All Glory, Laud and Honor

All Glory, Laud and Honor

The treasured hymn All Glory, Laud and Honor was first written in the year 820 by Theodulf of Orléans while in captivity, who had been Bishop of Orléans during the reign of Charlemagne. Following a power struggle after Charlemagne’s death, Theodulf had been imprisoned for backing the wrong successor. Myth has it that Theodulf’s captor, Louis the Pious, heard him sing the hymn and released Theodulf on the condition that All Glory, Laud and Honor be thenceforth sung every Palm Sunday thereafter.

The text of the hymn is based upon Matthew 21 and sings of the victorious arrival of Jesus into Jerusalem. Here, the Choir of King’s College of Cambridge sings the hymn while in procession on Palm Sunday, 2013.

– Logan Henke, Music Minister

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Be Thou My Vision

Be Thou My Vision

The text of the most famous Celtic hymn is so ancient that its authorship can not be claimed for certain. Be Thou My Vision, or Bi Thus a Mo Shúile in the modern Irish, is traditionally attributed to the 8th-century Irish poet, Saint Dal­lán For­gaill.

No matter its authorship, this much is true: Before it was sung around the world, Be Thou My Vision was sung on the Emerald Ilse by the faithful for centuries indeed.

This week’s Music Meditation is performed by Moya Brennan.

– Logan Henke, Music Minister

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God So Loved the World

God So Loved the World

There was a man of the Pharisees, named Nicodemus…So begins the third chapter of John’s gospel, the chapter from which the most famous piece of scripture unfolds. “For God so loved the world, that he gave his only begotten Son,” Jesus reveals to Nicodemus.

In 1725, Bach applied his singular talent to this text in one of his cantatas, Also hat Gott die Welt geliebt. Although written for Pentecost, Bach captures the joy, hope, and sacrifice imbued within Christ’s words to Nicodemus.

The meditation this week is that cantata, performed by the Amsterdam Baroque Orchestra & Choir.

– Logan Henke, Music Minister

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Stars

Stars

This week’s Music Meditation is Stars by Eriks Esenvalds. It is a fitting homage to the psalm for this week, Psalm 19, which begins “The Heavens declare the glory of God; and the firmament sheweth his handiwork.” The poet of Stars, Sara Teasdale, meditates on the beauty of God’s handiwork of the firmament, finally acknowledging:

And I know that I
Am honored to be
Witness
Of so much majesty

The meditation this week was recorded by Roots in the Sky, a professional chamber choir from Bozeman, MT.

Logan Henke, Music Minister

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