7. The Historical Use of Devotional Hymns at Mass
Although the Church defines a liturgical hymn as a text belonging to the sacred rites themselves, the lived tradition of the Roman Rite reveals a broader musical practice. For centuries, Catholic parishes have incorporated devotional hymns into the celebration of Mass, not as liturgical texts, but as expressions of the Church’s devotional life that support the faithful’s participation. This practice developed especially from the 17th century onward and became a defining feature of parish life across the English-speaking Catholic world.
A. Why Devotional Hymns Were Used at Mass
The Church has always recognized the value of approved Catholic devotions such as Marian devotion, the Sacred Heart, the angels, St. Joseph, the saints, and Eucharistic adoration. Hymns expressing these devotions were permitted at Mass when they were doctrinally sound, expressed Catholic faith clearly, supported the people’s prayer, and harmonized with the liturgical season or feast. These hymns were not liturgical texts, but they were authentically Catholic and served as a bridge between the devotional life of the faithful and the liturgical action.
B. A Common Practice Across Catholic Countries
This was not a local or isolated custom. Hymnologists and researchers consistently report that the same patterns were found in the United States, England, Ireland, and Canada. In all these regions, devotional hymnody formed a shared Catholic culture. Parishioners learned the liturgical year, the saints, and the mysteries of the faith through the hymns they sang.
C. Pre-Mass Devotional Hymns: A Universal Parish Tradition
One of the most widespread expressions of Catholic devotional hymnody was the singing of devotional hymns before Mass. This musical prelude was not part of the liturgy itself, but it served an important pastoral and catechetical purpose: it prepared the faithful spiritually and connected them to the rhythm of the liturgical year.
This custom was practiced across the Catholic world, and your own parish, St. Mary’s in Akron, Ohio, embodied it beautifully. Before Mass, the choir regularly sang older Marian hymns from before the 1960s, hymns to the Guardian Angels, hymns to St. Joseph, and hymns to saints whose feasts were approaching. These hymns were intentionally chosen to announce upcoming feasts, honor the saint or mystery of the approaching day, foster recollection and devotion, and prepare the congregation for the sacred mysteries. This was not merely a musical prelude; it was catechesis through hymnody, forming the devotional imagination of the parish and strengthening Catholic identity.
Researchers and hymnologists consistently report that this same pattern was found throughout English-speaking Catholicism. St. Mary’s was participating in a shared, trans-Atlantic Catholic culture, where devotional hymnody supported the liturgical life of the parish without being part of the liturgical texts themselves.
D. Examples of Devotional Hymns Historically Used at Mass
- Sacred Heart hymns (“O Sacred Heart, O Love Divine”)
- Marian hymns (“Mother Dear, O Pray for Me”)
- Eucharistic devotional hymns (“Veni Jesu, Amor Mi”)
- Hymns to the angels (“Beautiful Angel from Heaven So Bright”)
- Hymns to the saints (“Dear Guardian of Mary”)
- Mission and parish hymns (“O Holy Name of Majesty and Power,” hymn of the Holy Name Society)
- Hymns from religious orders — especially those whose sisters staffed Catholic schools and shaped parish devotional life:
- Sisters of Notre Dame
- Sisters of St. Joseph
- Sisters of Mercy
These communities produced some of the most beloved devotional hymns sung in American parishes, and their influence was especially strong in places like St. Mary’s in Akron, Ohio, where their hymnody formed generations of Catholic children and shaped the parish’s devotional imagination.
E. The Key Principle
Devotional hymns may be used at Mass when they are doctrinally Catholic, express the Church’s faith, and support the people’s participation, even though they are not liturgical hymns by definition. This historical reality helps parish musicians today understand the full landscape of Catholic hymnody: liturgical hymns, devotional hymns used in liturgical contexts, and non-Catholic hymns.
F. Discernment of Parish Musical Traditions
Every parish carries a musical story — hymns that have been sung for generations, melodies that shaped childhood faith, and devotional songs that became part of the parish’s spiritual “family history.” These traditions deserve genuine respect. They often reflect the devotion of the people, the influence of teaching sisters, and the lived Catholicism that formed so many of us.
At the same time, the Church invites us to look at these traditions with loving discernment. Not every hymn that is familiar is necessarily suitable for Mass, and not every cherished song expresses the fullness of Catholic faith. Discernment does not mean rejecting our past; it means honoring what is good and gently refining what needs clarity.
When evaluating parish musical traditions, we look for hymns that express Catholic teaching clearly and beautifully, draw the faithful toward prayer rather than sentimentality, reflect the mysteries of the liturgical year, strengthen Catholic identity, and help the whole community pray with one heart.
This kind of discernment allows a parish to treasure its musical heritage while ensuring that everything sung at Mass truly serves the sacred liturgy. In this way, tradition and liturgical integrity work together — preserving what has nourished the faithful and passing on what is best to the next generation.