Bridgefolk participants explain importance of pre-Reformation sources in new Mennonite hymnbook

Voices Together hymnal cover

In a recent post on the Mennonite Church USA website, Bridgefolk participants Sarah Kathleen Johnson and Carl Bear share why the committee that compiled Voices Together, the new Mennonite hymnbook, made sure to include pre-Reformation texts and tunes. Some excerpts:

Singing pre-Reformation songs reminds us that the Anabaptist tradition was deeply influenced by and connected to the previous fifteen centuries of Christian history — both the bad and the good. 

Owning this history as part of our history is essential for robust engagement in decolonial work for justice, locally and globally. It prevents us from failing to acknowledge our complicity in the foundations of colonialism established in this era, without which the Christian tradition, including the Anabaptist tradition, would not exist in the manner it does today.  

At the same time, singing early Christian and pre-Reformation songs connects Mennonites to the essential and life-giving theological insights and artistic riches of ancient and medieval Christians, across cultures, with whom we join our voices and celebrate the ways in which God has been active in the church of all ages.

“Connecting with the past in worship today is a way to remember God’s faithfulness to all generations. It joins our local communities with a vibrant church that has followed Jesus in many cultures and circumstances. It helps us keep the struggles of the present in perspective. Recognizing God’s faithfulness throughout a history marked by constant change can free us from fearing change and fearing the future.” — “Worship Leader Edition,” 202 

To read the entire post, click here.

First hymn in new Mennonite hymnal will again be by a Catholic

Voices Together hymnal cover

A recent article in the Mennonite World Review answers a few questions about Voices Together, the new hymnal that the Mennonite Church USA and Mennonite Church Canada plan to release this fall. Chief among them: What will be hymn no. 1?

Bridgefolk participants have noted approvingly that the first words of hymn in the current Mennonite hymnal, released in 1992 — “What is this place?” — were penned by the then-Catholic-priest Huub Oosterhuis of the Netherlands.

The new hymnal will again open with a text written by a Catholic, Sister Delores Dufner OSB, a member of St. Benedict’s Monastery in St. Joseph, Minnesota. Dufner has participated in Bridgefolk conferences and spoke on a panel concerning hospitality in 2006.

Duffner’s text, “Summoned by the God Who Made Us,” is being set to the tune “Nettleton” (best known as the tune to “Come, Thou Fount of Every Blessingj”). The refrain:

Let us bring the gifts that differ
and, in splendid, varied ways,
sing a new church into being,
one in faith and love and praise.