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TulaneLSU's Top 10 hymns for Holy Thursday and Good Friday

Posted on 4/7/20 at 2:48 pm
Posted by TulaneLSU
Member since Aug 2003
Member since Dec 2007
13298 posts
Posted on 4/7/20 at 2:48 pm
Dear Friends,

This is the strangest Holy Week of my life. In many ways, it does not feel like Holy Week. Without the structure of religious communities congregating and celebrating as a unified body, we must be deliberate in remembering what this week is. It truly brings tears to my eyes and crushes my heart that my physical body will not be able to attend services with my sisters and brothers in Christ this week. I have never in my life missed Holy Week services. Perhaps you have never attended. Perhaps you too are missing for the first time also.

I am in the process of preparing the Holy Thursday Passover Seder, the meal we eat to remember God protecting his chosen people and their first born just before the Exodus and liberation from Egyptian slavery. For Christians, we especially remember that special Seder meal that Jesus celebrated with his friends, even the one who betrayed him. Truly, even enemies can become friends, with our God. It was the night before Good Friday, in the Upper Room. Jesus broke bread and poured the fruit of the vine, instituting the Lord's Supper, our Communion, and Eucharist. I will be without the voices of my beloved community and without the beautiful organ of my home church. But I am still able to listen to and sing these beautiful songs.

Celebrating and reflecting on this most holy of weeks can be facilitated and enhanced through holy music. I am making a playlist with my Top 10 Maundy Thursday and Good Friday hymns. Perhaps you too will make a list, so that I could learn from you and be uplifted in that sharing.


10. Ah, Holy Jesus
Lutheranism is essentially Augustinian Protestantism. No where is this clearer than with Johann Heermann's 1630 hymn, Herzliebster Jesu. The British poet laureate, Robert Bridges, translated it for us in 1897. It is a perfect confessional hymn, one I commend as an opening hymn to a home service if you are worshiping at home this week.

9. Jesus, Remember Me
There were two others crucified with Jesus that Good Friday. Both criminals, one mocked Jesus, while the other saw that Jesus had done no wrong. As he hung on the cross next to Jesus, he pleaded, "Jesus, remember me when you come into your kingdom" (Luke 23:42). As sinners, all Christians pray to Christ that same entreaty. This song was first published in 1981 by the Taize Community in France, and was written by Jacques Berthier, the masterful organist at St. Ignace Church, Paris. We have confidence that Jesus surely does remember us.

8. When I Survey the Wondrous Cross
Isaac Watts was one of the greatest English hymn writers. This classic, written in 1707, is based on Galatians 6.

7. Were You There and Were You There, by Johnny Cash
First appearing in print in 1899, this slave spiritual has a much longer history that we will never know in this world. The Congregationalist minister William Barton put the words and music on paper, but whoever wrote this inspired piece did so in a place of deep agony, even torture. When I hear the repeated "tremble" my soul trembles knowing the pain that inspired it. I tremble, tremble. Lord, I was there. Please forgive me.

6. Ubi Caritas
"Where charity and love are, there God is." The origins of this hymn are largely unknown. It was likely a Gregorian chant. Around 1960, Paul Benoit, a Roman Catholic priest and organist, composed the music and expanded the chant, basing it on St. Paul's classic 1 Corinthians 13 treatise on love.

5. O Sacred Head Sore Wounded
Most Americans will know this as Sacred Head Now Wounded. Our version comes from a Presbyterian minister, James Waddel Alexander, who edited in 1830 the older English version by John Gambold. Gambold was a lover of Salve mundi salutare, a medieval poem written either by Bernard of Clairvaux or Arnulf of Leuven, and translated it into English in 1752. Each of this poem's stanzas describe the seven body parts of Christ wounded on the Cross. The slow and reflective tune comes from Bach, as a part of his sacred St Matthew Passion (1727).

4. Let All Mortal Flesh Keep Silence
Some liturgists insist that this is an Advent hymn, but I believe it is a perfect Communion hymn at Maundy Thursday or Good Friday. Historians believe this hymn was written 1600 years ago, taken from the Syrian or Jerusalem church. The English language has Gerard Moultrie to thank for translating and paraphrasing and publishing it in 1864. He titled it Prayer of the Cherubic Hymn.

3. Ave Verum Corpus
Mozart finished this piece just six months before his death in 1791. He did not intend for it to be used during Holy Week, but it matches the mood perfectly, and I highly commend it to you. He based the words on a Latin communion hymn attributed to Pope Innocent VI about 700 years ago. Many of my fellow Protestants object to the theology of this hymn, arguing that it too strongly pushes for a transsubstantial view of the Eucharist.

2. Miserere mei, Deus
Gregorio Allegri composed this beautiful hymn in 1638. Its scriptural inspiration is Psalm 51: Have mercy on me, O God. Legend has it that the hymn could only be sung once a year and only in the Sistine Chapel. Mozart, however, at the age of 14, heard it in 1770 and memorized it. He wrote it down and had it published, and the music, which some have called "the most beautiful piece of music ever written" spread throughout the world. If you have never heard it sung in a large church or cathedral with good acoustics and singers, you have truly missed one of the most glorious pleasures and treasures in human history.

1. What Wondrous Love Is This
We do not know the author of this most touching of songs. It first appeared in the hymnals of American Methodists and Baptists in 1811. The tune actually is an ancient English ballad about Captain Kidd, a pirate. Its incorporation in the Christian hymnary shows "what you intended...for evil, God intended for good." All things can be sanctified through our Christ, who loves us so wondrously. When from death I'm free, I'll sing and joyful be, and through eternity, I'll sing on, I'll sing on!

May your Holy Week celebrations be somber, sincere, and beautiful. You are deeply valued and loved, my dear friends.

