Categories
Catechesis

The Purpose of Hymns during the Reformation: Part 3

By Monica Berndt

The Purpose of Hymns for the Reformation: Part 3

Luther believed that “music was an ideal means to come to know and proclaim the mystery of God.”1 By placing hymns that the congregation could sing within the set structure of the Mass, he changed its purpose so that it educated the common people instead of making them mere spectators.2 Luther began by drawing on the Psalms for inspiration when composing hymns, because he believed that the Psalmists also understood the connection between God’s Word, music, and their ability to affect and teach humans.1 They helped draw people to the promises of God and were the earliest hymns of the church. Since singing Psalms was acceptable during the Mass, songs about God’s Word and the teachings of Christianity were equally as acceptable in Luther’s eyes. He progressed from writing hymns based solely on Biblical texts to hymns like Vater Unser im Himmelreich which taught doctrine as well. He believed that everyone could and should have access to music during the services because music was created by God for all people to enjoy.3 This justified the use of hymns in the church service, and more importantly, justified the ability of people outside the clergy to participate in the service as more than just observers. By allowing the congregation to participate in worship, Luther’s music became propaganda for spreading the Gospel across Europe.

The use of the vernacular was key to propagating doctrine. Luther emphasized that worship should be understood by the people participating in it, which meant that when he and other composers of his time composed hymns for their German speaking churches, they composed them in German.4 Luther’s German hymns brought people to him because they wanted to learn about the things they had been told to believe. Vater Unser im Himmelreich taught people the meaning of prayer, something they had been told to do without really understanding why it was important. Many of Luther’s other hymns outlined other parts of the Small Catechism, and others, such as Ein Feste Burg ist Unser Gott, simply taught people about the attributes of God. Luther did not believe that Biblical teachings were too complicated for ordinary people to understand. In fact, it was because common people did not understand the Bible that the church had been able to teach doctrines that Luther argued were Biblically false. The end of the second stanza of Vater Unser im Himmelreich translates to “let no false doctrines us pervert; all poor, deluded souls convert.”3 The main focus of these hymns was to teach people, and Luther’s concern that people receive proper teaching fueled his desire to spread this doctrine though the medium he felt best served both God and the people.

Sources:

1 Loewe, J. Andreas. “Why Do Lutherans Sing? Lutherans, Music, and the Gospel in the First Century of the Reformation.” Church History, vol 82, no. 1. (2013): 69–89. Accessed April 16, 2017.

2 Herl, Joseph. Worship Wars in Early Lutheranism: Choir, Congregation, and Three Centuries of Conflict. New York: Oxford University Press, 2004.

3 Leaver, Robin A.. Luther’s Liturgical Music: Principles and Implications. Grand Rapids, Michigan: William B. Eerdmans Publishing Company, 2007.

4 Schalk, Carl. Music in Early Lutheranism. Saint Louis: Concordia Academic Press, 2001.

Monica Berndt is the music director at Messiah Lutheran Church in Seattle, WA and studies music and history at the University of Washington. This is the first part of a paper written for her Medieval Music History course last spring. She can be reached at acinomtdnreb@gmail.com.

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Gospeled Boldly

Two Women – Gospeled Boldly #105

Forget deathbed conversions—Paul converts others on his own quasi-deathbed! In this episode, Pastor Eric Brown and Thomas Lemke read about how Paul came to the Galatians. Then they observe the contrast between Sarah and Hagar, the free woman and the slave, and their respective offspring.

In the Backwards Life, Pastor Brown talks about the phrase “everything happens for a reason.”

This episode covers Galatians 4:12-5:12.


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Categories
Life Issues

Ironic-er and Ironic-er… or Something Like That

 

A transgender man, Thomas Beattie, who made headlines after announcing he was pregnant, has given birth to a baby girl at a hospital in Oregon, the U.S. the People magazine reported.

Thomas Beattie, 34, who was born a woman, legally changed his gender undergoing hormone treatment and realignment surgery 10 years ago. But although he had his breasts removed he retained his female reproductive organs.

Beattie, who lives with his 45-year-old wife, Nancy, was cited in the People as saying, “The only thing different about me is that I can’t breastfeed my baby. But a lot of mothers don’t.”

