Vol. 27, No. 2 |
Summer (July-Sept) 2003 |
Gather into One: Praying and Singing Globally
by C. Michael Hawn
Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans, 2003
278 pages, paperback.
Reviewed by Mary Louise Bringle
What in the world is happening to
congregational song? Author and musicologist Michael Hawn seeks a
literal answer to this question, conducting an excursion into
global hymnody that ranges from Argentina to Zimbabwe, by way of
South Africa, Scotland, and Taiwan. Like world travel itself,
Hawn's book is most gratifying when taken at a leisurely pace. Too
rapid a reading, whipping through chapters, countries, and musical
contexts on the order of "if it's Tuesday, this must be
Belgium" defeats the purpose of the exploration. Hawn's
intent is not faddish ethno-tourism, but deep and lasting
intercultural exchange.
Since the late 1970s, new editions of
denominational hymnals have made a point of incorporating global
hymnody, including songs like "Siyahamba" and
"Canto de Esperanza." Some of us who plan worship
may bravely use one or two such works a year, in a service for
Pentecost or World Communion Sunday, knowing that we will later
receive criticism from our congregations for
"unpronounceable" words or unaccustomed rhythms and
harmonies. Hawn's book urges us to be far more venturesome -- for
profoundly incarnational, eucharistic, liberatory, and
eschatological reasons.
First, Hawn claims, singing global hymns is
incarnational. God's unique hallowing of human life through the
person of Jesus Christ occurred at a particular moment in history
within a particular culture. We show our own respect for such
particularities when we recognize the differently embodied musical
idioms that are indigenous to various cultures around the
globe.
Second, singing global hymns is eucharistic.
Hawn's title, in fact, comes from the early third century
eucharistic liturgy of Hippolytus. Invoking the Holy Spirit to
bless the elements of bread and wine, the ancient prayer
continues: "Gather into one all those who share these sacred
mysteries." If we are genuine when we liturgically express
our desire "to join . . . our voices . . . with all the
faithful of every time and place" in singing the glory of
God's name, we should at least be willing to learn one another's
actual songs!
Third, singing global hymns is liberatory. The
celebration of diverse musical cultures gives a voice to
previously voiceless peoples, and visibility to the previously
invisible. Among members of minority groups, the act of singing
together has long served to build community and sustain hope in
the face of oppression. Within majority cultures, too, Hawn
insists that the fashioning of worship constitutes a political
act. If we are not actively including the songs and prayers
of people from around the globe, then we are effectively excluding
them from our consciousness, whether by our ignorance, arrogance,
or apathy.
Finally, singing global hymns is
eschatological. Even as we yearn for the day when there will be no
"aliens or strangers" but all people will be welcomed
around the banquet table of the Lamb, so we glean a foretaste of
that day when we join in singing together -- as Africans, Asians,
Latin Americans, and Euro-Americans; not just with harps,
trumpets, and pipe organs, but also with marimbas, bamboo flutes,
and drums.
Fortunately, Hawn does not simply leave us
with the arguments for why we should learn the hymns of
other peoples and cultures. He also offers specific suggestions
for how we can go about doing so. Each of his five chapters
is devoted to a particular musical culture and mentor -- Pablo
Sosa in Argentina, I-to Loh in Taiwan, David Dargie in South
Africa, Patrick Matsikenyiri in Zimbabwe, and John Bell in the
Iona Community of Scotland. From these cultures and mentors, Hawn
provides printed examples of hymn texts and tunes, with notes on
their social and political background and recommendations for
appropriate "performance practice." To make the most of
these chapters, it helps to be able to read music, to know
something about rhythms and intervals and chord progressions.
(Much of the book, indeed, is geared for professional
musicologists -- but Hawn gives gracious leave for more
"amateur" readers to skip lightly over such materials.)
Of even greater help would be to participate in a live hymn
festival devoted to global song: Hawn himself conducted memorable
sessions at the Hymn Society annual conferences in Winston Salem,
NC, in 2002, and in Halifax, Nova Scotia, in 2003. The visual
experience of reading about singing, after all, stands as a pale
substitute for the full-body experience of chanting, swaying,
clapping, and dancing in the aisles!
Hawn would, of course, be the first to agree.
He speaks frequently of the difficulties in translating oral
musical traditions into written forms. He advocates the role of an
"enlivener" to lead congregations, personally and
persistently, beyond our zones of comfort into embodied singing
and praying for the world. Ultimately, Hawn concludes, the point
of engaging in multicultural musical expressions "is not to
'feel good' but to feel again -- feel a sense of the holy and an
experience of community" which will move us, with all our
sisters and brothers around the globe, to shout in renewed,
"polyrhythmic" enthusiasm: Alleluia! and Amen!
- Mary Louise Bringle
Reviewer Mary
Louise Bringle, professor of philosophy and religion and chair
of the Humanities Division at Brevard College in Brevard, NC, is
the winner of numerous international hymnwriting competitions. In
2002, she was recognized by The Hymn Society as "the emerging
hymn text writer of the U.S. and Canada." Her article, "Songs
as Yet Unsung: Why the Church Needs New Hymns," was
published in the Spring, 2003 issue of EEWC Update.
© 2003
Evangelical and Ecumenical Women's Caucus
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