Chant at Resurrection Parish

Chant at Resurrection Parish The Good and the True through the Beautiful. Listen to the Mystery of Faith.

“[Music] has the power to lead us back ... to the Creator of all harmony, creating a resonance within us which is like being in tune with the beauty and truth of God, with the reality which no human knowledge or philosophy can ever express.”
Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI

Find audio, video, music downloads, chant schedules, and updates for Resurrection Parish's early music group in Lansing, MI, directed by David Stattelman.

05/17/2026

Medieval modes and harmonies, monastic chants - Join us Sunday May 17, 2026 at 8pm for sung Compline (from the word for "completion"), the last liturgy of prayers of the day, as it has been prayed in monasteries since the 6th century •
At Church of the Resurrection, 1514 E Michigan Ave, Lansing, MI •
Under musical director David Stattelman, the Schola approaches chanting Compline from the medieval style and perspective, that is, a fluid style with strong emphasis on conveying the meaning of the text and often with the addition vocal drones. The result is an experience listeners describe as "ethereal" and "contemplative" •
What to expect: The church will be darkened. There will be print-outs at the South and East entrances you may use as a guide; this will have both the Latin and English. You may follow along with the guide or simply sit and listen. People of any faith are welcome to attend •

04/25/2026

Medieval modes and harmonies, monastic chants - Join us Sunday April 26, 2026 at 8pm for sung Compline (from the word for "completion"), the last liturgy of prayers of the day, as it has been prayed in monasteries since the 6th century •
At Church of the Resurrection, 1514 E Michigan Ave, Lansing, MI •
Under musical director David Stattelman, the Schola approaches chanting Compline from the medieval style and perspective, that is, a fluid style with strong emphasis on conveying the meaning of the text and often with the addition vocal drones. The result is an experience listeners describe as "ethereal" and "contemplative" •
What to expect: The church will be darkened. There will be print-outs at the South and East entrances you may use as a guide; this will have both the Latin and English. You may follow along with the guide or simply sit and listen. People of any faith are welcome to attend •
prayer

03/21/2026

Join us Sunday March 22 at 8pm for Compline (from the word for "completion"), the last liturgy of prayers of the day, has been prayed in monasteries since the 6th century •
(At Church of the Resurrection, 1514 E Michigan Ave, Lansing, MI) •
Under musical director David Stattelman, the Schola approaches chanting Compline from the medieval style and perspective, that is, a fluid style with strong emphasis on conveying the meaning of the text and often with the addition vocal drones. The result is an experience listeners describe as "ethereal" and "contemplative" •
What to expect: The church will be darkened. There will be print-outs at the South and East entrances you may use as a guide; this will have both the Latin and English. You may follow along with the guide or simply sit and listen. People of any faith are welcome to attend •

02/21/2026

Join us Sunday February 22 at 8pm for Compline (from the word for "completion"), the last liturgy of prayers of the day, has been prayed in monasteries since the 6th century. • (At Church of the Resurrection). • Under Resurrection's musical director David Stattelman, the Schola approaches chanting Compline from the medieval style and perspective, that is, a fluid style with strong emphasis on conveying the meaning of the text and often with the addition of vocal drones. The result is an experience listeners describe as "ethereal" and"contemplative". •. What to expect: The church will be darkened. There will be print-outs at the entrances you may use as a guide; this will have both the Latin and English. You may follow along with the guide or simply sit and listen. People of any faith are welcome to attend. •

A blessed Candlemas to you all, aka Feast of the Purification of Mary, Feast of the Presentation of the Lord, and anothe...
02/02/2026

A blessed Candlemas to you all, aka Feast of the Purification of Mary, Feast of the Presentation of the Lord, and another farewell to the Christmas season. A beautiful procession with the blessing of candles and Mass was held this morning.

The Gospel today includes the Nunc Dimittis - the Song of Simeon - spoken by Simeon upon seeing the infant Jesus at the temple. It is recited around the world every night at Compline, the evening prayer of the Liturgy of the Hours.

We prepare for Lent coming soon, with some carnival fun still, and opportunity for shriving (Confession), and planning, even easing into one’s Lenten sacrifices and fasting.

Some resources for Candlemas history, readings, folklore, and poetry:

https://www.fisheaters.com/customstimeafterepiphany3.html

https://www.hymnsandcarolsofchristmas.com/HTML/Candlemas.htm

https://www.cardinaljohnhenrynewman.com/candlemas-st-john-henry-newman/llgtiginge

01/22/2026

Join us Sunday January 25 at 8:00pm for Compline (from the word for "completion"), the last liturgy of prayers of the day, has been prayed in monasteries since the 6th century • (At Resurrection Parish, 1505 E Michigan Ave, Lansing, MI48912) • Under Resurrection's musical director David Stattelman, the Schola approaches chanting Compline from the medieval style and perspective, that is, a fluid style with strong emphasis on conveying the meaning of the text and often with the addition of vocal drones. The result is an experience listeners describe as "ethereal" and"contemplative". • What to expect: The church will be darkened. There will be print-outs at the entrances you may use as a guide; this will have both the Latin and English. You may follow along with the guide or simply sit and listen. People of any faith are welcome to attend.

