| Clockwise from upper left: "Worship and Service Hymnal;" "The Baptist Hymnal (1991);" "Songs for the Church;" "Praise! Our Songs and Hymns;" "Hymns of Grace;" "Gospel Hymns Nos. 1-6 Complete." |
In 1997, Becky and I were listening to Elizabeth Elliott on the radio, and she mentioned singing hymns together as a family. We took her up on it and have been singing hymns together since then.
Several people suggest that couples and families pray together, and maybe read the Bible or a devotional. Singing is not as common, I'm guessing. But this is an enjoyable part of our life. As you can see, we have a nice little collection of hymnals, and that is not complete.
Our go-to is the "Worship and Service Hymnal." When my parents divorced and I moved to Skull Valley where my grandparents were, this was the first hymnal that made an impression, mainly by having several "Amens" on the back inside cover. This came out in '61, old enough to miss including songs like "Victory in Jesus" and "How Great Thou Art." (It also lacked "Be Thou My Vision.")
I was there from February '69 to the fall of '90, when we moved to Prescott. In June, '71, I moved in with my Dad who remarried in Cottonwood, Arizona. We went to Verde Baptist Church, where I glanced at the back of the hymnal and saw the familiar Amens. We used that hymnal until '77 when we replaced it with the Baptist Hymnal 1975.
In August '78, I started attending Southwestern College. During chapel hour, I picked up the hymnal. Yep. The Worship and Service Hymnal.
What's interesting is that when we started, there were songs Becky was familiar with in growing up with Church of Christ hymnals, such as "Songs of the Church" (upper right hand corner) that I was unfamiliar with, like "O To Be Like Thee" and "My Jesus, As Thou Wilt," hiding in the hymnal I grew up with.
Two things happened. One is we got more hymnals. The other is some of the songs that we didn't have in "Worship and Service Hymnal." There are are three hymnals that we added to our singing time roster, though the new songs were limited.
First, there is "Praise! Our Songs and Hymns, which we used while members of Hunter Road Bible Church. It had some new hymns, and a lot of songs from John W. Peterson. In '74, I joined the camp choir which did a contata called "Jesus is Calling," and when we performed, we were conducted by Mr. Peterson himself. So with this hymnal I got to learn Peterson songs like "Come, Holy Spirit," "Springs of Living Water," "Heaven Came Down," and "Surely Goodness and Mercy." It also had "Victory in Jesus," "Be Thou My Vision," and "How Great Thou Art."
Second is the 1991 Baptist Hymnal. That had a great collection of Christmas songs (though it didn't include "God Rest You Merry Gentlemen," as well as a number of black spirituals like "Were You There?" and some contemporary songs like Maranatha Praise choruses (e.g."Seek Ye First," "Open Our Eyes, Lord) and tunes like "Shine, Jesus, Shine" and Twila Paris' classic "We Will Glorify." That hymnal had old songs I missed out on like "Brethren We Have Come To Worship," and songs by other writers like B. B. McKinney such as "Have Faith in God," which Becky and I regularly sing.
The last of the hymnals we regularly use was not pictured above. It is called "Songs Christians Sing Vol. 2", and was basicly a smaller version of the Church of Christ's "Songs of the Church." Becky was familiar with a lot of songs, but three caught my eye because they were written by hymn writers I knew but were not in any of our other hymnals - "I'm Not Ashamed To Own My Lord" by Isaac Watts, "More Holiness Give Me" by Phillip Bliss, and "Give Me The Bible" by Priscilla Owens, the lyrics writer who also wrote the more familiar "We Have Heard The Joyful Sound" (aka "Jesus Saves!) and "We Have An Anchor."
There are other hymnals I'd like to mention which are in our collection. These are:
- "Inspiring Hymns," used during my first year at Cactus Baptist Church, my first year at Southwestern. It introduced me to a little known but much convicting "He Was Not Willing" (which is why I kept it). It introduced me to another of my favorite hymns, "And Can It Be That I Should Gain," though I later learned this version butchered it, using only 3 of the 5 verses, and dropped the 5th and 6th lines of two of the three verses it kept. Ugh!
- "Trinity Hymnal," which Becky picked up from a Reformed Church while she spent a month at a journalism institute put on by World Magazine. That's one hymnal I want to learn more of.
- "Gospel Hymnal Nos. 1-6 Complete" is probably the oldest in our collection, dating to the late 1800s and early 1900s. A lot of these songs were from the Dwight L. Moody days, including writers like Phillip Bliss, Ira Sankey, and my favorite hymn music writer, James McGranahan, who chose to use his musics to bring the lost to Christ rather than getting into Opera.
- "Hymns for the Family of God" is one I'm including though we gave it away. This hymnal has a large number of Gaither songs.
- "Hymns of Grace" is the hymnal used by Grace Community Church, where the late Dr. John MacArthur was pastor. The book is large but it actually has fewer hymns than some of the others. One thing that struck me: I will mention four hymn writers, who combined wrote 80 songs. I'll start with Fanny Crosby, often considered the best known hymn writer. Only 6 songs of hers were included. Two of my favorites, Isaac Watts and Charles Wesley fared what seems reasonable, with 18 and 16 songs respectively, totaling... 40 songs? Who wrote the other 40 songs? Keith and Kristyn Getty (with Stuart Townsend). It included 10 of 12 songs from an album I enjoyed, omitting... of course, my two favorites.!
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