What did you sing at church today?

19091939596117

Comments

  • NenyaNenya All Saints Host, Ecclesiantics & MW Host
    .I'm surprised they didn't have Lord, thy word abideth to Ravenshaw...
    Oo, that one takes me straight back to school assemblies!

    We had:

    Holy Forever (A thousand generations)
    I Want To Know You (I've tried in vain a thousand ways)
    O Praise the Name of the Lord our God (I cast my mind to Calvary)
    There is an Endless Song (How can I keep from singing your praise?)
  • Finishing off Job.

    “Praise ye the Lord; 'tis good to raise” - Galilee.
    “Our God is a great big God”.
    “Spirit divine, inspire our prayers” - Beatitudo.
    “God moves in a mysterious way” - London New.
    “We rest on thee” - Finlandia.
  • Nehemiah starts rebuilding the walls of Jerusalem - a very literal hymn selection.

    My Hope Is Built On Nothing Less (Solid Rock)
    The King Of Love My Shepherd Is (St. Columba)
    Glorious Things Of Thee Are Spoken (Austria)
    The Church’s One Foundation (Aurelia)
  • Attended a presbytery meeting yesterday. During worship, we sang:

    “Let Us Build a House” (“All Are Welcome”)/TWO OAKS
    “In Christ There Is No East or West”/McKEE
    “Guide My Feet, Lord”
    “We All Are One in Mission”/ES FLOG EIN KLEINS WALDVÖGELEIN
    For Reasons (which are reasonable if less than ideal), All Saints was observed at our place today rather than next Sunday. We sang:

    “For All the Saints”/SINE NOMINE
    “God, Our Help and Constant Refuge” (Ps. 46)/MICHAEL
    “Rise, O Church, like Christ Arisen”/SURGE ECCLESIA


    Alas, observing All Saints today means the Reformation Sunday was not observed, so we missed the chance to sing “A Mighty Fortress” and “I Greet Thee, Who May Sure Redeemer Art.”


  • Well, I’ll make up for that!

    “A Mighty Fortress”
    “Thy Strong Word”
    “Let All Mortal Flesh Keep Silence”
    “The Church’s One Foundation”
  • Nice, @Lamb Chopped! Though I’d still miss “I Greet Thee, Who My Sure Redeemer Art.” One needs to be in a Reformed/Presbyterian church to encounter it, I’m afraid; at least, I’ve never encountered it anywhere else.


  • And I've never heard of it!
  • The tune (TOULON) I know, but not the words.
  • It is often attributed to Calvin, which is why it gets sung on Reformation Sunday in many Presbyterian churches. Some speculate that it is a Protestant reworking of the Salve, Regina. The original French text did appear in the 1545 Strasbourg psalter. The English translation can be found here. (The text is slightly different in our hymnal, but only slightly.)


  • TruronTruron Shipmate
    Feast of Dedication

    Solemn Eucharist (Order 1 trad)

    Hail thee festival day (Dedication version) with different choir members
    singing the verses and very effective it was too
    Harris in F and Meebecke
    Psalm 84 to the Parry chant
    O word of God above (St Edmund)
    Thy hand O God has guided (Thornbury)
    Choir motet was the Elgar 'Ave verum'
    In our day of thanksgiving (St Catherines Court)

    A lovely worship experience in an unfussy high church setting.

    1st Evensong of St Simon and St Jude. (in a rural parish)

    Psalms 121 and 122 both sung to a chant by Beethoven
    Thou who sentest thine Apostles (Regent Square)
    Bunnet in F for the canticles
    Captains of the saintly band (University College)
    Jerusalem on high (Christchurch)
    Disposer supreme (Hanover)

    A different type of worship but very nice feel to it. Both services today saw good congregational singing and although (being countryside) the material was a little dated it all hung together well.
  • The tune (TOULON) I know, but not the words.
    Often used in British Baptist circles as the Communion hymn "Here, O my Lord, I see Thee face to face".
  • Yes, i love that one.
  • Pentecost 23:

    O For A Thousand Tongues to Sing (AZMON)
    Amazing Grace (NEW BRITAIN)
    I'll Praise My Maker While I've Breath (OLD 113TH)
    Alleluia, Sing to Jesus (HYFRYDOL)

    Service music was Mathias.
  • October 27th, Pentecost 23

    Hymns
    O for a thousand tongues to sing, / Lyngham
    Lift up your hearts unto the Lord, / Sing Alleluia
    Comfort, comfort all my people, / Dorothy
    I’ll praise my maker, / Monmouth

    Choir
    Look toward the Lord, / Petrich
    Amazing grace, / arr. Iva Juras
  • Thank you all. If not tone deaf I'm as near to it as possible, but seeing so many hymns , anthems, etc I love brings them to mind.
  • (I rowed back across the Bosphorus today...)