Two Compines this month! We will see you tonight Jan 18th 8:30pm at St John Student Center in East Lansing…and next week...
01/18/2026

Two Compines this month!
We will see you tonight Jan 18th 8:30pm at St John Student Center in East Lansing…

and next week January 25th 8pm at Resurrection Parish, Lansing

12/30/2025

Join us New Years Eve - in gratitude, prayer, adoration, and petition.

Vigil Mass at 10:30pm
Eucharistic Adoration
& Confessions after
Benediction before midnight

Te Deum Recitation in thanksgiving for 2025
Veni Creator Spiritus in petition, to bless the New Year, sung after midnight

1514 E Michigan Ave, Lansing, MI 48912




Choral music, chants and hymns for Christmas Eve and Midnight Mass includes exquisite works of Renaissance polyphony, La...
12/24/2025

Choral music, chants and hymns for Christmas Eve and Midnight Mass includes exquisite works of Renaissance polyphony, Latin chants, and beloved hymns and carols.

Christmas Eve
December 24
12:00 Midnight Mass
Choral prelude at 11:30pm

Music:
Gaudete, Gaudete, Christus Est Natus
In the Bleak Midwinter - Holst
Tomorrow Shall Be My Dancing Day - Gardner
Puer Natus in Bethlehem - Sheidt
Alma Redemptoris Mater - Palestrina
Personet Hodie - Holst

Chant - Dominus Dixit Ad Me
Hymn - O Come All Ye Faithful
Neciens Mater - Mouton
Chant - In Splendoribus
Hymn - Silent Night
Ave Maria - Victoria
Hymn - Angels We Have Heard on High

Church of the Resurrection, 1505 E Michigan Ave, Lansing, MI 48912



12/17/2025

A WEE REMINDER: WINTER EMBER DAYS BEGIN TOMORROW: Wednesday, December 17, will see the start of the Winter Ember Days. They are tomorrow, Friday, and Saturday. But what are Ember Days? And why do they matter? Here’s a great explainer by Will Bloomfield, General Counsel of the Diocese of Lansing. Writes Will:

Ember Days are traditionally days of fasting and partial abstinence (no meat except at the principal meal). Each of the four Embertides include three days of fasting and partial abstinence – Ember Wednesday, Ember Friday (fasting and full abstinence), and Ember Saturday.

Ember Days occur quarterly around the beginnings of the four natural seasons, and are meant to focus us on God through His marvelous creation. The Ember Days should also remind us of our obligation to steward the earth.

So, when are these four Embertides? The four Embertides are in Spring (the week after Ash Wednesday), Summer (after Pentecost Sunday), in Fall (after the Triumph of the Holy Cross), and in Winter (in Advent after the feast of St. Lucy). The easy way to remember this is the rhyme: Lenty, Penty, Crucy, Lucy.

By the time of the US Bishops’ 1966 Pastoral Statement on Penance and Abstinence, which removed the obligation of fasting during the whole season of Lent, Catholics were already no longer obliged to fast and abstain during ember days or vigils (the day before a feast). Nevertheless, the Bishops suggested that the devout would continue to ‘find greater Christian joy’ in the Church’s liturgical feasts if the faithful continued to embrace these practices.

Now that we are more than 50 years from the removal of these obligations, and most Catholics have grown up knowing only two obligatory fast days (Ash Wednesday and Good Friday), many Catholics have found that it remains salutary to step back from the modern world’s comforts and voluntarily embrace Ember Days and other traditional days of fasting and abstinence, particularly Fridays.

Another reason for embracing Ember Days and other days of fasting is that the greats of the Catholic spiritual tradition routinely encourage fasting as a key to unlocking deeper prayer.
Saint John Vianney explained the connection this way:

"Unhappily, our hearts are not sufficiently pure and free from all earthly affections. If you take a very clean and very dry sponge, and soak it in water, it will be filled to overflowing; but if it is not dry and clean, it will take up nothing. In like manner, when the heart is not free and disengaged from the things of the earth, it is in vain that we steep it in prayer; it will absorb nothing."

• For more on Ember Days: https://www.fisheaters.com/emberdays.html

• Based upon an article first published during Lent 2022.

Address

Lansing, MI
48901-48980

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