Vol. 27, No. 1 |
Spring (April-June) 2003 |
Songs as Yet Unsung: Why the
Church Needs New Hymns
by Mary Louise Bringle
My vocation as a Christian feminist hymnwriter
began accidentally--and perhaps even a bit irreverently. Never let
it be said that God lacks a sense of humor.
For many years as a professor of Religious
Studies at St. Andrews Presbyterian College in Laurinburg, NC, I
taught a course in early church history. What a task it was to
make ancient doctrinal debates accessible to modern-day students!
The various positions leading up to the final christological
formulation of the Council of Chalcedon always presented a special
challenge.
Then, one day I hit upon an idea. I recalled a
passing remark that matristic/patristic theologian Roberta Bondi
had made during a graduate school lecture at Emory University.
"If the heretics had had their own hymns," she mused,
"what would they have sounded like?"
Hymns for heretics: now there was a
pedagogical inspiration! Calling upon my unfortunate fondness for
doggerel verse (my father used to read me to sleep with Ogden Nash
poems instead of bedtime stories), I decided to craft a few such
unorthodox texts.
Lest anyone take offense, I hasten to add that
I penned these lyrics toward the greater good (I hoped) of helping
students to learn the intricacies of orthodox Christian doctrine.
Besides which, as the story unfolds, God ends up getting the last
laugh on me.
"Hymns for heretics"
The first of my hymns for heretics was
"Hark, Docetic Christians Sing!" Docetism is the early
Gnostic claim that Jesus Christ merely seemed (Greek verb, dokeo)
to be human. In other words, He did not really suffer in the
flesh, because such suffering would have been an affront to His
divine majesty. Some docetic teachers even denied the reality of
the crucifixion, claiming that the Christ flew away into heaven at
the critical moment, leaving Simon of Cyrene to die in Jesus'
stead.
One line from Charles Wesley's great Christmas
hymn ("Hark! the Herald Angels Sing") had long seemed to
me to flirt with docetic implications, if it were taken out of the
overall context of celebrating Jesus' fully human birth and
incarnation. The docetist's mock-carol exploited this
implication:
Hark, docetic Christians sing:
only glory suits a king!
Loath to mount a cross to die,
look: He hovers in the sky!
Veiled in flesh, the Godhead see,
feigning full humanity.
Hark, docetic Christians sing:
only glory suits a king!
A few centuries after the docetists, a
different theological movement continued to raise questions about
Jesus' human nature. The Apollinarians, defeated at the Council of
Constantinople in 381 CE, posited that perhaps Jesus was only
two-thirds human--as suggested in the following text (singable to
AURELIA, Samuel Wesley's great tune most often associated with
"The Church's One Foundation"):
Apollinaris teaches
of Christ the Living Whole,
akin to human beings,
with body, mind, and soul.
Yet, though He seems so like us,
one question yet remains:
Can Christ be fully human
with Logos for His brains?
Admittedly, the poetry of this heretical hymn
leaves as much to be desired as the theology. However, if my
students are any indication, the problem of the Apollinarian
position sounds through it both clearly and memorably!
Perhaps a little too memorably, in fact. Here
we come to the part of the story where God begins getting the last
laugh. A few years ago, a former student contacted me with the
news that he was going to get married. With that news came an
unusual request: the student planned to compose a hymn in honor of
his bride, to be sung at their wedding, and he wanted me to write
the text for it! Since I did not think I had ever written a hymn
before, the request initially struck me as odd. But then I
recalled that this student had taken church history with me . .
.
A New Calling
"God moves in a mysterious way," as
that wonderful eighteenth century hymn by William Cowper
proclaims. From such whimsical beginnings, I found myself drawn
into an unexpected vocation as a writer of contemporary hymn
texts. Nowadays as I go about plying this craft, talking to sundry
church groups about why anyone would expend time and energy on
such a task when the world already seems to have hymns aplenty, I
remind people that the Psalmist proclaims: "Sing to the Lord
a new song," and not "Sing to God one of those
twenty good 'old standards' that everybody already
knows!"
As God's people, we are called to sing new
songs for some very important theological reasons. Foremost among
them is the fact that the God proclaimed by Christians, Jews, and
Muslims alike is perennially "doing a new thing." Thus,
to keep pace with the gifts and challenges that are constantly
opening up around us, we need fresh imagery--and fresh music to
make that imagery come to life. A few illustrations of such new
opportunities follow: opportunities related to women's
experiences, to interfaith conversations, and to new political and
pastoral situations confronting the life of faith.
