Sunday, August 15th, 2021 – 12th Sunday After Pentecost
Philip’s Reflection: “Make a Joyful Noise to the Lord”
Make a joyful noise all the earth!
Worship your God with gladness.
Make a joyful noise all the earth.
Come to this place with a song! (VU820)
Our first hymn reminds us why we gather here each week – it’s to worship God with gladness, to come to this place with a song, singing joyfully, in thankfulness and praise. Communal worship, when we come together in the Body of Christ, connects us in the mystery of genuine meeting and reveals God’s presence among us: and in worship, it is music and particularly singing, that inspires us, stirs our emotions, moves us, comforts us, opens us, and above all bonds us together with the others around us. We sing as many voices but as one, in a universal language – or, as we might say, as “Voices United”.
One of the regrets of my childhood education, is that I never learned to play a musical instrument. Like many of you, perhaps, I was enrolled in piano lessons at an early age but I have to admit that I didn’t get much beyond “All cows eat grass” and “Every good boy deserves fun” and I used to dread the lessons with my music teacher. She would sit beside this little boy with a 12-inch wooden ruler in her hand, and she would tap the back of the hands that misplayed the scales – and so I soon discovered that EGBDF meant “every good boy deserves football” and off I went to play soccer, never to return to music lessons. I’ve had many other opportunities – my wife Maggie is a piano-player but, as you know, like teaching a spouse how to drive, marital music lessons can pose a risk to even the strongest relationships.
But singing was different – and although I’ve a poor singing voice, and I hardly read a note of music, I do love to sing, particularly with others. For most of my school years, both in elementary and high school, I attended daily chapel services and sang in choirs, often twice on Sundays, and I learned most of the sung liturgy of the 1662 Book of Common Prayer – the Magnificat, the Te Deum, the Venite and my favourite at Evensong – the Nunc Dimittis, the Song of Simeon -
And, from a young age, I learned what many of you already know, that singing – as Paul says – “fills us with the Spirit” – it is often when we sing, or hear others singing – that we feel the stirring experience of God’s presence – and this can happen in many different times and places – yes, in the shower in the morning, or on the car radio, or as we sing a small child to sleep at bedtime – and in my experience, and perhaps yours, it happens most often in the sanctuary of a church.
And as we worship God in a church setting, we also discover the meaning of sacred music – that it is incredibly diverse, and we learn that not all good music is sacred music, nor is all sacred music necessarily good music. For example, I’ve always been moved by the repetitive chanting of just a few different chords that open us to God’s presence in a service of Taizé music, or chanting in a synagogue or a Buddhist temple. Music is both sacred and good when it facilitates good worship; I would go beyond and say that, as we emerge from the enforced lockdown of a pandemic, good worship, communal worship in which we gather to experience the presence of God in our midst – depends on music, and particularly singing, more than on any other factor. In many different settings, we have all witnessed how music and singing can bring a community together, raise the spirits, and strengthen our sense of purpose: and in recent weeks you have already shown how important music is to the worshipping life of St. David’s: a vibrant music program, multi-generational, intercultural, with a diverse repertoire of music styles, can surely play a significant role in the future of this community, just as it has done in the past.
Those of you who are familiar with the history of our denomination know that the United Church of Canada, which turns 100 four years from now, has its roots in the Methodist, Presbyterian and Congregational churches of Canada and this is true for its music too. One of the central figures in our musical heritage is the great hymn-writer Charles Wesley (1707-1788) who, with his older brother John Wesley, was a leader of the revival movement within the Church of England, known as Methodism, in the first half of the 18th century. Today, we’ve selected 4 of Charles’ best-loved hymns – by no means an easy task because during his lifetime Charles Wesley composed over 6,500 hymns! Surely that deserves a gold medal of some kind!
Although Charles was the more prolific hymn-writer it is to John Wesley that we are most indebted for the theology and doctrine of Methodism, a major influence, perhaps the most important influence on our denominational theology. John was also a hymn writer and I want to leave with you a treat – it’s not a hymn, or even a piece of sacred music – but you’ll find it on page 720 of our hymn book, Voices United. Tucked away there, you’ll find John Wesley’s Directions for Singing (1761), which was included as an appendix to his collection of 400 hymns for congregational singing in the early Methodist Church – we’ve re-printed them on the back of your worship bulletin. Since he’s one of our founders, let’s quickly review his directions on singing:
1. Learn these tunes before you learn any others – afterwards learn as many as you please! He would have approved of our selection today!
2. Sing them exactly as they are printed here… and if you have learned to sing them otherwise (with different words or to a different tune perhaps), unlearn it as soon as you can!
3. Sing all – join in the congregational singing as frequently as you can – don’t let weariness or weakness hinder you!
4. Sing lustily (not lustfully!) and with a good courage – beware of singing as if you were half dead or half asleep; but lift up your voice with strength!
5. Sing modestly. Don’t bawl – strive to unite your voices together in one melodious sound!
6. Sing in time – don’t run before nor stay behind – and take care not to sing too slow – this drawling way steals on all who are lazy!
7. Above all sing spiritually. Have an eye to God in every word you sing. Aim at pleasing God more than yourself or any other creature!
Perhaps we should print a copy of Wesley’s directions and put them on the wall in the choir room?
John Wesley’s directions speak for themselves – but I’d like to offer a possible addition. It was suggested to me by David Quinton who, as some of you know, has been repairing the organ in recent weeks. David was telling me about his father Ted, who sadly passed away in December. Mr. Q., as he was known, devoted much of his life of 96 years to church music, as an organist and choir director. He was a founder member of the Gallery singers in the late 1960’s at St. John’s Shaughnessy, and sang with them for over 35 years; and after working for 30 years in a print shop Ted’s passion for music led him into a second career as a pipe organ technician – a rare craft that is continued by his son David today. Whatever your singing ability, you were always welcome in Ted’s choirs and you would always have some fun. There was only one rule – “Words first” Ted would say – read and understand the words first because it’s the words that give them spiritual purpose and determine how they’re to be sung.
That sounds to me like advice that John and Charles Wesley would agree with, doesn’t it, and it’s also perhaps what Saint Paul has in mind when he writes to the Ephesians “be filled with the Spirit, as you sing psalms and hymns and spiritual songs” – because if we sing meaningfully, through the power of the Holy Spirit, with attention to the words we’re singing, then our sung music becomes the way in which we enhance the message of the words – it is both the words and the music that bond us together as a worshipping community and reveal the presence of God.
So, let us indeed “Make a Joyful Noise to the Lord”. “Do not get drunk with wine” writes Paul in his letter to the Ephesians “but be filled with the Spirit,” – because as we sing psalms and hymns we “give thanks to God the Father at all times and for everything in the name of our Lord Jesus Christ.” (Eph. 15:20). And whatever the concerns on our minds – and there certainly are many right now – music can raise our spirits, and bring us together in praise, thankfulness or lament – and remind us that nothing can separate us from the love of God. Now that’s surely something to sing about, isn’t it?
Philip Francis August 15, 2021
St. David’s United Church
West Vancouver