Should I rehearse with human voice

Scriptures:
  • Matthew 17:20
  • Mark 11:23
  • Romans 12:9
  • 1 Corinthians 13:12
  • 1 Corinthians 16:14
  • 2 Corinthians 6:6
  • Galatians 5:22-23
  • Ephesians 3:19
  • Ephesians 4:32
  • 1 Thessalonians 3:12
  • 1 John 3:2
Book Number:
  • 576

Should I rehearse with human voice
the words which angels make their choice,
devoid of love, my song resounds
magnificent but empty.
And should I preach with earnest tone
and know whatever can be known
and move the hills by faith alone
if I lack love, I’m nothing.

2. In love is patience always found,
for love kind hearts make common ground,
from love, conceit and pride take flight
and jealousy is banished.
Love keeps no score of what’s gone wrong
nor sings a pessimistic song
nor lets regret or guilt prolong,
for love expects tomorrow.

3. Let strange and startling language cease,
let tongues their ecstasy release,
let knowledge come and go in peace-
these things are not eternal.
For all the thought and skill we show
are but a stage through which we grow
till, face to face with God, we’ll know
that love which lasts forever.

© 1988 WGRG, Iona Community
John L Bell and Graham Maule

The Church - Character and Privileges

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Tune

  • A Rosebud
    A Rosebud
    Metre:
    • 888 7 D
    Composer:
    • Iona Community

The story behind the hymn

John Bell and Graham Maule have, as often, combined in the crafting of this searching biblical hymn, in this case for a Scottish tune and a fresh look at 1 Corinthians 13. It was published in their Iona collection of Enemy of Apathy: Wild Goose Songs No 2 in 1988, and first appears here in a main hymnal. The treatment of its theme may be compared and contrasted with that of C Wordsworth’s 19th-c Gracious Spirit, Holy Ghost, and with part of 930.

The tune A ROSEBUD is known only as ‘Scottish traditional’. It has been rediscovered and revived by the authors and arranged by Iona Community musicians for these words.

A look at the authors

Bell, John Lamberton

b Kilmarnock, Ayrshire 1949. Univ of Glasgow (degrees in Arts and Divinity after one false start and an interval working as a volunteer in London and Amsterdam). He was then ordained in the Ch of Scotland. His work with the Iona Community (where ‘there is no dualism between politics and piety’—JLB) began with youth ministry in 1984; with Graham Maule he initiated training programmes for young people committed to inner-city work. The Wild Goose Worship Group arose from this, subsequently publishing many collections of new hymns and songs in a folk idiom (with prayers and other worship material) and texts relevant to contemporary concerns. Based in Glasgow, his ministry takes him across the UK and Ireland, and abroad for much of the year, to Australia, Japan and the USA etc, as well as working nearer home with those on the edges of church life. But he dislikes ‘celebrity-style’ events and the general move from participation to performance. He has addressed the (British) Hymn Society and led sessions at Greenbelt; he was Convenor of the editorial group for the Ch of Scotland’s Common Ground Hymn Supplement of 1998 (for which he also compiled a companion booklet), and the major Church Hymnary 4th Edn (2005) which features some 60 of his texts and versions and nearly 100 tunes and arrangements. These include several of the ‘Short Songs’ which comprise the book’s penultimate section (preceding the Doxologies), comparable with those in HTC and CH2004 but in source more international and in style more liturgical. 22 of his texts are in Sing Glory (1999); 32 including single-stz texts in >i>Sing Praise (2010), and several others in the Methodist Singing the Faith planned for 2011. His newer compilation God Comes Tomorrow (book and disc) comprises ‘20 familiar and unusual Advent and Christmas resources’ which he has selected. Committed to a simple lifestyle and the quest for peace, he is a frequent radio broadcaster; the Irish bishop and hymnal editor Edward Darling said in 2006 that in reflecting a national folk culture, ‘John Bell has done for hymnody in Scotland what Vaughan Williams did [in EH] for hymnody in England’. Text nos.576, 910, 948; tune nos.428, 948, 1260.

Maule, Graham Alexander

b Glasgow 1958, d 2019. An architectural student in Glasgow who turned to full-time youth work, first at parish level and then with the Iona Community. There he teamed up with John Bell, qv for notes on Iona. With JB he co-authored many songs first published in the ‘Wild Goose’ series of contemporary folk-style collections. Several of these now appear in mainstream hymn-books: 7 in Rejoice and Sing (1991), 8 in the Irish Church Hymnal (2000), 13 in Sing Glory (1999) and 24 in the Scottish Church Hymnary (CH4, 2005). As a mature student he gained a Master’s degree in Fine Art (Sculpture); followed by his PhD. He contributed art-work and design to Iona publications. In 2004 he addressed the Hymn Society’s conference in Edinburgh. Nos.576, 910, 948, 1260.