Faith, Hope, and Love,
TulaneLSU

P.S. The Cherubikon of the Eastern Church is also a beautiful and divine hymn. I waver on if it should be in the Top 10. Based on the beauty of the music and the strength of its theology, it should. However, it is not well known to my past, so I leave it as an addendum. At your mystical supper, LORD.
This post was edited on 4/7/20 at 2:52 pm
Posted by CAD703X
Liberty Island
Member since Jul 2008
77945 posts
Posted on 4/7/20 at 2:49 pm to
no devil he's got a slippery shoe no care.
Posted by JetsetNuggs
Member since Jun 2014
13882 posts
Posted on 4/7/20 at 2:51 pm to
I was about to come rip this thread, but this is about Jesus the GOAT, so I'll let it go.
Posted by danilo
Member since Nov 2008
20062 posts
Posted on 4/7/20 at 2:51 pm to
(no message)
Posted by Hogwarts
Arkansas, USA
Member since Sep 2015
18044 posts
Posted on 4/7/20 at 2:51 pm to
Isaac Watts was the GOAT. Love “When I survey” but my favorite Watts hymn is “Alas and did my Savior bleed”. Thanks for sharing
Posted by Bamboozles
BR
Member since Jul 2008
2302 posts
Posted on 4/7/20 at 2:52 pm to
I was gonna make a smart arse comment but since this is a post regarding something religious I am gonna refrain. Carry on!
Posted by LSUJML
BR
Member since May 2008
45187 posts
Posted on 4/7/20 at 2:54 pm to
Because He Lives by Alabama

Best Easter hymn imo
Bonus that it’s Alabama, GOAT country group
Posted by Jim Rockford
Member since May 2011
98128 posts
Posted on 4/7/20 at 2:55 pm to
Just a Closer Walk With Thee

This was my grandmother's favorite In The Garden
Posted by ldts
Member since Aug 2015
2677 posts
Posted on 4/7/20 at 3:28 pm to
No Old Rugged Cross?
This post was edited on 4/7/20 at 3:29 pm
Posted by bayoubengals88
LA
Member since Sep 2007
18883 posts
Posted on 4/7/20 at 3:35 pm to
Truly a fantastic thread friend.
My wife and I have normally taken a camping trip during the end of Holy Week, but this year I was really looking forward to attending my first Maundy Thursday service. I have a strong desire to leave the sanctuary in silence and join in an a cappella outdoor singing of When I Survey. But sadly, God did not intend it.

Your thoughts on And Can it Be? One of my favorites...
This post was edited on 4/7/20 at 3:37 pm
Posted by DomincDecoco
of no fixed abode
Member since Oct 2018
10822 posts
Posted on 4/7/20 at 4:06 pm to
One foot in the grave

The other on a banana peel
Posted by ellishughtiger
70118
Member since Jul 2004
21135 posts
Posted on 4/7/20 at 4:13 pm to
TL you’ve been pretty active lately. Have you given up on your vaccine?
Posted by soccerfüt
Location: A Series of Tubes
Member since May 2013
65525 posts
Posted on 4/7/20 at 4:14 pm to
Praise to the Lord, the Almighty a hymn based on Joachim Neander's German hymn "Lobe den Herren, den mächtigen König der Ehren", published in 1680.

The text paraphrases Psalms 103 & 150.

Lobe den Herren, den mächtigen König der Ehren!
Meine geliebete Seele, das ist mein Begehren.
Kommet zuhauf!
Psalter und Harfe, wacht auf!
Lasset den Lobgesang hören!


Catherine Winkworth published her English translation of Neander's hymn in 1863.

A portion of her translation-

“Ponder anew
What the Almighty can do,
Who with His love doth befriend thee”
Posted by terd ferguson
Darren Wilson Fan Club President
Member since Aug 2007
108733 posts
Posted on 4/7/20 at 4:14 pm to
Posted by uway
Member since Sep 2004
33109 posts
Posted on 4/7/20 at 4:18 pm to
quote:


7. Were You There and Were You There, by Johnny Cash
First appearing in print in 1899, this slave spiritual has a much longer history that we will never know in this world. The Congregationalist minister William Barton put the words and music on paper, but whoever wrote this inspired piece did so in a place of deep agony, even torture. When I hear the repeated "tremble" my soul trembles knowing the pain that inspired it. I tremble, tremble. Lord, I was there. Please forgive me


For me this is easily the most moving song played in Catholic Churches.
Posted by Nonetheless
Luka doncic = goat
Member since Jan 2012
33000 posts
Posted on 4/7/20 at 4:21 pm to
god please protect me from corona
Posted by mauser
Orange Beach
Member since Nov 2008
21440 posts
Posted on 4/7/20 at 5:18 pm to
The Cherubikon is beautiful
Posted by TulaneLSU
Member since Aug 2003
Member since Dec 2007
13298 posts
Posted on 4/7/20 at 5:59 pm to
Friend,

The vaccine is, like most things in my life, an utter failure. Nothing has worked on my mice. I regret to inform you I will likely stop experimenting soon unless there is a significant break through.

I cannot believe I did not include And Can It Be. That is a great selection. Thank you for including it.
Posted by bayoubengals88
LA
Member since Sep 2007
18883 posts
Posted on 4/8/20 at 8:20 am to
Listening to Thomas Tallis’s Music for Holy Week while reading our church Lenten Guide this fine morning!
Posted by TDsngumbo
Alpha Silverfox
Member since Oct 2011
41536 posts
Posted on 4/8/20 at 8:31 am to
Back Dat arse Up
This brings back wonderful memories of after church festivities when grandma would turn the jukebox up real loud
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