Dictionary Definition
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Noun
- A collection of hymns; a hymn book.
Translations
book or collection of hymns
- Icelandic: sálmabók
Extensive Definition
A hymn is a type of song, usually religious,
specifically written for the purpose of praise, adoration or
prayer, and typically
addressed to a deity/deities, a prominent figure or an epic tale.
The word hymn derives from Greek
hymnos "a song of praise".
Hymenaios (also
Hymenaeus, Hymenaues, or Hymen; Ancient Greek: Ὑμέναιος) was a
Greek god of marriage ceremonies, inspiring feasts and song. He was
celebrated in the ancient marriage song of unknown origin Hymen o
Hymenae, Hymen delivered by G.
Valerius Catullus, which both the terms hymn and hymen are derived from..
Ancient hymns include the Great
Hymn to the Aten, composed by Pharaoh Akhenaten, and
the Vedas, a
collection of hymns in the tradition of Hinduism. The
Western tradition of hymnody begins with the Homeric
Hymns, a collection of ancient Greek hymns, the oldest of which
were written in the 7th century BC, in praise of the gods of
Greek
mythology.
Christian Hymnody
Originally modeled on the Psalms and other poetic passages (commonly referred to as "canticles") in the Scriptures, it is generally directed as praise and worship to God. Many refer to Jesus Christ either directly or indirectly.Since the earliest times, Christianity has sung,
"psalms and hymns and spiritual songs," both in private devotions
and in corporate worship (Bible verse |Matthew|26:30|nrsv; Bible
verse 1|Cor|14:26|nrsv; Bible verse |Ephesians|5:19|nrsv; Bible
verse |Colossians|3:16|nrsv; Bible verse |James|5:13|nrsv; cf.
Bible verse |Revelation|5:8-10|nrsv; Bible verse
|Revelation|14:1-5|nrsv).
Christian hymns are often written with special or
seasonal themes and these are used on holy days such as Christmas,
Easter and
the Feast of All Saints, or
during particular seasons such as Advent and Lent. Others are used
to instill reverence to the Holy Bible or
to celebrate Christian practices such as the eucharist or baptism. Some hymns praise or
address individual saints, particularly the Blessed
Virgin Mary; such hymns are particularly prevalent in Catholicism,
Eastern
Orthodoxy and to some extent "High Church" Anglicanism.
A writer of hymns is known as a hymnist or
hymnodist, and the practice of singing hymns is called, hymnody;
the same word is used for the collectivity of hymns belonging to a
particular denomination or period (e.g. "nineteenth century
Methodist hymnody" would mean the body of hymns written and/or used
by Methodists in the nineteenth century). A collection of hymns is
called a hymnal. These may or may not include music. A student of
hymnody is called a hymnologist, and the scholarly study of hymns,
hymnists and hymnody is hymnology. The music to which
a hymn may be sung is a hymn
tune.
In many Evangelical churches, traditional songs
are classified as hymns while more contemporary worship songs are
not considered hymns. The reason for this distinction is unclear,
but according to some it is due to the radical shift of style and
devotional thinking that began with the Jesus
movement and Jesus
music.
Music and accompaniment
In ancient and medieval times, stringed instruments such as the harp, lyre and lute were used with psalms and hymns.Since there is a lack of musical notation in
early writings, the actual musical forms in the early church can
only be surmised. During the Middle Ages a rich hymnody developed
in the form of Gregorian
chant or plainsong. This type was sung in unison, in one of
eight Church
modes, and most often by monastic choirs. While they were
written originally in Latin, many have been
translated; a familiar example is the 4th century
Of the Father's Heart Begotten sung to the 11th century
plainsong Divinum Mysterium.
Later hymnody in the Western
church introduced four-part vocal harmony as the norm, adopting
major and minor keys, and became led by organ and
choir. It shares many elements with classical
music.
Today, except for choirs, more musically inclined
congregations and a cappella
congregations, hymns are typically sung in unison. In some cases
complementary full settings for organ are also published, in others
organists and other accompanists are expected to mentally
transcribe the four-part vocal score for their instrument of
choice.
