2007 The Irish Times
This article appears in the print edition of the Irish Times


Caught in the eye of the stormAs the motor industry runs short of cash, with increasing demands for subsidies or loans, is the industry actually finding its natural equilibrium?
Art expanding to fill the historic spaceVisual Arts: All in all, this year's 178th Annual Exhibition of the Royal Hibernian Academy is one for the history books.
€30m for Tommy Hilfiger store on Grafton StBy offering a yield of 5.25 per cent, vendor Marks & Spencer has gone a good way to addressing the main problem stalling sales on Grafton Street - low investment returns
Citroën's new Tourer steals the limelight for estate carsRoad Test: After years in the doldrums, estate cars are making a comeback, with the likes of Citroën's new C5 Tourer leading the way, says Michael McAleer, Motoring Editor
All the right ingredientsAgri Aware's new project teaches TY students how to source the best local produce and cook it up into healthy, nutritious meals