Sunday, August 9, 2009

In Praise of Unsung Verses


Last Sunday the opening hymn for sacrament meeting in our ward was #116, "Come, Follow Me". It's one of my favorite hymns, and perhaps one of yours, too. At the end of the fourth verse, as usual, the chorister sat down and the organist stopped playing and we went on with the rest of the meeting. After the opening prayer, with my hymn book still open to #116, I began to read the two verses we NEVER sing and I began to wonder why.
Get out a hymn book (you do have one at home, don't you, perhaps with your name on it?) and turn to Hymn #116.Take a few moments to read verses 5 and 6. Note how the poet brings the whole theme to a beautiful conclusion by the last words,repeating "Come, follow me." Note, too, how the poem extends the thought into the eternities. I think the hymn would take on a much more powerful meaning if we sang all six verses.
So why don't we?
As a former stake president back in Oregon was fond of saying, "In the essence of time...."
We must get on with the meeting, because we have to stay on schedule because there are lots of announcements and ward business to take care of and because we still have two more meetings coming up.
But, except for the sacrament, when are we, as a congregation, brought more in harmony (word chosen deliberately) than when we are singing together? Why, in a church where we pride ourselves (rightfully so) on our love for music in our servies, do we give short shrift to the words of such poets as Parley P. Pratt, Charles W. Penrose, and, most notably, Eliza R. Snow?
It makes me wonder what those gifted poets must be thinking when they hear us cut their thoughts short.
I did a bit of research (i.e. looked in the hymn book) and found more than twenty hymns that have verses we rarely, if ever, hear sung in our meetings. For example:
#85 "How Firm a Foundation";
#100 "Nearer, My God, to Thee"
#145 "Prayer Is the Soul's Sincere Desire"
#195 "How Great the Wisdom and the Love"
etc., etc., etc.
Oh, I know I'm pleading a lost cause here. I don't really expect any ward music chairman anywhere, or any bishopric, or chorister, or organist (who is seldom consulted about what we sing) to start encouraging us to sing the whole hymn.
But I do have a suggestion that I hope some of you will consider. The next time your congregation sings a hymn where there are additional verses, take a moment during the meeting to quietly read "the rest of the story". I think you will be struck by how those unsung verses extend the range and bring a beautiful conclusion to the hymn.
Okay, now, all together ---you know the tune ---sing along with me:
"Be kind to your fine feathered friends
For a duck may be somebody's mother.
It lives in a place called a swamp,
Where it's always cold and damp.
Now you may think that this is the end,
Well it is."

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6 Comments:

At August 9, 2009 at 7:16 PM , Blogger andrea said...

Great thought, Grandpa! We really do leave out the full intended message of many hymns when we cut them off. If I could Caroline to hold still long enough for me to even sing a single verse, I'd take you up on your challenge to read the leftovers. Maybe I'll have to bring the program home with me and play through all of them on my own.

In our ward recently we sang #195 "How Great the Wisdom and the Love" for our sacrament song and they had us sing all six because the last two are the ones that actually talk about the sacrament. It was great!

I also read an article a while back by Orson Scott Card with a similar complaint. His least favorite that we cut off is "If You Could Hie to Kolob." He hates that we end with "there is no end to race" and was pleading for the general music committee to change that word to "grace." I thought he had a good point, too.

 
At August 9, 2009 at 7:46 PM , Anonymous dave said...

great idea. besides, the hymns are much better than 99 percent of the speakers anyways. next time i'm bishop or chorister [never] i'll be sure and follow your advice

 
At August 9, 2009 at 9:00 PM , Blogger The Oregonians said...

Dave, I love your comments. You say some things I feel like saying but never have the nerve. (e.g. "better than 99 percent of the speakers.")

 
At August 9, 2009 at 9:20 PM , Blogger Joey/Denny/Emma said...

The Danes always sing all of the verses; just a tradition. The music director in our last ward often had us sing all verses of sacrament hymns. It is quite nice.

In the "old" hymnbook (pre-1985 or so), the last two verses of "I Heard the Bells on Christmas Day" were down below and often not sung. So the congregation would end the song by singing, "For hate is strong and mocks the song of peace on earth good will to men." (Wow. Bummer.) All the verses are up top in the new version.

 
At August 12, 2009 at 7:20 AM , Blogger The Normal Mormon Husband said...

You're right. We normally have the congregation sing all verses on sacrament hymns because some of those verses are the most atonement-related of the hymn.

It would be much easier to sing all verses of all hymns if speakers would stick to their allotted times. Despite the best effort of most Bishoprics, many sacrament meetings runs long. This is understandably frustrating to the Sunday School and it is hard to extend the meetings that are already running long.

Good post. - Andrew

 
At August 12, 2009 at 8:52 PM , Blogger The Oregonians said...

Thanks, Bishop.

 

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