Difference between revisions of "Latter-day Saint Hymns"

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:The reason for the hymn's omission from the 1985 hymnbook isn’t completely clear, but a recent Salt Lake Tribune article gives some interesting information on the topic: “The most famous deletion was ‘Come, Thou Fount of Every Blessing,’ which committee members suspect would still be little-remembered among Mormons had not Mack Wilberg published his celebrated arrangement just a couple of months later.” It may have seemed like months, but Wilberg’s arrangement was actually published in 1993, several years after the 1985 hymnbook. This composition is one of his most celebrated works and has been sung by various choirs over the years. . . .
 
:The reason for the hymn's omission from the 1985 hymnbook isn’t completely clear, but a recent Salt Lake Tribune article gives some interesting information on the topic: “The most famous deletion was ‘Come, Thou Fount of Every Blessing,’ which committee members suspect would still be little-remembered among Mormons had not Mack Wilberg published his celebrated arrangement just a couple of months later.” It may have seemed like months, but Wilberg’s arrangement was actually published in 1993, several years after the 1985 hymnbook. This composition is one of his most celebrated works and has been sung by various choirs over the years. . . .
  
:The arrangement published of "Come, Thou Fount of Every Blessing" in older hymnbooks was simpler than Wilberg's arrangement we are used to hearing at general conference and it was among the rarely sung hymns in many LDS congregations at the time the 1985 edition was published. Something else to consider is the fact that over 6,000 hymns were submitted for consideration to be included in the hymnbook, and with room for just over 300 hymns, the LDS Church’s General Music Committee followed the Spirit in selecting hymns to include. [[Michael F. Moody|Michael Moody]], who was over the committee, said, "We had a very clear understanding of what our role was. The new book was to serve a worldwide community of Latter-day Saints. Foremost, it was to be a source of spiritual nourishment, not a museum piece for the artistically inclined."[https://www.thetabernaclechoir.org/articles/come-thou-fount-of-every-blessing-1985-hymnbook.html
+
:The arrangement published of "Come, Thou Fount of Every Blessing" in older hymnbooks was simpler than Wilberg's arrangement we are used to hearing at general conference and it was among the rarely sung hymns in many LDS congregations at the time the 1985 edition was published. Something else to consider is the fact that over 6,000 hymns were submitted for consideration to be included in the hymnbook, and with room for just over 300 hymns, the LDS Church’s General Music Committee followed the Spirit in selecting hymns to include. [[Michael F. Moody|Michael Moody]], who was over the committee, said, "We had a very clear understanding of what our role was. The new book was to serve a worldwide community of Latter-day Saints. Foremost, it was to be a source of spiritual nourishment, not a museum piece for the artistically inclined."[https://www.thetabernaclechoir.org/articles/come-thou-fount-of-every-blessing-1985-hymnbook.html]
  
 
The children’s organization of the Church (called the “Primary”) has its own songbook, called “The [[Children's Songbook]],” and new hymns and songs are written all the time for youth conferences and special events.
 
The children’s organization of the Church (called the “Primary”) has its own songbook, called “The [[Children's Songbook]],” and new hymns and songs are written all the time for youth conferences and special events.

Latest revision as of 13:48, 14 September 2024

In worship services of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, each meeting begins and ends with a hymn and a prayer. In addition, a hymn is sung during the preparation of the Sacrament (similar to communion). The Sacrament hymn focuses on the atonement of Jesus Christ, in order to help members begin to focus their own attention on the Savior as they partake of the Sacrament.

The preface to the(1985) hymnal specifies that the hymnal was meant to be used in the home as well. Families are encouraged to sing the songs as a family and to use them as lullabies for children.

Inspirational music is an essential part of our church meetings. The hymns invite the Spirit of the Lord, create a feeling of reverence, unify us as members, and provide a way for us to offer praises to the Lord.
Some of the greatest sermons are preached by the singing of hymns. Hymns move us to repentance and good works, build testimony and faith, comfort the weary, console the mourning, and inspire us to endure to the end (First Presidency Preface to Hymns).

Even many Latter-day Saints are surprised by the number of hymns in the hymnal of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (often inadvertently called the Mormon Church) that are not originally Latter-day Saint, but are sung throughout Christendom. In July 1830, shortly after the Church of Jesus Christ was organized, God directed Emma Hale Smith, wife of the prophet Joseph Smith, to compile a volume of sacred Christian hymns for the use of the Saints. This revelation is recorded in the Doctrine and Covenants, a collection of modern revelations.

