Today’s hymn from Sing Praise is ‘Let us rejoice’ by Martin Leckebusch. John said that it was set in the book to the tune of ‘For all the saints’ but in my copy of the book sets it to a tune by Stanford – I wonder if we have different editions?
The overall
theme of the hymn seems to be patience and endurance in the strength of
God. The first verse speaks of peace and
calm found in God’s acceptance, the second of strength to face trials found in
his ‘fatherly embrace’, the third of trust in his glory and splendour, the fourth
of the faith that ‘God is at work through all the griefs we share’, and finally
of the love of God found deep in our hearts that prompts our praise. It would be a good one to sing on a
(non-silent!) retreat.
This weekend’s
song is “Holy, Holy, Holy is the Lord God Almighty” by Nathan Fellingham. It’s a setting of a standard liturgical text,
with some extra lines. The hymnwriter is young (born 1977 and the song was
copyrighted in 1995 when he was 18) and it’s refreshing to see young people’s
compositions being published alongside those of established writers. I was glad that John was playing it on the
piano as I couldn’t have sung this one by sight, which probably just reflects
that contemporary worship songs are informed more by the popular music of our
time than by classical forms.
The additional lines in this song are “Lift up his name with the sound of singing, lift up his name in all the earth, lift up your voice and give him glory, for he is worthy to be praised”. I have used the first line of this part as a title for the blog post, rather than the more generic “Holy, holy”. This is indeed a song to lift the heart.
Today’s hymn
is ‘Glory to you, O God’ by Howard Gaunt. It’s another of the hymns from the ‘saints’
section of the book. The suggested tune is that of the hymn ‘My song is love
unknown’. John made some changes to the
words and used a different tune. But these
comments are based on the words in Sing Praise.
The first
verse gives glory to God for the saints, using the traditional language of the
early Church of winning victory in the fight against the evils of fire and
sword. The second gives thanks for those saints who walked in humble paths,
speaking God’s word and act as shining lights to inform our own lives. The third verse is about ourselves, asking to
know God’s truth and walk his way as ‘saints on earth’.
These are
three very different concepts of sainthood.
The language of the first verse is not commonly used in most Western churches
today. Even British saints such as Alban and Thomas (Becket) who were martyred are
not usually spoken of as winning victory so much as showing courage in the face
of evil, and other martyrs such as Hugh Latimer, Nicholas Ridley and (on the
Catholic side) Margaret Clitherow are not usually called ‘saints’ even though
they showed equal courage and loyalty to their beliefs. The language of war and
victory does however still resonate with those in countries where persecution
is still a reality. The imagery of the
second verse is more commonly found in our British churches, where we remember ‘home
grown’ saints such as Cuthbert, Wilfrid and David whose ascetic lives are held
up as a model of discipleship. And the
concept of all God’s people, living as well as dead, as being saints, is a
popular one in our time.
This coming
weekend sees the start of the Kingdom Season (from now until Advent) with
choices of hymn to match. So today’s is “The
Lord is King” by Brian Hoare.
The first half
of each of the first three verses list the ways in which the Lord is King: that
he set the stars in space (i.e. is the creator), sent his Son to earth, and sent
his Spirit; thus, a Trinitarian structure, although usually in Christian
parlance the terms Lord and King refer specifically to Jesus Christ rather than
to the Trinity as a whole.
The second
part of each verse is an appropriate response: “Creator God, your kingdom
stands”, “O Saviour Christ, your kingdom comes” and “Spirit of truth, whose
kingdom grows”. The final verse
proclaims praise to the Lord and King from all created things.
In all, the
hymn is nicely crafted as a statement of faith, and might well be used in place
of a spoken Creed in the Communion service, but didn’t strike me as conveying
any original thought.
Today is
Michaelmas, the feast of Saint Michael.
Which is why I have chosen a hymn from the ‘Saints’ section of the
hymnbook: ‘Thanks be to God for his saints’ by Timothy Dudley-Smith. Mind you, Michael is no ‘ordinary’ saint, he’s
actually an Archangel, a created but eternal being. Best known for his appearance in the book of
Daniel as the protector of God’s people, he also gets a brief mention in the
books of Jude and Revelation, though no longer on the labels of a well known
clothes brand of Jewish origin.
