Know a Priest Who’d Like to Come to the Liturgy Summit? Scholarship Available.

A Holy Week Gift for Priests!

A generous donor has enabled us to offer 10 $100 discounts to priests. Once the 10 discounted registration fees are gone, we will close this coupon. You must be a priest to receive this discount, and you must register for the entire conference, not just one day.

Ready to go to the Summit? Register now, and enter the coupon code Priest100 at checkout for the $100 discount.

Register here: https://catholicinstituteofsacredmusic.regfox.com/sacred-liturgy-summit

Sacred Liturgy Summit in the News

We’re gearing up for the July 1–4, 2025 Fons et Culmen Sacred Liturgy Summit here at St. Patrick’s Seminary, with CISM providing the fantastic chant and polyphony which will play an integral role in the Solemn Masses and Vespers that are part of the program.

Archbishop Cordileone speaks about the Summit in an article at the National Catholic Register saying:

Observers point to many serious problems: the decline in marriage and the impending demographic crisis; the parallel decline in young people accepting the call to priesthood and the religious life; ever growing family fragmentation; lingering fallout from revelations of clergy sexual abuse of decades ago; the scandal caused by prominent Catholics who stridently oppose foundational moral truths; lack of clarity in presenting the Church’s teachings on the sensitive issues of our time and the ensuing divisions that result from it; the rise of social media as an alternative magisterium, replacing parents and parish alike as the primary educators of children. And the list goes on.

These are all important. But if you ask me, the problem underlying them all is the loss of the sense of the sacred — and most especially in how Catholics worship.

What does this loss mean? We are seeing it played out before our very eyes: the failure to evangelize the next generation of young Catholics in our pews leading to a cascading decline in Catholic faith and practice, as witnessed by the decline in Mass attendance, marriages, baptisms and religious vocations. At least 40% of adults who say they were raised Catholic have left the Church, Pew Research reported in 2015, and 10 years later, the numbers are not getting better.

Clearly, too many of our next generation of Catholics are not meeting Jesus in the Eucharist. If they were, they would not abandon him to join other religions, or simply to be absorbed by the secular culture. In the oft-quoted line from Sacrosanctum Concilium, the fathers of Vatican II put the importance of the liturgy in our lives as Christians in a wonderfully succinct way:

“[T]he liturgy is the summit toward which the activity of the Church is directed; at the same time it is the font from which all her power flows.”

I sometimes wonder if we truly appreciate the overriding importance of this principle: it means that there is simply no more important issue in the Church, or in the world, than renewing this source and summit of faith in Jesus Christ. Do we really believe this?

We hope you’ll be able to join CISM at the Summit this summer!

2025 Summer Courses Announced! Application NOW OPEN.

We are delighted to announce the 3rd summer course session at the Catholic Institute of Sacred Music at St. Patrick’s Seminary in Menlo Park, CA.

We have an all-star faculty lined up to teach 9 courses, including 2 completely new courses and 2 new advanced chant seminar topics.

Faculty:

  • Prof. Christopher Berry
  • Dr. Jennifer Donelson-Nowicka
  • Dr. Joseph Dyer
  • Frank La Rocca
  • Fr. Joshua Neu
  • Dr. Charles Weaver

Courses:

  • Choral Institute
  • Composition Seminar
  • Organ Improvisation
  • Introduction to Gregorian Chant
  • Vocal Pedagogy – NEW
  • Organ Literature – NEW
  • Teaching Gregorian Chant to Children
  • Advanced Seminar in Chant: Old Roman Chant
  • Advanced Seminar in Gregorian Chant: Gregorian Modes and Hexachordal Solfège

Courses are held on the campus of St. Patrick’s Seminary in Menlo Park, California from July 7 to 25, immediately following the Fons et Culmen Sacred Liturgy Summit. Tuition is once again free for 2025 summer courses.

Learn more and apply by clicking here. 

Requiem for Ignatius Cardinal Kung Pin-Mei – Victoria for 6 with the Archbishop’s Schola

Join the Archbishop’s Schola, directed by Dr. Jennifer Donelson-Nowicka, as they sing a Solemn Pontifical Requiem for the repose of the soul of Ignatius Cardinal Kung Pin-Mei, bishop of Shanghai. Archbishop Salvatore J. Cordileone is the celebrant for the Mass, and the homily will be preached by Raymond Cardinal Burke.

Music for the Mass includes the Missa pro defunctis à 6 by Tomás Luís de Victoria. The Mass will be preceded by a performance of Stanzas for the Chinese Martyrs by Frank La Rocca.

Saturday, March 15th, 10:30 a.m.
Star of the Sea Church, San Francisco, California

An RSVP is helpful, but not required. The Mass is, of course, open to all.

