Did you ever go to church and hear a Nazi song in the worship service? Yeah--me neither. Or, at least, I never thought of it as a Nazi song when I was a kid. But when I was a teenager, I was surprised to find that one of my most beloved hymns was also the national anthem of the Third Reich. Maybe you've sung this song as well...
Yes, "We are Called to Be God's People" is one of the songs that shaped me as a child, for two reasons. First, it is a musically amazing Austrian hymn by Franz Joseph Haydn. The English lyrics by Thomas Jackson inspire Christians to understand their calling to live in unity, share hope, to work for God's glory, and shed light in the world.
We are called to be God's people
Showing by our lives His grace
One in heart and one in spirit
Sign of hope for all the race
Let us show how He has changed us
And remade us as His own
Let us share our life together
As we shall around His throne
We are called to be God's servants
Working in His world today
Taking His own task upon us
All His sacred words obey
Let us rise then to His summons
Dedicate to Him our all
That we may be faithful servants
Quick to answer now His call
We are called to be God's prophets
Speaking for the truth and right
Standing firm for godly justice
Bringing evil into light
Let us seek the courage needed
Our high calling to fulfill
That we all may know the blessing
Of the doing of God's will
Think my church's leadership overreacted? That they made too bit a deal of her pain? Listen to what this German vlogger has to say:
So even Germans (who have some sense) say you should avoid the first verse of that song, out of respect to others and out of a desire NOT to bring up painful feelings.
"We Are Called to Be God's People" is a song that shaped me in two ways. First, it helped me to understand our calling as the people of God. Second our congregational experience of the song taught me to be sensitive to the feelings of others, who may be offended by something that I might view as perfectly wholesome, beautiful, and theologically correct. It taught me that just because something is right, that doesn't make it good.
Vida's story has impacted the way, as a pastor, I have tried to deal with other songs that involve hints of racism, traces of emperialism and violence, or sexist language. This song that shaped me also made me aware of how much our musical choices affect young and old people who hear them. It's important that the church listen to the theology in its music, and make sure it's communicating truth. We need to be aware of the subtle social messages that are coming through in our hymnody and worship music. And we need to be brave enough to ditch the songs that need to be cut.
1 comment:
In 2012 I started a tenure as the youth pastor at a German enclave church in the United States. This was the first hymn they played on my first day at the church as a staff pastor. Wow, did that get my attention!
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