Thursday, July 2, 2020

Singing Home

It was hard not to have a tear.

It's even harder to distinguish whether the tear had materialized because of sadness or joy, because both are found in equal proportion.

I heard people singing this morning.

Sure, I hear music on the radio. I hear heavily manipulated voices resonating beautifully, reverbed to perfection, highlighted by dulcet backing vocals. These songs play well through speakers and I tap my hands on the steering wheel to the beat.

But nothing compares to human voices surrounding you in unison, singing the song of home.

We had staff devotions and prayer at the school this morning. The staff, lead by a group of teachers, sang songs of hope, songs of lament, songs of joy as they were designed. I wasn't really prepared to be moved by it, nor was I completely aware of how much I missed it. I realized that I'd taken group singing for granted.

Throughout history, people have always sung, and they've done this for a variety of reasons. Recently, most singing is done for entertainment; we plug a playlist into an app (or now, the app knows us better than we know ourselves and chooses for us) and we passively enjoy the music that someone else sings to us.

Before this, though, singing almost always took on a different purpose. Not for entertainment, but for remembrance.There is something intrinsically beautiful and deep about whatever place you call home. There is a profound echo in our modern perspectives that, if we just listen closely, we can hear home sung for us.

Call to mind the Sound of Music if you've ever seen the movie. When the von Trapp family are about to leave Austria, what do they sing? They sing a song of home. For many, this is a scene that resonates deeply, a desperate longing to return to times and home before.

Think about the Israelites in exile...

By the rivers of Babylon, there we sat done and wept when we remembered Zion.
there we hung up our lyres on the poplar trees, for our captors there asked us for songs,
and our tormentors, for rejoicing:
'Sing us one of the songs of Zion!'

How can we sing the Lord's song on foreign soil?
If I forget you, Jerusalem, may my right hand forget its skill.
May my tongue stick to the roof of my mouth if I do not remember you,
if I do not exalt Jerusalem as my greatest joy.
(Psalm 137:1-6  CSB))

They needed to remember home, so they sang about it. They didn't want to forget.

What about the people of the Reformation? They fashioned hymns to talk about the great things that God has done in the world and will continue to do. These hymns, a final end to strife and war, injustice and sadness, they spoke of a people longing for 'home' - the eternal place of God.

And the Spirituals sung by slaves in agony? Who cannot be moved by these lyrics by Thomas A Dorsey?

Precious Lord, take my hand
Lead me on, let me stand
I am tired, I am weak, I am worn
Through the storm, through the night
Lead me on to the light
Take my hand, precious Lord
Lead me home
When my way grows drear
Precious Lord, linger near
When my life is almost gone
Hear my cry, hear my call
Hold my hand lest I fall
When the darkness appears
And the night draws near
And the day is past and gone
At the river I stand
Guide my feet, hold my hand
The people sang to be reminded of a home they could never experience again other than the one that God had planned for them. These are the words of humanity.

As we have entered a new age, a new era (and I will not say a 'new normal') singing home is all that we can do. We cannot return to the way before, but in singing about it, we are transported to the feelings of it and the memories can sustain us until our Precious Lord leads us home.

Sing loudly into the darkness. Sing as the dawn comes.

1 comment:

Debbie Gortowski said...

I am on the re-opening committee of our church in Rockford Illinois.
No Bibles. No hymnals. No bulletins. No choir. No singing.
These rules are decided by the CDC. Silence is safer than whispering. Whispering is safer than talking. Talking is safer than singing. Here is an explanation: When one sings, microscopic particles burst forth from the mouth in a fountain of mist. Large droplets fall quickly to the ground, but the rush of air also creates an aerosolized mixture of everything that’s lingering in the mucus membrane of your pharynx. This is exactly where the coronavirus attaches and replicates, which it can do before a person feels any symptoms. Once aerosolized, those tiny mucus particles can linger in the air for an hour or more and float farther than six feet! Singing similarly puts force behind the excretion, shooting it out like a geyser. (The goal of singing is to “project.”) Gross, but the truth.

Singing, however is not effective unless it is heard. Hearing is a gift of God. The inner ear is responsible for transforming sound waves to our brains. The brain interprets it and lets us know what we just heard – incredible! God did a great job! We need to whisper a loud thanks to God that he created sounds and a method for the body to translate those sounds to something meaningful for us.

No singing out-loud, but what about in our hearts and minds?

Ephesians 5:19-20. Speak to one another with psalms, hymns and spiritual songs. Sing and make music in your heart to the Lord, always giving thanks to God the father for everything, in the name of our Lord Jesus Christ.
1 Corinthians 14:15. So what shall I do? I will pray with my spirit, but I will also pray with my mind; I will sing with my spirit, but I will also sing with my mind.

Here is a quote from Howard Thurman in his book Meditations of the Heart:
I will sing a new song. As difficult as it is, I must learn the new song that is capable of meeting the new need. I must fashion new words born of all the new growth of my life, my mind and my spirit. I must prepare for new melodies that have never been mine before, that all that is within me may lift my voice to God. How I love the old familiarity of the weary melody - how I shrink from the harsh discords of the new untried harmonies. Teach me, my Father, that I might learn with the abandonment enthusiasm of Jesus, the fresh new accent, the untried melody, to meet the need of the untried morrow. Thus, I may rejoice with each new day and delight my spirit in each fresh unfolding.

I propose that we still sing, but without letting “microscopic particles burst forth from the mouth in a fountain of mist.” Let us make music in our hearts and listen with our minds. The time will come when we will sing music we can hear with our ears and I too will cry!

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