Contemporary
Christian worship, as often found in Evangelicalism
and Pentecostalism
may include the use of contemporary
worship music played with electric
guitars and the drum kit,
sharing many elements with rock
music.
Other groups of Christians, notably assemblies of
Christians sometimes known as 'Brethren' (often both 'Open' and
'Exclusive'), the
Church of Christ (non-instrumental), Primitive Baptists, and
certain Reformed churches such as the Free Church of Scotland
(Presbyterian), cite the absence of instruments in worship by the
church for the first several centuries of its existence and adhere
to an unaccompanied a cappella
congregational singing of hymns.
Accompaniment is generally absent in worship by
Eastern
Orthodox congregations.
The development of Christian hymnody
Thomas Aquinas, in the introduction to his commentary on the Psalms, defined the Christian hymn thus: "Hymnus est laus Dei cum cantico; canticum autem exultatio mentis de aeternis habita, prorumpens in vocem." ("A hymn is the praise of God with song; a song is the exultation of the mind dwelling on eternal things, bursting forth in the voice.")The Protestant
Reformation resulted in two conflicting attitudes to hymns. One
approach, the
regulative principle of worship, favoured by many Zwinglians,
Calvinists and other radical reformers, considered anything that
was not directly authorised by the Bible to be a novel and Catholic
introduction to worship, which was to be rejected. All hymns that
were not direct quotations from the bible fell into this category.
Such hymns were banned, along with any form of instrumental musical
accompaniment, and organs were ripped out of churches. Instead of
hymns, biblical psalms were chanted, most often without
accompaniment, to very basic melodies. This was known as exclusive
psalmody. Examples of this may still be found in various
places, including the "free churches" of western Scotland.
The other Reformation approach, the
normative principle of worship produced a burst of hymn writing
and congregational singing. Martin
Luther is notable not only as a reformer, but as the author of
many hymns including Ein’ feste Burg ist unser Gott (A
Mighty Fortress Is Our God) which is sung today even in Roman
Catholicism. Luther and his followers often used their hymns, or
chorales, to teach tenets of the faith to worshipers. The earlier
English writers tended to paraphrase biblical text, particularly
Psalms;
Isaac
Watts followed this tradition, but is also credited as having
written the first English hymn which was not a direct paraphrase of
Scripture. Later writers took even more freedom, some even
including allegory and
metaphor in their
texts.
Charles
Wesley's hymns spread Methodist theology, not only within
Methodism, but in most Protestant churches. He developed a new
focus: expressing one's personal feelings in the relationship with
God as well as the simple worship seen in older hymns. Wesley
wrote:
- Where shall my wondering soul begin?
- How shall I all to heaven aspire?
- A slave redeemed from death and sin,
- A brand plucked from eternal fire,
- How shall I equal triumphs raise,
- Or sing my great deliverer's praise.
- How shall I all to heaven aspire?
Wesley's contribution, along with the Second
Great Awakening in America led
to a new style called gospel, and a new explosion of sacred music
writing with Fanny
Crosby, Lina
Sandell, Philip
Bliss, Ira D.
Sankey, and others who produced testimonial music for revivals,
camp meetings, and evangelistic crusades. The tune style or form is
technically designated "gospel songs" as distinct from hymns.
Gospel songs generally include a refrain (or chorus) and usually
(though not always) a faster tempo than the hymns. As examples of
the distinction, "Amazing
Grace" is a hymn (no refrain), but "How
Great Thou Art" is a gospel song. During the 19th century the
gospel-song genre spread rapidly in Protestantism and, to a lesser
but still definite extent, in Roman Catholicism; the gospel-song
genre is unknown in the worship per se by Eastern Orthodox
churches, which rely exclusively on traditional chants (a type of
hymn) in the worship.
African-Americans
developed a rich hymnody from spirituals
during times of slavery to the modern, lively black gospel
style.
The Methodist
Revival of the eighteenth century created an explosion of hymn
writing in Welsh,
which continued into the first half of the nineteenth century. The
most prominent names among Welsh hymn-writers are
William Williams Pantycelyn and Ann
Griffiths. The second half of the nineteenth century witnessed
an explosion of hymntune composition and choir singing in Wales.
