Friday, March 22, 2024

Music for Sunday of the Passion / Palm Sunday, Year B: March 24, 2024



GATHERING HYMN All Glory, Laud, and Honor (Valet will ich dir geben) ELW 344
Bishop Theodulph of Orleans is credited with writing this hymn some time in the 8th century. The story goes that Charlemagne had brought him to France and installed him as Bishop of Orleans. After Charlemagne's death, Theodulph was accused of traitorous acts against the new king, Louis the Pious. This, naturally, landed Theodulph in jail.
The story continues that on Palm Sunday, Louis was on his way to church when he heard Theodulph singing from his cell. Theodulph's hymn, which he wrote, so moved the king that he freed Theodulph from prison, restored his bishopric, and declared that the hymn, "All Glory, Laud, and Honor" should always be sung during Palm Sunday processions.
It's just a story though, however nice. There is no evidence that Louis was in the same city where Theodulph was imprisoned, and no historical evidence that Theodulph's position was ever restored. In fact, it's likely he died in jail.

It's a great hymn for Palm Sunday, but there is no rule that it always be sung for the Palm Sunday procession. Even at St. Mark's we have occasionally used "Fling Wide the Door."

HYMN OF THE DAY There in God's Garden (Shades Mountain) ELW 342

MUSICAL OFFERING My Dying Lord David Lantz III
The text of this anthem is a suitable poem to follow the passion reading. Jesus is compared to a dying lamb, a rose, and the rain.

COMMUNION HYMN My Song Is Love Unknown (Love Unknown) ELW 343

SENDING HYMN Go to Dark Gethsemane (Gethsemane) ELW 347

 CLOSING VOLUNTARY All Glory, Laud, and Honor setting, Kenneth T. Kosche

Friday, March 15, 2024

Music for the Fifth Sunday in Lent, Year B: March 17, 2024



OPENING VOLUNTARY Lift High the Cross arr. Sondra K. Tucker
In today's gospel reading, Jesus tells us, "The time has come for the Son of Man to be glorified." This hymn bids us to look forward to Good Friday where, on the cross, Jesus will wear a crown of thorns and be lifted up. Jesus dies on the cross and we receive new life.

Tucker's arrangement of this well-known hymn is bold, but no bolder than the hymn itself:
So shall our song of triumph ever be:
praise to the Crucified for victory!

GATHERING HYMN Now the Green Blade Rises (Noël nouvelet) ELW 379
Jesus tells us the seed that dies is the one that will bear fruit - and this is a theme well will hear in today's music many times.
Worshipers might notice that this hymn falls under the "Easter" heading in ELW, but it is equally at home with the readings for today's lectionary.
The tune goes back to at least the 15th century and was originally the tune for a French Christmas carol - hence the tune name, Noël nouvelet.

HYMN OF THE DAY Seed That in Earth Is Dying (Såkorn som dør i jorden)
ELW 330
You've heard me say the assembly is the most important choir in the church. Today's accompaniment of the hymn doesn't come from the hymnal, but from an arrangement for choir by Bradley Ellingboe.
Don't worry. The Festival Choir will keep you on track and you will know when to sing!


MUSICAL OFFERING
Rich in Promise Mark Sedio
Susan Palo Cherwien wrote this text specifically for the Fifth Sunday of Lent in Year B (today). It's no wonder then, that her poetic text seems to paraphrase Jesus.

Jesus: . . .unless a grain of wheat fall into the earth and dies, it remains just a single grain; but if it dies, it bears much fruit.

Susan Palo Cherwien: Behold, God does a new thing, Through death God brings new life.

Combined with Mark Sedio's gentle music, this musical offering provides a suitable meditation on the gospel reading for today. It finishes with a metaphor for us as the body of Christ: Letting go of what has been, We embody God's great promise: Behold, God does a new thing, Through death God brings new life.

COMMUNION HYMNS
As the Sun with Longer Journey (Nagel) ELW 329
As the Winter Days Grow Longer (Suo Gân) ACS 924
Paired with a tune whose name means "lullaby" in Welsh, this hymn by Mary Louise Bringle is full of sensory imagery. Lengthening days in springtime reminds us of the light of Christ. A vine with sweet-smelling blossoms lifts our spirits as we pray. As thirsty pilgrims, we ask for living water and God's guidance on our journey toward Easter. The melody goes higher in the third line of each stanza, enhancing the feelings of yearning, seeking, and wandering we experience during Lent. The return of the original melody in the last line mirrors God's enduring faithfulness to us. (from Sundays and Seasons)

SENDING HYMN A Lamb Goes Uncomplaining Forth (An Wasseflüssen Babylon) ELW 340

El Greco - Christ Carrying the Cross, 1580

There are beautiful things on the internet.

