Vocal Music
- Holy Spirit, Dwell In Me – K. Lee Scott
Instrumental Music
- Choral varié sur le thème du 'Veni Creator', Op 4 - Maurice Duruflé
- Hymn 421 - All glory be to God on high (ALLEIN GOTT IN DER HÖHE)
- Hymn 508 - Breathe on me, Breath of God (NOVA VITA)
- Hymn R 207 - Sanctus (Holy, holy, holy) (LAND OF REST)
There's a first for us this Sunday during our worship online. The choir, which has not sung together since March 11, comes together virtually to sing for our Pentecost celebration. This has been a real growing experience for our choristers, for not only did they have to learn how to do a recording on their phones or tablets (we are not the most tech savvy bunch), but they also had to stretch far outside some of their comfort zone and sing by themselves, making a recording without anyone else singing with them, or even a piano backing them up. Then they had to submit it to me, the director, so that I could layer it with all the other voices.The version we sing this morning is based upon Lynch's text, but arranged and expanded to fit another hymn melody arranged by contemporary composer Keaton Lee Scott, whose works are found in eight hymnals and some 300 published compositions. That tune is one we frequently sing to the words "Humbly I adore thee, Verity unseen." The tune, ADORE DEVOTE, is a Benedictine plainsong from the 13th century.
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| Maurice Duruflé |
The text to this hymn is believed to have been written by Rabanus Maurus in the 9th century. As an invocation of the Holy Spirit, it is sung in the Roman Catholic and Anglican churches during celebrations on the feast of Pentecost. The hymn is also widely used in the Anglican Communion in the Ordering of Priests and in the Consecration of Bishops. Since the English Reformation in the 16th century, there have been more than fifty English language translations and paraphrases of Veni Creator Spiritus.
The version in our own hymns was first included in the 1662 revision of the Book of Common Prayer, and compresses the content of the original seven verses to four (with a two-line doxology), keeping the Latin title. It was written by Bishop John Cosin for the coronation of King Charles I of Great Britain in 1625. The same words have been used at every coronation since. The first verse is:
Come, Holy Ghost, our souls inspire,
and lighten with celestial fire.
Thou the anointing Spirit art,
who dost thy sevenfold gifts impart.


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