Beattie’s announcement of his pregnancy caused a sensation on the Oprah Winfrey Show in April. He said the decision was made to get pregnant as his wife was unable to give birth following a hysterectomy.

 

So Tracy Lagondino became Thomas Beattie. She apparently felt like she was really, truly a male deep down inside. She took lots of male hormones to counteract her naturally occurring female hormones and had her girl bits cut off and the remaining stuff fashioned to resemble boy bits…but she retained the girl parts inside.

Somewhere along the line, Thomas met Nancy and they got married (because it’s legal and all). Now Nancy, who has always been and still remains Nancy, had her inside girl stuff removed for health reasons a long time ago, still had her outside girl stuff.

Thomas and Nancy wanted to have a family. But since Nancy was unable to become pregnant – even if she was married to an actual man with real man parts inside and out – Thomas generously decided to lend her his uterus. (It’s not like he was using it, after all.) A baby was conceived via intrauterine insemination (IUI), with an anonymous male donor providing the manly ingredients for the couple. Their daughter was born on June 29, 2008 – via natural childbirth even, since Thomas apparently also retained the important parts that connect the inside girl parts to the outside girl parts.

Despite years of taking hormones and living outwardly as a man, Beattie maintained that he retained his female sex organs because he intended one day to get pregnant.” (ABC News)

Uh…

So now Nancy has been taking lots of female hormones since she doesn’t have the female parts to produce them naturally so that she can induce lactation to breastfeed the baby that her husband bore with another man’s ingredients.

Now that’s teamwork!

…but somehow I just don’t think this is quite what God had in mind…

by Sandra Ostapowich

Categories
Catechesis

The Irony of being “Lutheran”

Rev. Mark Buetow

Martin Luther the monk. October 31. 95 Theses. The Diet of Worms. “I will not recant; Here I stand, so help me God.” Knight George. Popes. Councils. Excommunication. A staged kidnapping. Throwing an inkwell at the devil. Threats of being burned at the stake. A scholar and Bible translator. Wittenburg. Saxony. Augsburg. If you are familiar with the story of Martin Luther and the Reformation, you will recognize many of these images in the life of Martin Luther and the “Lutheran” Reformers. But even if you aren’t aware of all this history, that doesn’t matter. As exciting as these things are and as a great a story as they tell, the Reformation and being “Lutheran” isn’t about any of that. The irony of the Reformation and “daring to be Lutheran” is that it’s only about one thing. One person. Not Martin Luther. And not you.

It’s about Jesus Christ.

More specifically, it is about Jesus Christ who is true God, begotten of the Father, and true man, born of the virgin Mary who died for your sins on the cross of Calvary on Good Friday and rose from the dead on Easter. That’s what Martin Luther, the Reformation and anything genuinely “Lutheran” is all about.

The Reformation and being “Lutheran” is about Jesus Christ who gives to you the forgiveness He won for you on the cross in the waters of Holy Baptism, the Words of Holy Absolution, the preaching and teaching of the Holy Gospel and His body and blood in His Holy Supper. There is an unbreakable connection between what Jesus did for you and how He gives it to you and makes it yours by His Word, water, body and blood as the Holy Spirit calls you to faith and keeps you in that faith as He keeps you in His church.

Lutherans boast in those Reformation “solas” that confess we are saved by GRACE ALONE, apart from our good works or earning or deserving anything from God. This is through FAITH ALONE which is not some choice or decision but the gift of the Spirit by which we trust in Christ and His promises. This is revealed to us in the SCRIPTURES ALONE which are God’s Holy Word and teach and give us everything we need of Jesus to believe that He is the Christ and to have life in His Name. All of this is to boast and confess in CHRIST ALONE who has accomplished our salvation, delivers our salvation, conquered our enemies, seats us with Him in the heavenly places and will come again and raise us from the dead on the Last Day.