As Covid was gripping the land, I became interested in this hymn from Paul Gerhardt (1607-1676), Germany's most famous hymnwriter. (Yes, he's even better known than our beloved Martin Luther!) During research, I found Bálint Karosi's Hymn of the Day series. It includes a treatment of this hymn - and I highly commend it as a meditation/devotion during Holy Week.

If features the crystal clear voice of Addy Sterrett, Karosi's brilliant improvisations, and the marvelous Richards, Fowkes and Co. organ at St. John's Lutheran Church in Stamfort, CT.

After watching and listening about a hundred times, I knew this was a hymn we'd be singing at St. Mark's and slowly introduced it into our repertoire in 2022.


Taking up a page and a half, long verses, and some pretty emotional language, this hymn is a lot of work - but it's well worth the effort.  Sort of like Lent.

CLOSING VOLUNTARY Prelude and Chorale on "Christ, the Life of All the Living" Chorale, Donald Busarow
See the text and tune at ELW 339.

Sources:
The Hymnal Companion to Evangelical Lutheran Worship (Augsburg Fortress)

O Blessed Spring, Hymns of Susan Palo Cherwien (Augsburg Fortress)

By El Greco - Web Gallery of Art:   Image  Info about artwork, Public Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=594530












Friday, March 8, 2024

Music for the Fourth Sunday in Lent, Year B: March 10, 2024



OPENING VOLUNTARY Amazing Grace, How Sweet the Sound
Setting, Robert A. Hobby
The organ's oboe stop opens quietly. The drone of an open fifth under a lightly ornamented melody sounds like a distant bag piper who moves toward us. As they pass the village church, the organist picks up the theme and lends a dramatic crescendo. The piper continues on their way, and we stand watching and listening as they fade from our sight and our hearing.  

GATHERING HYMN O Christ, Our Hope (Lobt Gott, ihr Christen) ELW 604
The original version of this hymn dates to the seventh or eighth century where it was sung for Ascension. Evangelical Lutheran Worship classifies it under "Confession and Forgiveness," so it's easy to see why we might sing it during Lent.
The first stanza hails Christ as the Lord of creation and the redeemer. The second stanza goes on to tell us that Jesus died willingly. Stanza three tells of Christ being raised and being seated at God's right hand - hence the Ascension theme of the original hymn. The fourth stanza comes around to tell us, having been purified by mercy, we can approach Christ's throne. Stanza five is doxological and moves us to look forward to Ascension.

HYMN OF THE DAY Amazing Grace, How Sweet the Sound (New Britain) ELW 779

MUSICAL OFFERING God So Loved the World John Stainer
The English composer, John Stainer (1840-1901), wrote The Crucifixion in 1887. There was a time when this oratorio was performed by church choirs regularly - I have found it in the choral library of every church I have ever served. It is rarely performed in its entirety today, but the central motet, God So Loved the World, is beloved by church choirs. Its structure is mostly chordal, but there is enough polyphony to keep it interesting and to move the piece forward.
The text is pulled directly from today's gospel reading.

COMMUNION HYMN God So Loved the World (Rockingham Old) ELW 323

SENDING HYMN What Wondrous Love Is This ELW 666

CLOSING VOLUNTARY O Lord, We Praise You  setting, Kenneth T. Kosche



Friday, March 1, 2024

Music for the Third Sunday in Lent, Year B: March 3, 2024



OPENING VOLUNTARY Jesus, Lover of My Soul (Aberystwyth) Gordon Young

This hymn text by Charles Wesley doesn't appear in Evangelical Lutheran Worship, but the tune is there with the Ash Wednesday text Savior, When in Dust to You. Both texts are suitable for worship during Lent. It's worth noting that Charles included Jesus, Lover of My Soul under a heading titled "In Temptation."