The importance of inclusiveness
First, while I am no longer personally
concerned to give a voice (even tongue in cheek) to heretical
movements from Christian history, the church itself seems
increasingly and rightfully concerned to lift in song the
experiences of other groups who have not yet been adequately
represented within the mainstream of its life and worship.
Gender inclusiveness
Women constitute a prime example. For
generations, we unthinkingly sang from our pews, "Rise Up, O
Men of God!" and "O Brother Man, Bind to Your Heart Your
Brother." Simply eliminating such exclusive texts from
newly-edited hymnals does not go far enough to redeeming the past;
nor does revising old hymns to "neutralize" exclusively
masculine references for God. An increasingly gender-inclusive
faith community cries out for more gender-inclusive hymnody: hymns
celebrating significant female figures from biblical and church
history; hymns using feminine imagery for God and the sacred;
hymns written by women poets and women composers from both the
past and the present day.
A major contribution to this goal of
gender-inclusion comes to fruition this summer. Voices Found:
Women in the Church's Song, a hymnal supplement edited by Lisa
Neufeld Thomas, is being presented to the General Convention of
the Episcopal Church this July. Authorized by the General
Convention in 1997 to begin compiling the new hymnal, The Women's
Sacred Music Project has been at work for the past five years,
collecting and editing a rich array of selections. The culminating
Voices Found anthology contains over 150 psalms, hymns, and
spiritual songs celebrating the gifts and diversity of women from
twenty different nationalities and ethnic groups, from the eighth
to the twenty-first centuries.
A related contribution to the
gender-inclusivity of worship appeared just two years ago. Frank
Henderson, a Canadian liturgical scholar, put together A Prayer
Book for Remembering the Women. This small and elegant volume
contains liturgies for morning and evening prayers, usable by
groups or individuals, on the themes of God as Holy Wisdom, God as
Creative Life-Giver, women as prophets and apostles, and women as
anointers (a priestly function). All the hymn lyrics included with
the liturgies are ones that I wrote during the summer of 2000,
when I had just become aware of my calling to compose legitimate
texts. God's gentle laughter, I think, can be heard as background
music.
Since writing the texts for the Liturgy
Training Publications' (LTP) Prayer Book (as well as half a
dozen hymns that figure in the Voices Found collection), I
have gone on to publish my own single-author collection--Joy
and Wonder, Love and Longing. In it, the biblical Tamar (Gen
38) at last has her day as a sung rather than unsung
heroine:
For the blessing of your God,
would you risk your name and place?
Would you wait beside the road;
like a harlot, veil your face?
And, like Tamar, would you ask
for your master's seal and cord?
What are you prepared to risk
for the blessing of your Lord?
Likewise, a number of women from medieval
church history become subjects for the church's celebration in
songs heretofore unsung. Elaborating upon images from the
fourteenth century Mirror of St. Marguerite d'Oingt, a text
entitled "Sisters in God's House" begins:
Sisters in God's house,
bold to sing new songs:
Marguerite, Umiltą, Agnes,
Julian, Clare, Macrina, Catherine . . .
Mothers from our past,
daughters in one faith--
named; unnamed and now forgotten;
held within God's heart forever . . .
It is sad to realize how many of such
foremothers' names are lost to history, because their specific
contributions were not thought worthy of recording during their
lifetimes. Yet we can still lift their memory in song, trusting to
God's maternal and attentive Wisdom to take care of the
rest.
Indeed, the maternal and feminine dimensions
of God offer further treasures for exploring in new songs. The
Hebrew Psalmist did not shrink from declaring the comfort of being
held in God's grace "like a child quieted at its mother's
breast" (Ps 131); why, then, should we? Brian Wren's splendid
text "God of Many Names" (set to William Rowan's tune
MANY NAMES, which I also borrowed for "Sisters in God's
House," above) celebrates the "God of Hovering Wings,
Womb and Birth of time." Ruth Duck's powerful "Womb of
Life and Source of Being" speaks of God as "Mother,
Brother, holy Partner; Father, Spirit, Only Son."
