Negative Space: Hymns
- Amazing Grace (Common Melody)
- Amazing Grace, by John Newton, with melody by Edwin O. Excell, 1900. This is the commonly-known melody for Amazing Grace.
- Amazing Grace (Uncommon Melody)
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Amazing Grace, by John Newton, with melody by C.H. Warwick. This was apparently once a common melody for the song but is rarely heard now.
- Depersonalizing God in modern hymns
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Hymn publishers seem to be hell-bent on removing God and faith from the hymns we sing during mass. Where Charity and Love Prevail has removed almost all personal pronouns, and implies that our faith can change with the whims of the day.
- Holy, Holy! Lord God Almighty!
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One of my favorite tunes, and perfect for Easter, is Reginald Heber’s hymn of praise beginning with “Early in the morning, your song shall rise to Thee”. It’s filled with evocative lyrics and a rousing, joyous melody by the Reverend John B. Dykes.
- How Great Thou Art
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Then sings my soul…
- Hymns
- Musings about hymns, and about modern bowdlerism as it applies to Christian, especially Catholic, lyrics.
- Let mortal tongues awake
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Samuel Francis Smith’s America—more commonly known as “My Country, ’Tis of Thee”— is short, direct, and a wonderful hymn to God as the soul of liberty. It’s a perfect hymn for the Fourth of July. It’s also very easy to play using the piano script from 42 Astounding Scripts.
- Light a candle for Christmas hymns
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While the holidays brought more examples of bowdlerized lyrics they also brought, at least to our church, a lit candle for the darkness, in the form of a new hymnal that retains sound Catholic theology.
- Our parental unit, who art, somewhere, maybe
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God’s Blessing Sends Us Forth; We Are the Light of the World; With a Shepherd’s Care. Is there room for God the Father in the modern church? Are the bowdlerizers creating a first-contact crisis?
- A Song of Thanksgiving: America, the Beautiful
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America, the Beautiful, by Katharine Lee Bates, with melody by Samuel A. Ward.
- The Soul Felt It’s Worth
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“A thrill of hope, the weary world rejoices…” What is a soul worth? For God, a soul is worth his son.
- Though the Darkness Hide Thee
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Removing mankind from hymns makes them less inclusive and more self-centered. The new language almost always destroys the universality—the catholicity—of the older language. It also has a tendency to deny the necessity of God’s grace.