The hymn, though,
or at least the first couple of lines, is more about the ‘ordinary’ saints, meaning
not merely those who were specially canonised by the church as martyrs for
their faith or allegedly responding to prayers addressed to them after their death,
but the whole company of Christians who have passed over into eternal
life. Whether or not they can actually
answer prayers (and that’s a contested bit of Catholic theology) it is
mainstream Christian faith that they are “one with us still in one body, one
great congregation”.
The other
verses aren’t really about the saints.
The second thanks God for his daily blessings including the death and
resurrection of Christ; the third, for our as yet unknown future in which Christ
will keep us company, and the last for his calling and defence, not just of ‘special’
saints but of all who follow him.
We will have
more opportunities to sing of the saints at the beginning of November.
Today’s hymn
from Sing Praise is “Lord Jesus Christ, invited guest and Saviour” by Michael
Perry. It’s another wedding hymn, which as John has pointed out doesn’t really
fit well with online morning prayer or a blog, but it’s in the book so we sing
it anyway.
Like most modern wedding hymns, the emphasis is on praying a blessing on the couple being married. Perhaps because families are often rather complex today, there is less emphasis than there once would have been on marriage as implying the conception and rearing of children, which is good news for those of us who have not been able to have them. Rather, the vision presented here of a Christian marriage is one of “caring and serving” (which may be for one’s own children as well as each other, or for others in a wider family or community), for a life of faithfulness and prayer, a continued commitment to follow Christ, and of knowing his peace.
The last of
the three verses acknowledges that no marriage is free of problems. Rather we
ask that Christ be “their delight in joy, their hope in sorrow, their true
friend in pleasure as in pain”. At the end is the almost obligatory reference
in any wedding hymn to the miracle of water becoming wine at the wedding in
Cana (is it just a happy coincidence that the composer of the tune had the
middle name Bacchus?)
Today’s hymn
is “The touching place” by John Bell and Graham Maule, also known by its first
line “Christ’s is the world in which we move”. It’s a sort of lament for the
many ways in which people suffer, and the Christian response to their need.
The first
verse sets the tone for the rest: the world and its people belong to Christ, so
it is his voice calling us to care, and (if we feel the task is too great) he
is the one who “meets us here”. The
remaining verses list the many forms of suffering that, with Christ, we may
feel called to address. As with many of John Bell’s lyrics, he uses some unconventional
and memorable phrases: “strange or bereaved or never employed”, “the women whom
men have defiled”, “the baby for whom there’s no breast”, “the lonely heart,
conscious of sin, which longs to be pure but fears to begin”. What all these people have in common – and between
them probably cover nearly everyone at some time in their life – is that we are
called to “feel for them”, to have empathy.
The chorus
is equally memorable in its wording, and using only a slight variant of the
tune of the verses: “To the lost Christ shows his face, to the unloved he gives
his embrace, to those who cry in pain or disgrace, Christ makes with his
friends a touching place”. “With his friends”
is important: we should both pray for Christ’s compassionate help for those in distress,
and do what we can for them in our circumstances.
Writing this
later in the day after seeing John’s use of the hymn in morning prayer, may I
express a bit of surprise at the brisk pace at which he took it. When we’ve sung this hymn in my own church,
the music director always directs a slow pace to match the emotional burden of
the words.
I’ve been on holiday for the last week without access to a computer, which is why there have been no posts this week – it’s too difficult to type much on a mobile phone. So here is a briefer commentary than usual on all this week’s hymns. I have been singing them all, as well as attending three very different worship services – communion in a parish church, Cathedral evensong, and harvest festival in a Baptist chapel. In all of them, music has played a key part, whether provided by a robed choir or a couple of guitarists – you can work out which is which.