Lutherans rejoice to confess that they are “Christians” in a world full of religions of works, self-improvement, self-worship, and vague spiritualities. Lutherans rejoice to be called “Christians” in a world that hates Christ, doesn’t believe in God and would even persecute and harm them. But Lutherans also rejoice to confess that they are “Lutherans” when this helps distinguish them from other Christian churches which may have taken a wrong turn in their teaching. For example: to be “Lutheran” is to confess the gift that Jesus gives even to babies in the waters of baptism. To say we’re Lutheran reminds others that is what we teach in contrast to churches which don’t believe what Jesus says about Holy Baptism.

To be “Lutheran” is to humbly confess Christ and His gifts to others who may not be sure, who may be in doubt, and who are troubled by their sins. But it also means to boast mightily in Christ and His gifts against those who willfully twist God’s Word or teach falsely when they ought to know better.

Do you get it? The Lutheran Reformation and being “Lutheran” is about one thing and that’s NOT Martin Luther. It’s about just One Person. Jesus Christ. Savior. Lord. Prophet. Priest. King. Word. Lamb. The One who is about nothing other than taking away the sin of the world and delivering His forgiveness by His holy gifts. Our Lutheran heritage is a gift not because it gives us some exclusive tie-in to some great events in the history of the Western world. It’s a gift because it brings Christ to us and calls us to Him in repentance and faith. And that’s a gift not just from history but on into eternity. Happy Reformation from Higher Things!

Categories
HT Legacy-cast

Episode 109: October 29th, 2010

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Episode 109 of HT-Radio is a special Reformation edition. Pr. Borghardt is joined by Rev. Brent Kuhlman of Trinity Lutheran Church in Murdock, NE. Pr. Kuhlman covers the scriptural view of Faith, Salvation, Justification and Sanctification as he talks about Martin Luther and the problems that he saw in the Medieval Church. Listen in and learn how the Reformation was all about Christ alone!

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HT Legacy-cast

Episode 108: October 22nd, 2010

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During Episode 108 of HT-Radio, Pr. Borghardt is joined by two more sectional teachers from the Given Conferences. During the first half of the Episode Rev. Shawn Kumm of Zion Lutheran Church in Laramie, WY goes through his sectional, “Going to Hell with Jesus.” Then Pr. Borghardt is joined by Rev. John Hill of Mount Hope Lutheran Church in Caspar, WY. As he goes through his In-Depth Sectional “Being a Real Man – According to the Bible.”

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HT Legacy-cast

Episode 252: October 25th, 2013

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This week on HT-Radio, Pr. Borghardt and Jon talk to Jon’s sister, Bekah Kohlmeier. She talks about being a Lutheran College Student. Then during Free Time Pr. Borghardt and Jon rejoice in the Reformation by talking about some of the major events in Luther’s live.

Categories
Current Events

Wanna Celebrate Reformation? Dare to be Lutheran!

by The Rev. Mark Buetow

The rally cry of Higher Things is “Dare to be Lutheran!” In October, Lutherans celebrate Reformation Day , the day when Dr. Martin Luther posted his 95 Theses on the church door in Wittenberg to call the church back to preaching God’s grace through Jesus Christ. Martin Luther was ready to give his life for the Gospel of the forgiveness of sins for Jesus’ sake alone, just as many more martyrs before him had given their lives for confessing Jesus. Today, however, we live in a world where it is unacceptable to say that one religion is right and others are wrong. Today, even Christians are timid when it comes to saying that Christ is the only way to heaven. Even more, some Lutherans call themselves “Lutheran-Christians” as if to emphasize that somehow the two aren’t quite the same. Against all this, we say, “Dare to be Lutheran!” And just what does it mean to “Dare to be Lutheran?” Read on!

“Dare to be Lutheran” means that you dare to be a Christian, a follower of Christ. It means that we confess that Jesus Christ is the ONLY Way, Truth and Life. He alone is true God and true man who was born of the Virgin Mary to carry our sins to the cross of Calvary and die for them. To be Lutheran is to believe, teach, confess, celebrate, rejoice in and live by Christ and Him crucified. It is to joyfully declare to the world that the God who was killed on the cross and rose again is the only true God and Savior. To dare to be Lutheran is to have all of your hopes and confidence in Jesus, who has rescued us from sin, death, the devil, hell, the curse of the Law and the judgment of God. It is to trust in the Jesus who has given us forgiveness of sins, life, salvation, and made us children of God with an eternal inheritance. Dare to be Lutheran? It’s all about Christ!