In a recent hymn inspired by a sermon on Luke
13:34 (supplemented by passages from Hos 13:8 and Deut. 32:11), I
play in separate stanzas with images of God who is "as tender
as a mother hen who spreads her wings to shield her brood";
"courageous as a mother bear who guards her young from
danger's path"; and "a phoenix rising from the flames, a
mother eagle soaring high." Surely, even if we sang a hymn
with new imagery every day for the rest of eternity, we could not
exhaust the many facets of the One who is the very Source of all
our creative imagining!
Interfaith understanding
Nor are women's experiences the only
unsung-dimensions today calling for incorporation into the
church's new liturgical life. Fresh opportunities and challenges
arise as we attempt to bring ecumenical and even interfaith groups
together for work and worship. British hymnwriter Andrew Pratt
carries the idea of God's many names, used by Brian Wren above to
recognize gender-inclusivity, into the arena of global religious
inclusion: "Great God of many names: Jehovah, Allah, Lord,
Christ, Brahman, Spirit, Adonai; we worship you." Similarly
honoring the manifold ways in which humans address the ultimate
mystery that surrounds us, one of my own hymns ("In Star and
Crescent, Wheel and Flame") celebrates the fact that
In Buddhist chant and Muslim prayer,
in shofar, drum, and sacred song,
the music thankful spirits share
gives praise in voices millions strong.
Surely the world would be a more peaceful
place if we spent less time trying to pronounce one another
"heretics" or "infidels," and more time
learning to make beautiful music together.
Remembering September 11
The impetus to interfaith understanding has
taken on new urgency in the wake of the tragic events of September
11, 2001. I think, in a curious way, our recognition of the value
of hymnody has taken on new resonance as well. Who could forget
the image of the leaders of our nation joined together, across
party divisions, on the steps of the Capitol Building, launching
into a spontaneous rendering of "God Bless America"? How
many of us found ourselves yearning to attend a service of worship
where we could be comforted by the strong affirmations of Isaac
Watts: "Our God, our Help in ages past, our Hope for years to
come"? Singing "old" songs brought us together,
nurtured us through our grieving, strengthened us in our resolve
not to let terror have the final say.
New songs seemed to be in order as
well. Those of us who practice the craft of hymnwriting found
ourselves called upon by colleagues in ministry to compose works
specifically in response to the 9/11 tragedies, works that could
be sung by people of various faiths and traditions joined in
services of prayer and remembrance. At the initiative of author,
composer, and congregational song leader John Thornburg, The Hymn
Society of the US and Canada put together a collection of twelve
such hymns, publishing them in the summer of 2002 for use by
worshiping communities on the anniversary of the events the
following September. Included in that collection are such
heartfelt attempts to speak to the unspeakable as Rae Whitney's
"When All the World Is Wounded"; Mary Nelson Keithahn's
"When Life Becomes a Nightmare"; Carl Daw's "When
Sudden Terror Tears Apart"; and my own "When Terror
Streaks through Morning Skies."
New political situations
The list of new political situations calling
for new responses in hymnody could go on and on. Awareness of the
global environmental crisis, for example, has fostered a wide
range of texts and tunes attending to the vulnerable beauties of
the creation and our call to responsible stewardship. The AIDS
crisis has elicited a stunning hymn by Thomas Troeger, coupled
with powerfully evocative music by Sally Ann Morris ("God
Weeps with Us Who Weep and Mourn," tune name MOSHIER). The
outbreak of war against Iraq prompted a number of new works by
contemporary writers concerned to comment on the events of our
day, even as prophets and poets for generations have sought to
address the challenges unfolding before God's people as we strive
to live faithfully during the "in-between" times: in
between promise and fulfillment, in between our exit from Eden and
our homecoming to the New Jerusalem. (Readers interested in
staying abreast of current ventures in hymnody would be
well-served by paying occasional visits to the "News and
Views" postings on The Hymn Society website at www.thehymnsociety.org
)
Personal and pastoral concerns
During the 1970s, a slogan of the women's
movement reminded us, "The personal is political." In
such instances as the above, the political becomes intensely
personal as well: a parent or spouse waits for a loved one to
return from being stationed in combat; a friend or partner watches
a loved one ravaged by AIDS or some other disease provoked by
environmental toxicity. When illustrating new political and
pastoral situations that confront our life of faith and call for
hymns as yet unsung, we invariably recognize how such situations
keep close company with one another. Timely or
"occasional" issues stir up perennial questions of
despair and hope, anxiety and courage, grief and the persistence
of a joy rooted deeper than any earthly sorrow.