Sunday 19 September
“Peace on earth to all your people”, a Scottish version of the canticle Gloria in Excelsis. See 12th September for my previous comments on this canticle. The present version departs from the standard text in a few places, such as in verse 2 where it has “receive our song of praise” rather than “receive our prayer”; I’m not sure that’s a sensible change as the original is really a prayer for mercy. And in verse 3, “God in heaven” rather than more specifically “Christ in heaven”.
Monday 20 September
“Creating God, we bring our songs of praise” by Jan Berry and sung to the well known (sometimes over-used) tune ‘Woodlands’. The first verse addressed to the ‘creating God’ celebrates life, work, skill and joy. The second to the ‘forgiving God’ expresses sorrow for our anger, strife and emptiness. The third to the ‘redeeming God’ refers to the ‘fragile hope’ that he will make all things new, which is an honest acknowledgement that it does take a good deal of faith to hold on to that hope. The last verse addressed to the ‘renewing God’ looks to a future of harmony, peace, justice, dignity and pride – all the things that are often lacking in our earthly societies. Overall this is a good summary of what the Christian life is about.
Tuesday 21 September
“For the music of creation” by Shirley Murray. The first verse suggests that music is a sort of metaphor for creation, as it requires creativity in us. God is described as the ‘world’s composer’ and we as the ‘echoes of his voice’. The second verse lists various types of instrument, and different types of music – ‘simple melodies’, ‘hymns of longing and belonging’, ‘carols from a cheerful throat’, lullabies and love-songs. The music we make doesn’t have to be ‘religious’ to please God. The last verse refers to movement in worship – ‘hands that move and dancing feet’ – for the idea still sometimes found in Western churches that we have to stand up straight and immobile when singing in church probably seems weird to many Christians around the world for whom the whole body is used in worship.
Wednesday 22 September
“Earth’s fragile beauties we possess” by Robert Willis. John provided his own alternative tune to this one. The theme is life as pilgrimage. The first verse looks at the ways we should move through this life leaving as little impact as possible on those ‘fragile beauties’. The second looks at ‘earth’s human longings’ in grief, loss, famine, plaque and sword, referring to Christ’s cross as well as the story of Exodus, the archetypal pilgrimage. The last verse reminds us that we possess not only the beauties of earth but God’s own image, any deliberate damage to which was borne by Christ on the cross. This is a hymn for our times as people are realising too late the irreversible damage we have already done to this fragile world.
Thursday 23 September
“We give God thanks for those we knew” by Michael Perry, a hymn about healing and wholeness. It reminds us that Jesus came to bring healing through his love, and still does, but that we too should “dedicate our skills and time” to address the suffering around us.
Friday 24 September
“Maker of all whose word is life” by Elizabeth Cosnett. It’s a wedding hymn, addressing the Trinity: the Father as God of truth and faithfulness, Jesus the Son who knew earthly happiness, and though unmarried himself brought joy to the wedding guests when he turned water into wine, and the Holy Spirit as guide and bringer of steadfastness. The last verse reminds us that we need God’s grace to help us keep our wedding vows.
Sunday 26 September
The final
song in this section, for the weekend of 25th/26th
September, was a setting of “Holy, holy holy Lord” by Geoff Weaver. There’s probably not much to say about this
short and familiar text, but John did
suggest it was an appropriate response to the Old Testament reading about the
dedication of Solomon’s Temple when the shekinah-glory of God filled the place.
Today’s hymn from Sing Praise is “Beauty for Brokenness” by Graham Kendrick. I’m not sure whether this song was written specifically for the development charity Tearfund, but it was published around the time of their 25th anniversary and they certainly adopted it as being a perfect description of their work and their theological stance.
Let’s look
at the chorus first, which to save the song being overly long is usually sung
after the second, fourth and fifth verses only. “God of the poor, friend of the
weak, give us compassion we pray”. That is Tearfund in a nutshell: supporting churches
around the world to respond to the needs of the poor and weak in their
communities, with the love of God and the compassion that can only really be
shown by those who live alongside them.