“Dare to be Lutheran” means that you live only by Christ’s gifts. It means confessing the salvation that God gives in Holy Baptism where you are born again from above by water, word and Spirit and become God’s child by His grace. Daring to be Lutheran is about believing that by the pastor whom God calls, Jesus Himself forgives our sins and no one in heaven or hell or on earth can say otherwise. It means that all of our religion and piety and worship and believing and doctrine and teaching come from one place and one place only: The Holy Scriptures, the pure “fountain of Israel” which are God’s holy Word. Daring to be Lutheran means having a hunger and thirst for the body and blood of Jesus at His altar. His Supper is no symbolic meal but a true and living gift of the very body and blood that were pierced and flowed on the cross for your sins. Dare to be Lutheran? It’s all about Christ’s gifts!

“Dare to be Lutheran” means that you speak, sing and listen for Christ and God’s Word in your worship and when you hear teaching. It means singing the hymns of the faith with gusto, singing the liturgy with joy and worshiping not mostly to tell God how great He is, but to receive from Him His holy and saving gifts. Daring to be Lutheran is all about hearing our pastors teach us Christ from the Holy Scriptures, call us to repentance for our sins, and teach us how Christ lives for others in and through us. It means asking the hard questions and relating all that we hear and learn to Christ and his salvation. Daring to be Lutheran means rejecting what is false and flashy for what is true and genuine. Dare to be Lutheran? It’s all about Christ’s Word and teaching!

“Dare to be Lutheran” also means that you enjoy the creation that is a gift from your heavenly Father, even while knowing this life is passing away for a better life to come. Daring to be Lutheran means enjoying the gifts of this world in music and art and friends and activities. It means being hardcore sports fans or skilled video game players. It means enjoying good food and fun entertainment. It means being silly and having fun with friends. It means having a good time without having to fall into the excesses of a world that has no heavenly perspective. Daring to be Lutheran recognizes that all of these things are gifts from our heavenly Father, given to us for Jesus’ sake. Dare to be Lutheran? It’s all about every good gift given to you through Jesus Christ. 

So as Reformation Day approaches, “Dare to be Lutheran!” As St. Peter says, be ready to give a defense for the hope that is in you! It’s Christ. By His cross and through water, word, body and blood, Jesus has saved you from your sins. He continues to forgive them and has prepared a place for you in the life to come. Dare to be Lutheran? You bet! Dare to be Lutheran! For Christ is Lord of all!

Categories
HT Legacy-cast

Episode 207: October 19th, 2012

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Episode 207 of HT-Radio, kicks off with Free Time where Jon Kohlmeier asks a questions about a statement he’s heard recently surrounding the political debates, “Jesus for President.” What do Lutherans think about that and what do the scriptures teach. Then Pr. Borghardt and Jon are joined by Pr. Mark Buetow who tackles the third Sola of the Reformation – Sola Scriptura. He talks about what that means, how it applied to the Reformation and how tradition, the church and your pastor, play into it.

Categories
Pop. Culture & the Arts

Rhythm of Faith: God’s Gifts During the Reformation

Bethany Woelmer

Can you hear it? It’s still beating—the heart of Lutheranism still flowing through time, not just once during the Reformation service we anticipate every year, but from our new heart of faith. Can you hear it? It’s there in God’s Word, renewed in your baptism, restored by faith in the Lord’s Supper, refreshed by the words of absolution. Can you hear it? The Law pounds into us our need for a Savior, and the Gospel frees us with a new rhythm of faith, flowing forth forgiveness of sins and love for the neighbor. It is the beautiful sound of God’s love to us in Christ.

Oh, and you thought I was talking about music! Yet without the heart of faith, how could we have received such strong hymns we can hear even now as we read them? “A mighty fortress is our God, a trusty shield and weapon,” “Dear Christians, one and all rejoice with exultation springing,” “Lord, keep us steadfast in your Word,” or “These are the holy ten commands,” just to name a few. If they’re stuck in your head the rest of the day, you can thank me later.

