This October, our church celebrates its hundredth anniversary. All this year, every so often, we are having brief "historical moments" during church.
Today, our temporary choir director -- and my high school band teacher -- was a
Vorsanger. He got up during church and discussed how hymn singing was done in the early days of the church. Today, our Mennonite church sings in a variety of styles, most commonly 4-part music accompanied by a piano, and no director. But we also sing more "contemporary" styles.
Back in the earlier days, the church didn't have hymnals with music for everyone. The
Vorsanger -- song leader -- would sing each phrase, then the congregation would sing it back in unison, throughout the whole song. Hymns that the congregation already knew well would just be sung normally, in unison, with the
Vorsanger directing.
Not only did the
Vorsanger lead the singing, but he or she also chose the music -- not the pastor. As the church purchased first a pump organ, and later a piano, the instruments would sometimes be used to accompany the singing. The musicians never knew what would be sung in advance. One 80-year-old member of our congregation remembered the she started to play for church at 8th grade. But much of the time, there would be no instrument, not even to pick the starting pitch.
This morning, we sang
Holy God, We Praise Thy Name with the
Vorsanger. It's a familiar song in our church, but we generally sing it in English. The
Vorsanger taught it to us in German, the older people in church would have remembered it. He finished his introduction, stepped away from the microphone, and rang out with the first phrase.
Großer Gott, wir loben dich
Then we all sang the phrase back to him, in unison. On to the next phrase, back and forth for the rest of the hymn. Terah and I were in the choir area, behind him, but could hear him -- and the rest of the congregation -- just fine.
At the end, our
Vorsanger for a day said he thought we got it, so we sang through it again, still in unison, but without him leading us on each phrase.
Großer Gott, wir loben dich,
Herr, wir preisen deine Stärke,
Vor dir beugt die Erde sich
Und bewundert deine Werke.
Wie du warst vor aller Zeit,
So bleibst du in Ewigkeit.
What a powerful way to feel connected to the people that worshiped at the same place so many years ago.
As our director said before we sang in choir this morning, music can say so much more than words.
Comments
Fri, 09.05.2008 15:51
We use Accurev here at work, s o let me try that. Well, I do know that several airlines actually use Accurev and [...]
Thu, 08.05.2008 16:34
Continuus Airlines: This a irline started as a skunk-work s project in Sweden that was s old as a "sort of versio [...]
Wed, 07.05.2008 07:43
Just a small update: The re dmine forums have been moved t o redmine.org 4 days after you r post: http://rubyfo [...]
Mon, 05.05.2008 14:49
What the hell are you guys tal king about? Is it really that bad? Can't programmers google anymore? Swap Caps and E [...]
Sun, 04.05.2008 11:57
I use the Google Browser Sync firefox extension on all 3 of my computers. It syncs everyth ing: bookmarks, cookies, [...]
Sun, 04.05.2008 09:32
I've been thinking about setti ng up an ikiwiki site to hand le my bookmarks. I'm currentl y using a wiki page on [...]
Sun, 04.05.2008 07:53
I guess what I would say is th at PDF *can* faithfully reprod uce documents, but doesn't gua rantee that it always wi [...]
Sun, 04.05.2008 07:51
I agree with you; I have some file:/// URLs bookmarked. T he del.icio.us has a syncing a lgorithm, and I have fou [...]