Where can I find the hymns, etc. written to express the beliefs your
writings have developed?
The hymns for which you search are available but sometimes you have to
look very hard to find them. Hymnals are important aids in most worship
services but they are also expensive, so they cannot be reproduced much more
than once or twice a century. My own church revised its hymnal in 1942 and
again in 1983. If all churches would move to big screens on which the words
of the hymns could be displayed, this deterrent to good music would be
removed.
The 1983 edition of my church's hymnal was chaired by one of our great
church musicians, Raymond F. Glover, who had experience as organist and
choirmaster in many churches (including St. Paul's in Richmond, Virginia),
as well as by being the Professor of both Church Music and Voice at one of
our principle seminaries. Ray is also a first rate church liturgist and
that talent aided him greatly in his quest to bring some exciting new music
to Episcopal pews. Nonetheless, that commission was surrounded by the
weight of traditional church music from medieval plainsong to 19th century
piety and 20th century social gospel themes. Because hymnbooks must be
broad in their appeal, there is also in our latest hymnal some of the music
of what came to be called the renewal movement.
I still believe that most hymnody has not yet embraced the theological
revolution that has occurred in the past 100 years. Very few of our hymns
reflect this shift in understanding God from "a being up there or out there"
to what Paul Tillich called "the ground of being." Very few have escaped
the "fall" mentality of "original sin" or sacrifice mentality of rescue
theology, all of which has been rendered inoperative in a post Darwinian
world. One of the reasons for this is that very few hymns have yet been
written that engage these contemporary themes.
I like the work of Fred Kaan in England, who was one of the most
prolific hymn writers of the last century. I look for his hymns in the
hymnals of every church I visit. None of them are in the Episcopal
hymnbooks yet. I also greatly enjoy, even treasure, the hymnal of the
United Church of Canada that is called Voices United as well as the official
hymnal of the United Church of Christ in America. Those two publications
have made the best effort to get beyond the "Atonement Theology" that
focuses on death, blood and sacrifice that plagues so many hymn books.
I hope this helps. I encourage you and all my readers who are so
inclined to examine the possibility that you might be one who can write the
hymns the Church needs both today and tomorrow.
John Shelby Spong
You must be logged in to post a comment.
Comments