Further Thoughts on Sacred Music

On my run this morning, I listened to a version of “Simple Gifts” from Aaron Copeland’s Appalachian Springtime. I had the thought that, just as sacred places for me are not necessarily related to churches, so it is with music. There are pieces of music that touch me deeply and give me a sense of God’s presence. What occurred to me this morning was that many of those pieces have nothing to do with church.

You might object, saying that “Simple Gifts” is based on a Shaker hymn and you would be right. But I came to know that beautiful piece through Aaron Copeland’s symphony, not through a church.

There are other pieces of music that seem to give me a glimmer of the Divine.

I first encountered “Jupiter” from Gustav Holst’s Planets when I was back East spending time with my mother just prior to her death. There was something about “Jupiter” that captured that moment for me. My mother faced her death with stoicism and faith, a truly wondrous event to witness. The music of “Jupiter” captured the grandeur of that moment.

I first heard the second movement of Antonin Dvorak’s New World Symphony on a PBS series America hosted by Alistair Cook. Cook shared with us the inspiration for that piece coming from Dvorak’s moment of encounter with the great prairies of the U.S. Midwest. Since then, that piece has often played in my head when I encounter some wondrous part of nature. When I encountered El Capitan at Yosemite, I heard that piece. When I came to a beach in Southeast Ireland near the Skelligs and saw that the beach was untouched, I felt Dvorak’s music with me.

My encounters with the ocean always bring to mind Claud Debussey’s Clair de Lune. Granted, Debussey has another piece titled Le Mer but Clair de Lune for me captures the peacefulness of waves washing the beach with perhaps a fog horn in the distance.

Finally, though I hate war and all it has done to us, I have to admit that my heart soars with the ending of Tchaikovsky’s 1812 Overture, fireworks, cannons, and all.

I stand in awe that God gives us so many avenues through which we can experience His/Her magnificence. For me, great musical works are one of those avenues.

REFLECTION: Are there any pieces of non-church music that speak to you of God?

About richp45198

I am a clinical psychologist and have an abiding interest in matters spiritual.
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1 Response to Further Thoughts on Sacred Music

  1. Susan Bass says:

    Music and the Divine? I would say yes. This piece mentions hearing certain music at key moments. I have also experienced that. During the early stages of pregnancy, I was jobless and sick. My mother was not thrilled about the impending birth of the child who would later become so much like her. Some members of my husband’s family were also not pleased. To top it all off, I became bedbound due to illness. I picked up the phone to make an appointment to terminate the pregnancy and I heard the song by Helen Reddy, “You and Me Against the World”. I put down the phone. My therapist said it was our friend God who allowed me to hear that song in my head. Justin was born seven, hard months later.

    I am not making a statement against termination of pregnancy in all cases because there are times when it cannot be avoided. I am only stating my therapist’s interpretation of the event which seems to fit.

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