It goes on, “melt
our cold hearts, let tears fall like rain, come change our love from a spark to
a flame”. I admit to feeling ‘compassion fatigue’, the thought that all the
money, time and prayers I have given over the years to the work of Tearfund and
similar agencies is in vain, when there is still so much need, so much discrimination
and structural injustice in the world.
But the words and works of Jesus suggest that however little we achieve,
it is still recognised by God: “whatever you do for the least of these, you do
for me”.
The first of
the five verses starts with the vision of what development work can achieve: “Beauty
for brokenness, hope for despair”. It’s not just about the day-to-day
practicalities that follow (“bread for the children”) but about a message of the
hope of God’s kingdom that can transform lives. “Sunrise to sunset, your
kingdom increase”.
The second
verse reflects the reality that war is behind much suffering: “Refuge from
cruel wars, havens from fear, cities for sanctuary, freedoms to share, peace to
the killing fields, scorched earth to green”, but finishes with a specifically
religious vision, “Christ for the bitterness, his cross for their pain”.
The third
verse speaks of medical work and provision of training and trade opportunities
and land for farming, programmes that help local communities become
self-sufficient, and also the advocacy work that forms much of Tearfund’s success
(“voices to plead the cause of those who can’t speak”).
The fourth
verse speaks of the ecological emergency that has only become a mainstream
concern in the last few years, though the song was written in 1993. “Rest for
the ravaged earth, oceans and streams, plundered and poisoned, our future, our
dreams”. We pray “Lord, end this madness, carelessness, greed, make us content
with the things that we need”.
The final
verse turns clearly to Jesus who is the only one who can truly change the
world. “Lighten our darkness, breathe on this flame, until your justice burns
brightly again, until the nations learn of your ways, seek your salvation and
bring you their praise”. If verse 4 could have been written by Greta Thunberg,
verse 5 could have come from the mouth of Isaiah.
You might gather from this lengthy commentary that this is one of my favourite hymns, for the music as well as the words. It deserves the classic status it has won in the churches. If you wish to donate to the work of Tearfund, they are currently appealing for support for their work in Afghanistan and you can donate here.
Today’s hymn
from Sing Praise is ‘The heavens proclaim God’s glory’ by Martin Leckebusch. A setting
of Psalm 19, set in the book to a tune called ‘Stand up’, though John used the
tune ‘Morning Light’ better known to the words ‘Stand up, Stand up for Jesus’. The
three verses reflect the three parts of the psalm.
The first verse
covers probably one of the best known of all passages in the psalms, “The
heavens proclaim God’s glory, the skies sing out in praise”. The passage of day and night, the movement of
stars and planets, has always fascinated humankind and been seen as evidence of
a powerful creator. Contemporary understanding
of the immense (possibly infinite) size of the universe and the features
ancient people could not have imagined such as the ongoing formation of stars
and galaxies, black holes, and so forth, have not lessened that sense of awe.
The intellectual debate about whether the complexity or even existence of a
stable universe is random, or a necessary result of the conditions at its
beginning, or truly evidence of intelligent design, will probably never be
resolved, but for those who have faith, we can still praise God for all this.
The second
verse is about God’s laws, and the benefits to the individual of obeying them. This
move from the stars and planets to the moral law may seem illogical, but I
think it would have seemed logical to the author, for whom the planets were
obeying God’s instructions just as much as he exhorted people to do. The message
is, that if we go along with what God has determined to be the way for us to live,
we will find it the way of happiness. Just
as the planets have to make no effort to continue in the course that God (or
gravity) determines for them, so it should be effortless for us to live a good
life.
The last
part of the psalm then explains why this is not so. “Forgive my secret failures, the faults I do
not know; from wilful sins protect me, the ways I should not go”. The human tendency
is to err from God’s ways, even if we don’t always know when we are doing so. Like an asteroid that breaks free from its
orbit and heads towards the sun or another planet, we may up harming ourselves
and other heavenly bodies. We need God’s
help to put us back on the correct course.
This reflection is not, of course, meant to be good astronomy, or even good theology. But perhaps it might get us a bit closer to what the writer of the psalm had in mind.