And it shall be given thee, also, to make a selection of sacred hymns, as it shall be given thee, which is pleasing unto me, to be had in my church. For my soul delighteth in the song of the heart; yea, the song of the righteous is a prayer unto me, and it shall be answered with a blessing upon their heads (Doctrine and Covenants 25:11-12).

This task took some years for Emma to complete, as the Latter-day Saints suffered almost constant persecution and were forced to move from place to place. From the beginning of the restoration of the gospel, however, talented Latter-day Saints were writing their own praises to God in verse and music.

Mormon hymns
The 1985 Church Hymnal
The first hymns of the LDS Church were published by William Wines Phelps in June, 1832 in Independence, Missouri. These appeared as text only (no music) in The Evening and the Morning Star, the church’s semimonthly newspaper. Many of these lyrics were written by Phelps, while others were borrowed from various Protestant sources. The first of these hymns published by Phelps was “What Fair One is This.” [1]

In September 1835 Emma was again counseled to compile a hymn book. The volume created also lacked musical notations, was lyrics only, and printed in the cheapest manner possible. Hymns previously published in church periodicals were included. Less than a dozen of these hymnals currently exist, and they are very valuable to collectors. Church members sang the words to familiar tunes and sometimes a single song would be sung to several different tunes at different times and one tune might be applied to several different hymns. The hymnal was designed to be carried in a pocket, so it was very small. The hymnal contained just ninety songs, a mixture of newer music written by church members and traditional Protestant hymns.

In 1840, Brigham Young, Parley P. Pratt, and John Taylor published a words-only hymnal for the church in Manchester, England, where they were serving as missionaries, which they nicknamed the “Manchester Hymnal.” This volume went through many printings over a number of years (25 editions between 1840 and 1912). In this case, too, the Saints knew the tunes from memory, since the editions continued to be words only. It was a popular hymnal for the Saints while they crossed the plains to Utah Territory. The printing of the Manchester Hymnal eventually moved to Salt Lake City.

The next edition of a Church hymnal was printed in Nauvoo, in 1841. An expanded version of the Manchester hymnal, the new book contained 304 hymns (340 pages plus an index). The music was composed by five of the Church’s top musicians, all former or future conductors or organists for the Mormon Tabernacle Choir. Each was given one-fifth of the hymns and assigned to create a formal tune. There were several hundred hymns, so this process required some time to complete. Many of the songs were created for the Mormon Tabernacle Choir and so much of the book was choir-oriented. The process, which included meeting weekly to play their hymns to the others for critiquing, took three years.

A small Latter-day Saint hymnal was published in Vermont in 1844, and this one included music for eighteen hymns. Published in 1889, The Latter-day Saints’ Psalmody finally included music for the hymns. This edition was cross-referenced to the Manchester Hymnal. “Budding composers in the church were encouraged to submit new tunes to fit the new and old lyrics. Most of the old tunes were cast aside without ever having been committed to print, and the memory of them was quickly lost.” [2] Ninety-five of these hymns are still sung in the Church today.

Peripheral hymnbooks were compiled in 1908 and 1909 by Latter-day Saint mission presidents and the Deseret Sunday School. They contained hymns with simpler music and annotations that were melodic and easier to sing. The latter volume was especially popular. Another short volume was the “Songs of Zion.” Thus for a short time in the early 1900s, there were four hymnals for the Church. In 1927 the Church Music Committee combined hymns into one volume called “Latter-day Saint Hymns.” The volume contained 421 Hymns, 128 of which still appear in the 1985 Church hymnal. The Sunday School hymnal was used separately until 1948.

In 1948–1950 a new volume was published, which added the best hymns from the Sunday School hymnal, for a total of 391 hymns. The volume was titled “Hymns: The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.” About half of the hymns still came from non—Latter-day Saint sources.

The volume of hymns for the Church published in 1985 was published after the Church asked the Saints what hymns were their favorites and invited submissions of newly written hymns. This volume is called “Hymns of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.” In English this volume contains 341 hymns, with various iterations printed in many foreign languages. The volume includes hymns for mens-only and womens-only choruses. The hymns are organized generally around themes, with Christmas and Easter hymns clustered, sacrament hymns together, etc. Twenty-six hymns in the book are from the 1835 edition, but the tunes may be different.

One hymn from the Church’s earliest volume that has been left out of the newest hymnal is “Come Thou Fount of Every Blessing.” It has become immensely popular in the Church and is often sung by choirs, including the Mormon Tabernacle Choir. Its spiritual power makes it a shoe-in for any future publication of an updated Latter-day Saint hymnal.

