Wednesday, July 10, 2024

Lead lives worthy of your calling

Lead lives worthy of your calling; 

         Live in humble gentleness.

Live with love for one another,

         Slow to anger, swift to bless.

Strive for unity in Spirit,

         Joined in bonds of sacred peace.

Know the one hope of your calling,

         Hope that will not ever cease.

 

For we live in grace first given

         In the gifts of God alone,

Gifts Christ gave to build the body – 

         Gifts of grace we do not own.

Gifts of teaching and proclaiming,

         Gifts of challenge and of care;

All these gifts our Christ has given

         To his people everywhere.

 

So we live in sacred body,

         Speaking truth in holy love,

Growing always in our Savior,

         Into Christ our Head above.

Let us all praise our Creator;

         Let us praise our Savior true;

Let us praise the Holy Spirit

         In all things we say and do.

 

 

TEXT: Charles Spence Freeman, June 2021, after Ephesians 4:1-16.

MUSIC: Tune HOLY MANNA, William Moore's Columbian Harmony, 1825

 

 

Born of a liturgy writing workshop at the 2021 Montreat Music & Worship conference on the epistle reading for Ordinary 18B. What can I say? Hymns are liturgy, as far as I’m concerned. Now (three years later), it has a nice stable tune as well.





 






Live in the love of Jesus

Live in the love of Jesus; be rooted in his love! 

Take strength in your whole being with power from above. 

With riches of God’s glory, with Holy Spirit’s grace,

Live out the love of Jesus in this and every place.

 

Live in the love of Jesus; be grounded in his love!

Know Christ in your whole being with power from above.

Let Christ’s own holy presence through yearning faith draw near,

And fill you with his deep love, the love that casts out fear.

 

Live in the love of Jesus; live ready for his love!

Know deep in your own being this power from above. 

This love beyond all knowing, God’s fullness holding sway;

Live out the love of Jesus in this and every day.

 

 

Text: Charles Spence Freeman, July 2021 (after Ephesians 3:14-21)

Music: Tune WEBB, George J. Webb, 1837.

 

 

I have sometimes compared my writing process to cooking in a crock pot, one that involves getting all the ingredients together and giving them plenty of time to cook together. In this case, the cooking period more resembled that of a barbecue pit (where “low and slow” is key) than a crock pot. As with my cooking experiences with slow smoking, this text only came together after I had largely given up.

 





Monday, July 8, 2024

Remember who you were

Remember who you were before Christ came

to set you in his new eternal frame; 

and how you live in Jesus without blame:

Alleluia!

 

Remember how you lived before that day, 

with only futile deeds to make your way; 

then Jesus made for you a whole new day!

Alleluia!

 

Remember how you lived in enmity

with those who saw our God, but differently;

now reconciled for all eternity!

Alleluia!

 

Now we are reconciled in God's good plan,

God's doing since before the world began; 

now let this unity the whole world span.

Amen!

 

 

TEXT: Charles Spence Freeman, July 2024, loosely after Ephesians 2:11-22.

MUSIC: Tune ENGELBERG, Charles Villiers Stanford, 1904; alt.

 

 

Ephesians can present some challenges for hymn adaption; some passages can get a little dense (as is certainly true in Paul's epistles), but without the Pauline vividness or excitedness. Still, there are threads that can be pulled or traced through the passage and brought out for hymnic emphasis.





Monday, July 1, 2024

Two hymns from three years ago...

 Three years ago I was able to attend the Presbyterian Association of Musicians' Worship and Music Conference at Montreat. The preacher for the week was Rev. Cecelia Armstrong. Two of her sermons, on consecutive days, touched off the two hymns noted below. Rev. Armstrong (I have met her but I don't know that I'm close enough to call her CeCe) was just elected Co-Moderator of the 226th General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church (USA), which makes this a Presbyterian-style "brush with fame" for me, I guess. 


The reign of Christ compels us to bear a witness true

To glorify our Savior in all we say and do.

The Lord, who in our living is sovereign above all, 

Compels and draws us always to live into this call. 

 

As Christ first bore good witness to God’s almighty power, 

So we are charged to sound forth in this and every hour.

With calls to truth and justice, with words of peace and love,

We give our testimony to our good God above.

 

By Spirit’s power unyielding we bear that witness true,

Not just with words but actions that we are called to do.

In work that lifts up God’s own that this world calls “the least,” 

We call the world to gather at God’s own holy feast.

 

For God our king and ruler, all that we have, we give. 

Our witness is embodied in every way we live.

So let us join our living to words of love and grace,

That Christ’s own holy justice may reign in every place.


TEXT: Charles Spence Freeman, June 2021.

MUSIC: Tune AURELIA, Samuel Sebastian Wesley, 1864.

 

 

Original note: This text was provoked by a sermon by Rev. Cecilia Armstrong and service given at the Presbyterian Association of Musicians Worship and Music Conference at Montreat Conference Center in North Carolina on June 29, 2021. The scripture from Revelation 1:4b-8, in particular the reference to Christ as “the faithful witness” in verse 5, provided the starting point for the sermon (at least as I understood it) and this hymn as well. With some references to the Parable of the Sheep and Goats added as the hymn kept developing, it also can be used for Christ the King/Reign of Christ Sunday, Year A.































So Jesus came to Bethany when his dear friend had died,

And Martha, Mary, all their friends, and even Jesus cried.

So those who watched his sorrow flow knew how he loved the man,

But when the tears had shed their last, the miracles began.

 

Then Jesus told those standing there, “Now roll the stone away.”

Poor Martha’s fears he brushed aside; such doubt could not betray. 

Then, lifting up a prayer above that all could see and hear,

Jesus called out to his dear friend, “Oh, Lazarus, come out here!”

 

Now Lazarus heard the Lord’s command and from his bier did rise.

His body once bound to the earth now stretched out toward the skies.

But still his hands and feet were bound; he could not walk away. 

His yearn to flee the yawning tomb the graveclothes did betray.

 

So Jesus told those standing there to tear those bonds aside.

They loosed the graveclothes, freed the man, his life now open wide.

So when you find the bonds of sin are all you feel and see,

Remember risen Lazarus; remember you are free.

 

 

TEXT: Charles Spence Freeman, July 2021, after John 11.

MUSIC: Tune SALVATION, Kentucky Harmony, 1816.

 

 

Original note: Another hymn provoked by another worship service (same preacher) at the Presbyterian Association of Musicians Worship & Music Conference. I don’t know if it’s the mountain air or what, but things are coming forth this week. The scripture is part of the gospel for Lent 5A, I think, which might be helpful in the future.