    24th Sunday after Pentecost, All Saints' Day, All Souls' Day

    All People That On Earth Do Dwell
    Breath Of Life, Come Sweeping Through Us
    Love Divine, All Loves Excelling
    For All The Saints

  • PigletPiglet All Saints Host, Circus Host
    That's a very decent selection, Climacus!

    Our offerings for All Saints/All Souls were a bit of a mixed bag:

    For all the saints - Sine Nomine*
    Praise to God for saints and martyrs - which was supposed to be to Ebenezer (Ton-y-Botel), but for some reason wasn't, and was to some ditty that I'd never heard before
    Ye watchers and ye holy ones - Lasst uns Erfreuen
    Glory to thee, O God - Love Unknown
    We shall go out with hope of resurrection - Londonderry Air :grimace:

    * in which today's organist either omitted the "bonks" at the start of the verses, or played them so quietly they couldn't be heard - what a wuss!
  • Our Main service this morning was a Baptism. The early morning service, which I go to, was a warm-up act for it.

    Now Thank We All Our God (Nun Danket)
    Alleluia, Alleluia, Give Thanks To The Risen Lord (Donald Fishel)
    O Jesus, I Have Promised (Woodlands)
    Blessèd Assurance, Jesus Is Mine! (Assurance)
  • Our Main service this morning was a Baptism. The early morning service, which I go to, was a warm-up act for it.
    Good to have nice warm water for baptisms!

  • Eucharist at Newport Cathedral - non-choral due to half-term.

    "For all the saints" (Sine Nomine - 8 verses!)
    "Give me the wings of faith to rise" (Song 67 - clearly not known by the congregation)
    "Let saints on earth in concert sing" (Dundee).
    "Jerusalem the golden" (Ewing).

    Responses: "Mass of St Thomas" (Thorne).
  • BroJamesBroJames Purgatory Host
    Our Main service this morning was a Baptism. The early morning service, which I go to, was a warm-up act for it.
    Good to have nice warm water for baptisms!

    In the Baptist Church of my teens and 20s, that was effected by the church secretary putting a plug-in immersion heater into the baptistry the night before – not by getting the early service congregation to warm up the water themselves! :mrgreen:
  • ArethosemyfeetArethosemyfeet Shipmate, Heaven Host
    We had:
    Stand up and bless the Lord
    As the deer pants for the water
    Brother sister let me serve you
    Just as I am
    God is working his purpose out
  • NenyaNenya All Saints Host, Ecclesiantics & MW Host
    King of Love and Grace, my Guardian
    Jesus said that if I thirst
    If Faith can move the Mountains (Waiting here for you)
    I see the King of Glory coming on the Clouds with Fire
  • BroJames wrote: »
    In the Baptist Church of my teens and 20s, that was effected by the church secretary putting a plug-in immersion heater into the baptistry the night before .
    That's still what's done.

  • RecoveringCynicRecoveringCynic Shipmate
    edited November 2024
    All Saints' Day

    For All The Saints (SINE NOMINE), all 8 verses!
    Alleluia, Alleluia, Give Thanks (ALLELUIA NO. 1)
    I Sing a Song of the Saints of God (GRAND ISLE)
    Ye Watchers and Ye Holy Ones (LASST UNS ERFREUEN)

    and @Piglet, you'll be pleased to know I made sure all the "bonks" were heard!
  • BroJames wrote: »
    In the Baptist Church of my teens and 20s, that was effected by the church secretary putting a plug-in immersion heater into the baptistry the night before .
    That's still what's done.

    Yes, but they took it out before the service started so that the tepid water had cooled down by the time of the baptism. I caught a cold after my immersion on a very chilly day in February!
  • Cathscats wrote: »
    BroJames wrote: »
    In the Baptist Church of my teens and 20s, that was effected by the church secretary putting a plug-in immersion heater into the baptistry the night before .
    That's still what's done.