Requiescat in pace, Dr. William Mahrt

Dr. William Mahrt delivers a plenary lecture at the Nov. 2023 CISM Conference dedicated to his life and work. More pictures of the conference are available here.

William Peter Mahrt (March 9, 1939–January 1, 2025)

With great sorrow, but with hope in the resurrection and confidence in God’s providence and mercy, we announce the passing of Dr. William P. Mahrt on January 1, 2025, the Octave Day of Christmas and Solemnity of Mary, Mother of God. Dr. Mahrt died peacefully, having received the sacraments of the Church and the apostolic pardon, and surrounded by faithful friends and students who sang and prayed the liturgical offices in which he had so many times directed them.

Born in 1939, Dr. Mahrt dedicated his life to the study and performance of the Catholic Church’s sacred music, leaving an indelible mark on the field of musicology, as well as on the hearts and souls of those who knew him. His insights into the characteristics of the various forms of Gregorian chant elucidated the nature of the chant as integral to the sacred liturgy, even explicating the nature of the sacred liturgy itself. His exposition of the nature of beauty and its embodiment in Catholic sacred music, liturgical gestures and symbols, and architecture has served as an important guide in the Church’s understanding of the purpose of artistic beauty in divine worship. His work with medieval and Renaissance polyphonic masters illuminated the performances and scholarship of many choirs and students.

Dr. Mahrt’s academic journey began at Gonzaga University, near his family’s wheat farm in rural eastern Washington (near Reardan), where he earned his B.A. in 1960. He went on to receive an M.A. from the University of Washington in 1963 with a thesis on the keyboard fugues of Schumann. Driven by an insatiable curiosity and a deep love for music, he continued his studies at Stanford University, where he completed his Ph.D. in 1969 with a dissertation entitled “The Missæ ad organum of Heinrich Isaac.” Throughout his illustrious career, Dr. Mahrt held prestigious teaching positions at Case Western Reserve University, the Eastman School of Music, and Stanford University, where he inspired countless students as an Associate Professor, teaching courses on medieval notation, the modes, medieval and Renaissance repertoire and analysis, and the music of Johannes Brahms. 

William Mahrt served as the President of the Church Music Association of America starting in 2005 after first joining the board in 1977. Under his editorship of the CMAA’s journal (2006–present) Sacred Music, the oldest continuously-published music journal in the United States, the publication expanded in length and breadth to serve as an important locus for the study and praxis of the Church’s music. The editorials he wrote for the journal evince a profound understanding of both the sacred liturgy and its music and were remarkable both for their integration of scholarship and Catholic theology, as well as for the wide range of topics covered. As president of the CMAA, Dr. Mahrt played an important role in the discussions of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops which led up to the 2007 publication of guidelines on music in the liturgy, Sing to the Lord. At the initiative of his friend and the CMAA’s then-director of publications, Jeffrey Tucker, a collection of his essays, The Musical Shape of the Liturgy, was published in 2012. 

Known for his expertise in Gregorian chant, medieval performance, and the works of composers such as Machaut, Dufay, Isaac, and Lassus, Dr. Mahrt’s scholarly contributions earned him numerous accolades, including the NEH’s Newberry Library Fellowship in 1976, the Albert Schweitzer Medal in 1991, and the Thomas Binkley Award in 2010. He served as President of the Northern California Chapter of the American Musicological and Chairman of the Bay Area chapter of the Latin Liturgy Association. He was a frequent presenter and attendee at the International Congress on Medieval Studies in Kalamazoo, the International Fota Conference, as well as the conferences of the Society for Catholic Liturgy, International Musicological Society (IMS), and the IMS’s study group Cantus Planus. In demand as a teacher, Dr. Mahrt was a regular faculty member and plenary speaker at the CMAA’s annual Sacred Music Colloquium, Cantores in Ecclesia’s annual Byrd Festival in Portland, Oregon, the Lumen Christi Institute of the University of Chicago, the Singers’ Retreat in San Anselmo, California, the Renaissance Polyphony Weekend in Dallas, Texas, the Sacred Music Institute of America, and the Catholic Institute of Sacred Music at St. Patrick’s Seminary in Menlo Park. 

