Friday, November 8, 2019

Music for November 10, 2019 + Kirkin o' the Tartans

Vocal Music

  • Come, Let Us Join Our Cheerful Songs – Paul Ritchie
  • I Know that My Redeemer Liveth – G. F. Handel, Amy Bogan, soprano

Instrumental Music

  • Highland Cathedral - James D. Wetherald, arr., Richard Kean, pip
    er 
  • Traditional Piping Tunes – Richard Keen, piper

Congregational Music (all hymns from the Hymnal 1982 with the exception of those marked “R” which are from Renew.)

  • Hymn R 5 - God is here, and we his people (ABBOTT’S LEIGH)
  • Hymn 295 - Sing praise to our Creator (CHRISTUS, DER IS MEIN LEBEN)
  • Hymn - I know that my Redeemer lives (DUKE STREET)
  • Hymn R 90 - Spirit of the Living God (LIVING GOD)
  • Hymn R 36 - I love you, Lord (I LOVE YOU, LORD)
  • Hymn 671 - Amazing grace! how sweet the sound (NEW BRITAIN)
  • Hymn 625 - Ye holy angels bright (DARWALL’S 148TH)
  • Psalm 17:1-9 - Tone Vc, Refrain by Jane Marshall
This is a favorite Sunday for many parishioners at Good Shepherd when we “Kirk (or bless) the Tartans.” Though we have been doing this for over 20 years, it is still a relatively new thing, beginning in the early 1940s, when Peter Marshall (the Presbyterian minister who was chaplain of the Senate - not the game show host) held prayer services at New York Avenue Presbyterian in D.C to raise funds for War Relief. At one of the services, he preached a sermon called “Kirking of the Tartans,” and thus a legend was born. You can read a more detailed history here at the Scottish Tartans Museum website. (Side note: the Scottish Tartan Museum is in Franklin, North Carolina, NOT Scotland)

Samuel Seabury
The reason we "kirk the tartans" is to remember our Anglican history,  specifically Samuel Seabury, the first American Anglican bishop who was consecrated by the Scottish Bishops of the Anglican church during the Revolutionary War. (England was a bit upset with the Americans, so they would have no part of that!) Thus we commemorate his consecration on the Sunday nearest his feast daym which is the anniversary of his consecration as a bishop, November 14, 1784. We wear our tartans, hang them in the church, and hear the bagpipe play. For twelve years now we have begun the service with the piper playing Highland Cathedral and end with him playing traditional piping tunes.

Amy Bogan, our soprano section leader, is singing one of the favorite arias from Handel's Messiah, I Know That My Redeemer Liveth.  It's the opening movement of the third part of the oratorio, which is considered to be the Easter section, but the text is not New Testament, but is mainly from the Old Testament book of Job. As our first lesson this Sunday is that passage from Job, it is only fitting that Amy sing it during communion.

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