Charles was the younger brother of John Wesley who is credited as the founder of the Methodist movement. In 1780, John compiled "A Collection of Hymns for the People Called Methodists." Jesus, Lover of My Soul was not included because John Wesley felt the "lover" reference would be overly intimate for many people - and the intimate language doesn't end there! Since Charles wrote over 6,500 hymns, it's not surprising his brother would have to set more than a few aside. (Charles has 10 entries in ELW - and they are all pretty popular.

Our Prayer of the Day says "Keep us steadfast in your grace, and teach us the wisdom that comes only through Jesus Christ. . ." In his hymn, Charles confirms "Plenteous grace in thee (Jesus) is found, grace to cover all my sin . . ."

The texts of the first and third stanzas:
Jesus, lover of my soul,
let me to thy bosom fly, 
while the nearer waters roll,
while the tempest still is high;
hide me, O my Savior, hide,
till the storm of life is past; 
safe into the haven guide,
O receive my soul at last!

Plenteous grace with thee is found,
grace to cover all my sin;
let the healing streams abound;
make and keep me pure within.
Thou of life the fountain art;
freely let me take of thee;
spring thou up within my heart,
rise to all eternity.

Gordon Young's arrangement comes in five sections, starting with a gentle intimacy and ending with a majestic fortissimo (loud!). Young (1919-1998) was a prolific composer of organ and choral music for use in the church.

GATHERING HYMN Built on a Rock (Kirken den er et gammelt hus) ELW 652
Church bells have long been used to call the faithful to worship, and if to worship, then also to observance of the sacraments. ELW's version is shorter than the original nine stanzas (which the author later revised to seven). One of the missing stanzas highlights the role of the sacraments in Lutheran worship and also lifts up the importance of preaching:

Here stands the font before our eyes
telling how God did receive us;
Th' altar recalls God's sacrifice
and what his table does give us;
Here sounds the word that doth proclaim
Christ yesterday, today the same
Yea, and for aye our Redeemer.

It's too bad this stanza is missing from our version. It would have made a great center!
Church bells at one of the Spanish missions near San Diego, California
At St. Mark's we have a courtyard bell that rings during the Lord's Prayer. Read more about this St. Mark's tradition at https://smljax.blogspot.com/2019/03/every-sunday-bell-rings-but-why.html

HYMN OF THE DAY Christ Is the Life (Coe Fen) ACS 927
Crafted in 1989, Christ Is the Life is one of the earlier texts by prolific hymnwriter Susan Palo Cherwien (1953-2021). She was reading Dietrich Bonhoeffer's The Cost of Discipleship and was affected by Bonhoeffer's statement that "when Christ calls a person, he bids that person to come and die." Also drawing from Romans 6:3-9 and 14:8, the text embodies the essential form of the spiritual journey from life, to letting go, to transformation, to new life.   (From Sundays and Seasons)

MUSICAL OFFERING Lord, Who Throughout These Forty Days Linda Cable Shute

COMMUNION HYMN When I Survey the Wondrous Cross (Hamburg) ELW 803

Isaac Watts (1674-1748), the "Godfather of English hymnody" has 10 entries in ELW, the same as Charles Wesley. He based this text on Galatians 6:14: May I never boast of anything except the cross of our Lord Jesus Christ, by which the world has been crucified to me, and I to the world. (NRSV)

ELW, and many other hymnals, pair this text with the unassuming, only five notes, hymn tune Hamburg. Coupled with a staid rhythm, worshipers can focus on the text, sometimes described as "the finest hymn in the English language."

SENDING HYMN Lord Christ, When First You Came to Earth (Mit Freuden zart) ELW 727

CLOSING VOLUNTARY Earth and All Stars
setting, Michael Burkhardt
Sometimes it hard to choose the closing voluntary for a service. This text came to mind from after I read the opening line of today's psalm: The heavens declare the glory of God, and the sky proclaims its maker's handiwork.


Sources:
Hymnal Companion: Evangelical Lutheran Worship: Paul Westermeyer, editor. Pub. Augsburg Fortress
Hymn Notes for Church Bulletins, Austin Lovelace. Pub. GIA Publications
Sundays and Seasons
Wikipedia (including the portraits of Wesley and Watts)





 

Music for the Fifth Sunday of Easter, Year B: April 28, 2024

OPENING VOLUNTARY Ubi caritas et amor  setting, Gerald Near It is the Holy Spirit's work to gather us together as God's people in a ...