The Balm of the Music

Categories: Catechesis, Children and Youth, Worship
Written By: ToddPeperkorn

Today was a busy but typical day for this pastor.  It was the first day of school for our Academy, and like so many good Lutheran schools, we have a hymn of the week.  The hymn for this week is a new one in Lutheran Service Book, entitled “O Christ, Who Shared Our Mortal Life” (LSB 552).  The text is a powerful one, and uses the three resurrections that our Lord performed as the basis for the hymn: the raising of Jairus’ daughter, the son of the widow of Nain, and Lazarus.  The text is by Herman Steumpfle.  The music is by Kantor Kevin Hildebrand of Concordia Theological Seminary.

There is much that could be said about the text of this hymn.  It holds up some of the best characteristics of twentieth century hymnody: powerful word painting, vivid imagery, strong biblical connections, etc.  But I mostly want to talk about the music of this text.

The music for this text, entitled “Lord of Life”, can be best described as haunting yet hopeful.  The topic of the text is death and resurrection, and following the biblical imagery, there are three stanzas that really address the grief of the bereaved.  The music beautifully holds this up.  There is a strength in classic Lutheran chorales that they don’t hide from grief.  Paul Gerhardt is perhaps best known for this.  In the same way, the music has to hold up this very real tension of grief and hope.  Hildebrand’s melody does this well.

But it’s more than that.

In the span of a day, I sang and taught this at our K-8 school chapel, sang and prayed it with a parishioner in the hospital with multiple chronic illnesses, used it to meditate on the text for the upcoming Sunday, and then sang, taught and prayed it with my own family before going to bed.  What a gift!  What a treasure!

Any music that can be taught to kindergartners and then used to comfort an eighty year old man is worth learning.

This is also a great example of why I love being a pastor.  We get to hold these great treasures of the Gospel up to God’s people, young and old.  I probably sang this hymn a dozen times today.  I’ll sing it a dozen more times tomorrow.  What could be bad about that!

-Pastor Todd Peperkorn


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