- Now the Green Blade Riseth – Ken Heitshusen (c. 1950)
Instrumental Music
- For the Feast of the Resurrection of Our Lord: O angelos evoa – Gerald Near (b. 1942)
- (The angel cried out to Lady of grace)
- O Sons and Daughters, Let Us Sing – Denis Bédard (b. 1950)
- Good Christians All, Rejoice and Sing – Paul Manz (1919-2009)
Congregational Music (all hymns from the Hymnal 1982 with the exception of those marked “R” which are from Renew.)
- Hymn 494 - Crown him with many crowns (DIADEMATA)
- Hymn 206 - O sons and daughters, let us sing (O FILII ET FILIAE)
- Hymn 432 - O praise ye the Lord (LAUDATE DOMINUM)
- Hymn R271 - Alleluia, alleluia! Give thanks (ALLELUIA NO. 1)
- Hymn R91 - Open our eyes, Lord (OPEN OUR EYES)
- Hymn R258 - To God be the Glory (TO GOD BE THE GLORY)
- Hymn R119 - Psalm 150: Hallelujah, praise the Lord (ORIENTIS PARTIBUS)
It's the second Sunday of Easter, traditionally called "Thomas Sunday." The day commemorates the appearance of Christ to his disciples eight days after Easter, when Thomas was present and proclaimed "My Lord and my God" upon seeing the hands and side of Christ. (Today is also called Quasimodo Sunday, having nothing to do with Hunchbacks nor Notre Dame, but coming from the Latin text of the traditional Introit for this day, which begins "Quasi modo geniti infantes..." from 1 Peter 2:2, roughly translated as "As newborn babes [desire the rational milk without guile]...". Literally, quasi modo means "as if in [this] manner".
To commemorate Thomas Sunday, we will sing the hymn O sons and daughters, let us sing, which contains the stanzas
4 When Thomas first the tidings heard
that some had seen the risen Lord,
he doubted the disciples' word.
Lord, have mercy!
5 At night the apostles met in fear;
among them came their Master dear
and said, "My peace be with you here."
Alleluia!
6 "My pierced side, O Thomas, see,
and look upon my hands, my feet;
not faithless but believing be."
Alleluia!
7 No longer Thomas then denied;
he saw the feet, the hands, the side.
"You are my Lord and God!" he cried.
Alleluia!
8 How blest are they who have not seen
and yet whose faith has constant been,
for they eternal life shall win.
Alleluia!
Thomas Sunday is particularly important among Orthodox Christians. So the quirky thing is that today is NOT Thomas Sunday in the Orthodox Church, but, instead, is Easter Day! In observance of that, I am playing a setting of a Paschal hymn from the Orthodox tradition, as found in the collection
Meditations on Byzantine Hymns by Gerald Near. The melody is a chant, much like the Gregorian Chant of the Early Roman church.
We are also singing all nine stanzas of "O Sons and Daughters." We're doing it during communion so I'm sure there will be plenty of time.
ReplyDeleteAlleluia Number 1 is already in Hymnal 1982. Why use Renew, Songs and Hymns for it?
ReplyDelete