    Yes, but they took it out before the service started so that the tepid water had cooled down by the time of the baptism. I caught a cold after my immersion on a very chilly day in February!

    I wouldn't leave it n once the service has started. Not only does it Not Look Very Nice, but it avoids any tiny risk of electrocution.
  • Baptist TrainfanBaptist Trainfan Shipmate
    edited November 2024
    I Sing a Song of the Saints of God (GRAND ISLE)
    That is about the only hymn I can think of that talks about "day-to-day" saints ... but it sounds so 1930s-English-middle-class-suburban!
    @Piglet, you'll be pleased to know I made sure all the "bonks" were heard!
    I'm very pleased to hear that! We had a slight problem this morning as the organist started the hymn with a short prelude so we weren't quite sure that he was starting!

  • Bonks???

    Sorry, musical ignoramus.
  • It's a sort of POM! (rather than a bonk :lol: ) that should be played at the beginning of at least some of the verses:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=21GTTM2TIYA

    I haven't yet heard what hymns were sung for All Saints at Our Place, but I expect that For all the saints (with POMS! as prescribed by RVW) was one of them.

    @Piglet - at Our Place, we sing Praise to God for saints and martyrs to an old Dutch melody called In Babilone. Is this what you had today?

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zihZdIGQX8k

    FWIW, I like Ebenezer as well, but prefer the Dutch tune.

  • Climacus wrote: »
    Bonks???

    Sorry, musical ignoramus.
    The melody like of SINE NOMINE starts on the second beat of the measure. Most arrangements provide for the organ to play the tonic (“do” of “do-re-mi”), usually in a lower octave, on the first note/downbeat, so the congregation has a sense of the rhythm and knows when to come in. Musicologists call this a “bonk.” :wink:


  • ArethosemyfeetArethosemyfeet Shipmate, Heaven Host
    Climacus wrote: »
    Bonks???

    Sorry, musical ignoramus.

    The tube SINE NOMINE, used for the hymn For all the saints, prefaces each verse with a single beat note, with the melody starting on the second beat. If you're familiar with singing it you expect the single beat "bonk" and use that to guide when to come in.
  • Bishops FingerBishops Finger Shipmate
    edited November 2024
    :lol:

    I didn't know that it was indeed technically a bonk. Our Place prefers to call it a POM!...to leave them out, whatever you call them, Is Outrage!
  • NenyaNenya All Saints Host, Ecclesiantics & MW Host
    :lol:

    I didn't know that it was indeed technically a bonk. Our Place prefers to call it a POM!...to leave them out, whatever you call them, Is Outrage!

    Indeed... "bonk" here in the UK having something of a double entendre... :flushed:
  • ClimacusClimacus Shipmate
    edited November 2024
    Nenya wrote: »
    Indeed... "bonk" here in the UK having something of a double entendre... :flushed:
    And here too. I was taken aback ha ha.

    Thank you all for the explanations. Being familiar with "Sine Nomine" I now know the word, or two ("POM"*), for what is happening there!


    * what we call people from England!
  • RecoveringCynicRecoveringCynic Shipmate
    edited November 2024
    I Sing a Song of the Saints of God (GRAND ISLE)
    That is about the only hymn I can think of that talks about "day-to-day" saints ... but it sounds so 1930s-English-middle-class-suburban!

    Well, my 2020s American congregation loves it...I'm sure there would be Outrage if it were to be taken out of All Saints' Day service! I think the quaintness of it is fun and a nice change of pace.

    I did hear some giggling from the front pew though at the Fierce Wild Beast though :lol:
  • I Sing a Song of the Saints of God (GRAND ISLE)
    New to me. Thank you. My week has been filled with readings, videos, sermons extolling "everyday" Saints. Something for me to ponder.

  • Lots of music in our little parish over this weekend

    All Saints [reinstating the High Mass for the feast]
    For All the Saints [4 verses]
    You Watchers and You Holy Ones
    Blest Are the Pure in Heart
    You Servants of God your Master Proclaim

    All Souls
    Come as you are that's how I want you
    The Lord is my shepherd [Boniwell]
    Amazing Grace
    I heard the voice of Jesus say - to the beautiful Kingsfold

    24th after Pentecost - Sunday after All Saints
    You holy angels bright
    Brother sister let me serve you
    Rejoice in God's saints
    Christ be my leader by night as by day
    Hail Redeemer, King divine

    @Climacus the acknowledgement of country has been incorporated into worship within the diocese as part of the reconciliation strategy adopted by synod. It takes different forms in different parishes according to their progress along the pathway.
  • What a weekend of worship!, Barnabas_Aus.