The reason for the hymn's omission from the 1985 hymnbook isn’t completely clear, but a recent Salt Lake Tribune article gives some interesting information on the topic: “The most famous deletion was ‘Come, Thou Fount of Every Blessing,’ which committee members suspect would still be little-remembered among Mormons had not Mack Wilberg published his celebrated arrangement just a couple of months later.” It may have seemed like months, but Wilberg’s arrangement was actually published in 1993, several years after the 1985 hymnbook. This composition is one of his most celebrated works and has been sung by various choirs over the years. . . .
The arrangement published of "Come, Thou Fount of Every Blessing" in older hymnbooks was simpler than Wilberg's arrangement we are used to hearing at general conference and it was among the rarely sung hymns in many LDS congregations at the time the 1985 edition was published. Something else to consider is the fact that over 6,000 hymns were submitted for consideration to be included in the hymnbook, and with room for just over 300 hymns, the LDS Church’s General Music Committee followed the Spirit in selecting hymns to include. Michael Moody, who was over the committee, said, "We had a very clear understanding of what our role was. The new book was to serve a worldwide community of Latter-day Saints. Foremost, it was to be a source of spiritual nourishment, not a museum piece for the artistically inclined."[3]

The children’s organization of the Church (called the “Primary”) has its own songbook, called “The Children's Songbook,” and new hymns and songs are written all the time for youth conferences and special events.

To encourage people to become better acquainted with music, ChurchofJesusChrist.org, the official Church website for members, includes a section on Latter-day Saint hymns that contains the hymns for both adults and children online. These include the sheet music and audio files wherein one can even change the tempo of a hymn or choose whether to hear a chorus or just the accompaniment. There are free online courses designed to teach people how to conduct hymns and also to learn to play the piano by learning hymns. Members of the Church of Jesus Christ believe that music is a powerful teaching tool, allowing members to understand the doctrines at a new level an in a way that is easy to remember. Former Church leader J. Reuben Clark said, “We get nearer to the Lord through music than perhaps through any other thing except prayer (Conference Report, Oct. 1936, 111.)

A New Hymnal: Hymns—for Home and Church

In June 2018, the Church announced plans to publish new, unified editions of both Hymns and the Children's Songbook. Members of the Church are invited to participate in the revision process in unprecedented ways. Elder Ronald A. Rasband of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles noted, "We desire to offer a consistent core collection of hymns and songs in every language that reflects the diverse needs of the global Church in our day.” Elder Erich W. Kopischke of the Seventy added, "This core collection means that “members of the Church, no matter where they live in the world, will have the same hymns and the same songs and the same hymn numbers!” Members were asked to submit original music and lyrics and to provide feedback.[4]

“Hymns—for Home and Church,” a sacred music collection of between 450 to 500 hymns and children’s songs, began to be available digitally in 2024 and will be available in print for individuals and families to use at home and at church. The first release will be in English, Spanish, Portuguese, and French by the end of 2026, with other languages to follow. Up to 50 total languages will be published by 2030. This means that Latter-day Saint congregations throughout the world will worship with the same consolidated and unified hymnbook, numbered the same across the languages most spoken in the Church. Many additional languages in which the Church is still being established will receive a smaller collection of approximately 60 hymns and children’s songs called “Selected Hymns” as soon as reasonably possible.

Latter-day Saints traditionally worship as individuals and families at home and as a congregation in Sunday worship services. Rather than the previously announced hymnbook and separate songbook for children, “Hymns—for Home and Church” will be representative of the communal nature of music and worship with hymns and children’s songs together in one collection.

“We are pleased to share an update on the anticipated consolidated music collection,” said Elder Dale G. Renlund of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles. “One way God helps us to feel the Spirit and motivate us to live the gospel of Jesus Christ is through sacred music.”

Some new songs are planned to be released digitally in small digital batches starting in the first half of 2024. The first appeared at the end of May 2024, with 13 songs in the release. These songs can be used alongside hymns and songs in the Church’s current published hymnbook and songbook. These will include well-loved music of the Church composed after 1985 (such as “Faith in Every Footstep”), music borrowed from other faiths, and some of the 17,000 new songs submitted by members of the Church. Many, if not all, of these new songs will later be incorporated into “Hymns—for Home and Church.”[[5]]

The Church announced on April 1, 2024: "After six years of work reviewing thousands of submissions and gathering hymns from across the world, 12 hymns of the new “Hymns—for Home and Church” will be available on May 30, 2024. The selections will include “Come, Thou Fount of Every Blessing” and will be published in English, Spanish, Portuguese and French. The hymns will be available in the Sacred Music and Gospel Library apps, and in the online Music Library."Church Newsroom, "A Glimpse Into World Report April 2024: A Portion of the New Hymnbook Is Coming in May" Thirteen hymns instead of 12 were included in the release. Nine more followed in September.