We all know Martin Luther as the leader of the Protestant Reformation, a faithful preacher of the Word, and a strong defender of the truth and clarity of Scriptures against the false doctrine that clouds the message of forgiveness that rings forth to all nations. Did you know that Luther was also an integral part in the music of the Reformation that began a new musical movement, affecting the church here and now?

Martin Luther’s life in the monastery and as a priest gave him the education and experience of singing within the church. Luther became completely familiar with the ritual of seven services within the Augustinian monastery at Erfurt, where he was devoted to the religious exercises of singing, praying, and other ascetic practices that were required to the sanctification of the self. Early Luther, as taught from early church fathers, would have regarded music in mystical or allegorical speculation, meaning that music was emphasized as a science rather than as a performed art.

One of the ways in which Luther sought to preserve the truth of the Scriptures was through music. The new musical movement of the Reformation did not mean that Luther threw away the old copies of music and started over. Certainly not! He used the traditions of the past but altered them in new ways and with new teachings. This change of attitude and thought toward music affected the style and place of music in relation to the worship and life of the church. Instead of creating a theology for music through mystical speculation and self-sanctification, Luther sought to create music for theology, ultimately for the glory of God. Music was regarded as the handmaiden to the Gospel and deserved the highest praise next to the Word of God.

This living voice of the Gospel (viva vox evangelii) thus served as the church’s “sung confession” in proclamation and praise for what Christ has done for us. It became lyrical, congregational, and confessional. The Reformation transformed spectators into participants in the dialog of the worship service between God and His people. Melodies in the form of Lutheran chorales were constructed—not on a particular period structure or harmonic scheme but rather they “enlivened the text,” interpreting it according to the important stresses placed on the important words of the stanza. For example, in the hymn, “A Mighty Fortress,” Luther emphasized the German words feste, Burg, Gott, gute, and waffen through the rhythmic stress of music to hammer into us the teaching of God as our mighty fortress, shield, and weapon. Sing it, and you can feel it, too!

Our rhythm of faith creates a rhythm of strength and weakness throughout the Christian life. Luther recognized this in his preaching of Law and Gospel. Music during the Reformation reflected this rhythm of preaching by its own rhythmic vitality that served to bring vigorous encouragement to our confession. Faith is an ever-flowing fountain of the New Song of the Gospel in the life of forgiveness; therefore, finding delight in hymns and liturgy that support this New Song encourages us to sing as forgiven sinners in Christ. Luther remarked, “We often sing a good song over again from the beginning, especially one we have sung with pleasure and joy.”

Luther not only viewed music as a liturgical song through the participation of all the people in worship, but he also viewed music as the song of the royal priests, meaning all Christians—that means all of you! Therefore, praise, proclamation, and adoration was not just for the priests, choirs, and leaders of worship, but included the whole people of God. Thus, many Gregorian chant melodies were adopted into hymns, such as “Come, Holy Ghost, Creator Blest,” “Christ Jesus Lay in Death’s Strong Bands,” “O Lord, We Praise Thee,” and “Lord, Keep Us Steadfast in Your Word.” Hymns were also written in catechetical nature, in order to teach, bind, and aid memory. Luther’s hymn, “We All Believe in One True God,” teaches the creed, “Our Father, Who from Heaven Above” teaches the Lord’s Prayer, and “These Are the Holy Ten Commands” teaches the Ten Commandments.

So, there you have it! Luther grew up listening to music that accompanied the Mass, which was perverted into a good work. He instead sought to use music as proclamation and praise. Luther regarded external ceremonies as necessary, good, and beautiful, but stressed the importance of their edification to the truth of Scripture. The rhythm of faith from the Reformation still continues, and you, as the Church, can contribute to the spread of the Gospel’s message every time you sing those treasured hymns and liturgies in all truth and purity. Can you hear it? Forgiveness still rings forth! Though you may fail to uphold the Gospel, receive God’s gifts, or sing with delight, Christ still died for you and gives you new life in Him. As Luther clearly states, “I have no one to sing and chant about but Christ, in whom alone I have everything. Him alone I proclaim, in Him alone I glory, for He has become my Salvation, that is, my victory.” That’s certainly something to sing about!