    Thank you for the information on the Acknowledgement of Country in the diocese.
  • PigletPiglet All Saints Host, Circus Host
    edited November 2024
    It's a sort of POM! (rather than a bonk :lol: ) that should be played at the beginning of at least some of the verses:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=21GTTM2TIYA

    I haven't yet heard what hymns were sung for All Saints at Our Place, but I expect that For all the saints (with POMS! as prescribed by RVW) was one of them.

    @Piglet - at Our Place, we sing Praise to God for saints and martyrs to an old Dutch melody called In Babilone. Is this what you had today?

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zihZdIGQX8k

    FWIW, I like Ebenezer as well, but prefer the Dutch tune.

    Thanks, BF - it was indeed In Babilone*. I'd seen the name in a hymnbook, but I don't think I'd ever sung it before. As I didn't have a book with music I was a bit befuddled.

    * the autocorrect on my mobile wanted to change that to "In Basildon". :mrgreen:

    Re: poms/bonks, David always referred to it as "bonk! for all the saints", and he knew a thing or two about that sort of thing.
  • Piglet wrote: »
    It's a sort of POM! (rather than a bonk :lol: ) that should be played at the beginning of at least some of the verses:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=21GTTM2TIYA

    I haven't yet heard what hymns were sung for All Saints at Our Place, but I expect that For all the saints (with POMS! as prescribed by RVW) was one of them.

    @Piglet - at Our Place, we sing Praise to God for saints and martyrs to an old Dutch melody called In Babilone. Is this what you had today?

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zihZdIGQX8k

    FWIW, I like Ebenezer as well, but prefer the Dutch tune.

    Thanks, BF - it was indeed In Babilone*. I'd seen the name in a hymnbook, but I don't think I'd ever sung it before. As I didn't have a book with music I was a bit befuddled.
    In my tribe, IN BABILONE is the standard tune for “There’s a Wideness In God’s Mercy.”


  • Piglet wrote: »
    * The autocorrect on my mobile wanted to change that to "In Basildon". :mrgreen:
    Love it!

  • Nick Tamen wrote: »
    In my tribe, IN BABILONE is the standard tune for “There’s a Wideness In God’s Mercy.”
    I tend to link those words with the (IMO rather dull) "Cross of Jesus".

  • So do I, and yes, Cross of Jesus is dull.

    Tangentially, Ebenezer/Ton-y-Botel tends to be associated in my mind with the splendidly obscure hymn Who is this with garments gory? by A C Coxe.

    This gives you some idea of it, though the video seems to be rather erratic:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c2DyLzbkC2Y
  • For me, it's "O the deep, deep love of Jesus". Incidentally "Ton-y-Botel" is, I understand, a bit pejorative ("Tune in a bottle").
  • Yes - O the deep, deep love of Jesus was a favourite in the snake-belly-low Church Of My Youth. and the tune fits the words very well (or the other way around).
  • Of course, and as we all know, it goes well to "Yn y dyfroedd mawr a’r tonnau".

    No, I don't speak Welsh either; but my wife is learning. Not only do we avidly watch "Dechrau Canu Dechrau Canmol" (the Welsh "Songs of Praise") each week on S4C, we went to the big "Cymanfa Ganu" hymn-sing at the National Eisteddfod in the summer. It was great but we both caught (mild) Covid at it!!!
  • For me, it's "O the deep, deep love of Jesus". Incidentally "Ton-y-Botel" is, I understand, a bit pejorative ("Tune in a bottle").

    I remember reading somewhere was that the legend was the composer found it washed up on a beach.
  • So did I. But I don't think it's true.
  • Bishops FingerBishops Finger Shipmate
    edited November 2024
    For me, it's "O the deep, deep love of Jesus". Incidentally "Ton-y-Botel" is, I understand, a bit pejorative ("Tune in a bottle").

    I remember reading somewhere was that the legend was the composer found it washed up on a beach.

    It's mentioned in the Wikipedia article:

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ebenezer_(hymn_tune)*

    A good story, but presumably unsubstantiated...

    *I think you may need to scroll down to Ebenezer - hymn tune.
Sign In or Register to comment.