Of all the "timely" hymns I have
written, none has seemed to touch more responsive chords than a
text I wrote for a friend whose mother was suffering from the
acute pastoral challenge of Alzheimer's disease and whose father,
the primary caregiver, was growing increasingly frail. Set to Jean
Sibelius's tune FINLANDIA ("Be Still, My Soul"), the
first verse begins:
When memory fades and recognition falters,
when eyes we love grow dim, and minds, confused,
speak to our souls of Love that never alters;
speak to our hearts, by pain and fear abused . . .
The hymn goes on to affirm that although our human memories
fade and our human arms weaken, the memory and the arms of God
uphold us everlastingly. As people of the "in-between"
times, we urgently need such affirmations. We need to sing them
through our tears and doubts, to sing them as if we believe
them--because in so doing, God helps our unbelief.
Moreover, beyond any such songs of lament, we also need new
songs of celebration: ways of rejoicing together in the surprising
gifts of a God whose constant, redemptive work is to "make
all things new." Since I opened this essay with the whimsical
examples of my early "hymns for heretics," I will close
with the whimsical example of a celebratory children's song,
recently composed for use on Christian Education Sunday at Trinity
Presbyterian Church in Hendersonville, NC. In place of a sermon on
that Sunday, we invited one of the story-tellers who normally
works with the learning hour classes for children to re-tell in
worship the biblical tale of Sarah and the angelic visitors--the
ones who announce that she is about to enter the geriatric
maternity ward. To give the adults and children something to sing
together in response to the lesson, I wrote a new bit of musical
doggerel. The last stanza and refrain go something like this:
Sarah laughed, O Sarah laughed,
and so should you and I.
When God can give such wondrous gifts,
our hope should never die.
So Ha Ha Ha!
and Ho Ho Ho! and Hallelujah, too!
With Sarah, laugh and clap your hands
at all that God can do!
By the end of our singing, the whole congregation was sharing
in a hearty chuckle together. Somewhere, somehow, I suspect God
joined in.
References
Contemporary hymn texts referred to in this article can be
found in full, with musical accompaniment, in the following
publications:
Bringle, Mary Louise. Joy and Wonder, Love and Longing.
Chicago: GIA Publications, Inc., 2002.
Duck, Ruth. Dancing in the Universe. Chicago: GIA
Publications, Inc., 1992.
Henderson, Frank. A Prayer Book for Remembering the Women,
with Hymn Texts by Mary Louise Bringle. Chicago: Liturgy
Training Publications, 2001.
Pratt, Andrew. Whatever Name or Creed. London: Stainer
& Bell Limited, 2002.
"Songs of Remembrance: Hymns for the Commemoration of
September 11, 2001," printed as a central insert in The
Hymn: A Journal of Congregational Song. 53/5 (July
2002).
Thomas, Lisa Neufeld, ed. Voices Found: Women in the
Church's Song. NY: Church Publishing, Inc., 2003.
Troeger, Thomas. In Giving Thanks in Song and Prayer:
Hymntunes of Sally Ann Morris. Chicago: GIA Publications,
Inc., 1998.
Wren, Brian. Praising a Mystery. Carol Stream, IL:
Hope Publishing Co., 1986.
Mary Louise (Mel)
Bringle, professor of philosophy and religion and chair of the
Humanities Division at Brevard College in Brevard, NC, holds a
Ph.D. in Theological Studies from Emory University. Her scholarly
work bridges the disciplines of theology and psychology in a
contemporary approach to the seven deadly sins. (Her books, Despair:
Sickness or Sin? and The God of Thinness: Gluttony and
Other Weighty Matters, were published by Abingdon Press; and
she is presently writing a book on envy.) Winner of numerous
international hymnwriting competitions, she was recognized by The
Hymn Society in 2002 as "the emerging hymn text writer of the
US and Canada." Her first single-author collection of hymn
texts, Joy and Wonder, Love and Longing, was recently
published by GIA. Many EEWC members will remember the workshop Mel
presented at the 1990 EEWC Conference in Chicago. You
can read some of her hymn texts by clicking on "Hymnody"
on her website at http://tornado.brevard.edu/mbringle/bio.htm ©
2003 Mary Louise Bringle
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