In addition to his scholarly achievements, Dr. Mahrt was a founding member of the St. Ann Choir in 1963 and served as its director for most years since 1964. Under his leadership, the ensemble developed an extensive repertory of medieval and Renaissance motets and masses, singing each Sunday and principal feast day a Missa cantata in Latin, with Gregorian propers, two motets, and a mixture of Gregorian and Renaissance ordinaries at St. Thomas Aquinas Church in Palo Alto, California. Dr. Mahrt played an organ prelude and postlude for every Mass in which the organ was permitted. The choir, in response to an initiative by Dr. Mahrt several decades ago, also sings Sunday vespers and compline, with vespers usually at the St. Ann Chapel, the choir’s original home in Palo Alto. The ensemble is one of the few in the world which has a continuous tradition of singing the Church’s treasury of sacred music, all the while implementing the reforms to the sacred liturgy called for by the Second Vatican Council’s Sacrosanctum concilium and the 1967 Instruction Musicam Sacram. Dr. Mahrt was a graceful and compelling proponent for the place of Gregorian chant and sacred polyphony as the central music of the Roman rite, especially in the celebration of the modern Roman missal. He carefully collected and produced editions of important and interesting polyphonic works, teaching them to his choir with love and enthusiasm for the music in all its aspects. The choir continues singing from these editions, as well as the large choirbook-style score of the Gregorian chants from Annie Bank Editions, even inspiring the production by longtime choir member Susan Altstatt of beautiful illuminations of the choir’s patronal feast’s propers. The extensive library of the St. Ann Choir, complete with its elegantly accurate translations of many motet texts, was a core part of the early formation of the Choral Public Domain Library by one of Dr. Mahrt’s students at Stanford, Rafael Ornes. Many of Dr. Mahrt’s students from Stanford joined his ensemble to augment their experience of the music, in its proper liturgical context, about which they were writing dissertations and theses. Singers flocked from all backgrounds to sing with him in this unique ensemble, and they are the core of those who attended Dr. Mahrt’s bedside until his hour of death. The friendships formed in the choir by Dr. Mahrt served as an anchor in his life and the lives of so many others. His leadership of the St. Ann Choir and the Stanford Early Music Singers was a testament to his unwavering commitment to sacred music, the true and deep bond between the highest levels of scholarship and praxis, and a fervent love for his Catholic faith. 

To celebrate his life and legacy, a conference entitled “The Musical Shape of the Liturgy: Celebrating the Life and Work of William P. Mahrt” was held in November of 2023, marking the 150th volume of Sacred Music and honoring the establishment of a new chair in sacred music at St. Patrick’s Seminary in Menlo Park under the leadership of Dr. Jennifer Donelson-Nowicka. Scholars, musicians, and friends from around the country gathered to fête Dr. Mahrt’s remarkable accomplishments and work.

Dr. William Mahrt’s contributions to the field of musicology and his passionate dedication to sacred music will be remembered and cherished by his family, friends, students, colleagues, and the countless lives he touched through his work. His legacy will continue to inspire and guide future generations in the pursuit of beauty and excellence in sacred music. 

More than just a scholar and a musician, Bill—as he liked to be called—was a gentleman, a colleague, and a dear friend. Highly respected by his students, singers, and all who knew him, he was a very modest man and always remained a humble worker in the vineyard of the Lord. After a year of several health problems, Bill suffered a stroke while in the hospital receiving care for other matters. He was preceded in death by his mother, Evelyn, his father, Peter, and his sister Kathryn. He is survived by his sister Susan Perkins, brothers-in-law Tom Brannon and Norman Smith, nieces and nephews, and their children and grandchildren.

Bill, you have been a shining light for so many of us, and you shall never be forgotten. Requiescas in pace

NON NOBIS DOMINE SED NOMINI TVO DA GLORIAM

Funeral arrangements are being handled by Duggan’s Funeral Service. Those wishing to send flowers should contact Duggan’s. The wake will take place at St. Thomas Aquinas Church in Palo Alto, California (751 Waverley St.) from 5 p.m. to 8 p.m. on Thursday, January 9, 2025. All are invited to come at any time during the wake. Vespers will be sung at 6 p.m., a rosary will be prayed at 7 p.m., and compline will be sung at 7:30 p.m. The funeral is at noon on Friday, January 10, 2025 at Mission Dolores in San Francisco, California (3321 16th St.). Parking is available in the school lot, with an entrance on Church St. A reception will follow the funeral. Burial arrangements are TBA. 

Anyone who would like to sing for the funeral is invited to do so. Required sign-up is available here. A required rehearsal will be 9 a.m. to 11 a.m. in the basilica church at Mission Dolores. 

Priests who would like to assist at the Mass in coro must bring a cassock + surplice, with biretta if they have one. If they wish to receive communion, they must also bring a black stole. Those assisting in coro need to be at Mission Dolores and ready (vested)rat 11:40 a.m. on Friday, January 10th, 2025. Any priest or deacon in a liturgical role (in coro or at the altar) must send a letter of good standing to the chancery of the Archdiocese of San Francisco: vicarforclergy@sfarch.org. More information is available here: https://sfarchdiocese.org/visiting-clergy/.