Along with the more classical sacred music of
composers ranging from Mozart to Monteverdi, The
Roman
Catholic Church continued to produce many popular hymns such as
Lead
Kindly Light, Silent
Night, O
Sacrament Divine and Faith
of our Fathers.
Many churches today use contemporary
worship music which includes a range of styles often influenced
by popular
music. This often leads to some conflict between older and
younger congregants (see contemporary
worship). This is not new; the Christian
pop music style began in the late 1960s and became very popular
during the 1970s, as young hymnists sought ways in which to make
the music of their religion relevant for their generation.
This long tradition has resulted in a wide
variety of hymns. Some modern churches include within hymnody, the
traditional hymn (usually describing God), contemporary
worship music (often directed to God) and gospel music
(expressions of one's personal experience of God). This distinction
is not perfectly clear; and purists remove the second two types
from the classification as hymns. It is a matter of debate, even
sometimes within a single congregation, often between revivalist
and traditionalist movements.
Hymn meters
In the English language poetic meters and hymn meters have different starting points but there is nevertheless much overlap. Take the following text:- Imagine now you say this line aloud;
- in fact, you really ought to do just that.
- I-mag-ine now you say this line a-loud
- in fact, you real-ly ought to do just that.
So poetically a verse of the hymn 'Amazing
Grace' is two couplets (line pairs) each of
iambic tetrameter (four feet) and iambic trimeter (three feet), but
hymnologically is 8.6.8.6 (or 86.86):
- Amazing grace, how sweet the sound
- that saved a wretch like me.
- I once was lost, but now am found,
- was blind, but now I see.
- that saved a wretch like me.
Conventionally most hymns in this 86.86 pattern
are iambic (weak-strong syllable pairs). By contrast most hymns in
an 87.87 pattern are trochaic, with strong-weak
syllable pairs:
- Love divine, all loves excelling,
- joy of heaven to earth come down,...
In practice most hymns fall into a relatively
small number of meters (syllable patterns), and within the most
commonly used ones there is general convention on whether its
stress pattern is iambic or trochaic (or perhaps dactylic).
All meters can be represented numerically. In
addition, some of those most frequently encountered are named:
- C.M. - Common Meter, 8.6.8.6; a quatrain (four-line stanza) with alternating lines of iambic tetrameter and iambic trimeter, which rhymes in the second and fourth lines and sometimes in the first and third.
- L.M. - Long Meter, 8.8.8.8; a quatrain in iambic tetrameter, which rhymes in the second and fourth lines and often in the first and third.
- S.M. - Short Meter, 6.6.8.6; iambic lines in the first, second, and fourth are in trimeter, and the third in tetrameter, which rhymes in the second and fourth lines and sometimes in the first and third.
- D.C.M. (also C.M.D.) - Doubled CM, 8.6.8.6.8.6.8.6.
- 8.7.8.7.D - equivalent to two verses of 8.7.8.7. Many of the strongest hymns are in this meter, such as Love Divine, All Loves Excelling, Glorious things of thee are spoken.
Much rarer these days are the following names:
- H.M. - Hallelujah Meter; a six-line stanza of which the first four lines are trimeter and the last two are tetrameter, which rhymes most often in the second and fourth lines and the fifth and sixth lines (6/6/6/6/8/8).
- L.P.M. - Long Particular Meter; a six-line stanza of iambic tetrameter (8/8/8/8/8/8).
- M.T. (or 12s.) - Meter Twelves; a quatrain in anapestic hexameter (12/12/12/12).
- C.P.M. - Common Particular Meter; a six-line stanza of which the first, second, fourth and fifth lines are iambic tetrameter, and the third and sixth lines are iambic trimeter (8/8/6/8/8/6).
- P.M. - may stand for Psalm Meter (more commonly known as 8s.7s), Particular Meter, or Peculiar Meter (each indicating poetry with its own peculiar, non-standard, meter).
- S.P.M. - Short Particular Meter; a six-line stanza of which the first, second, fourth and fifth lines are iambic trimeter, and the third and sixth lines are iambic tertameter (6/6/8/6/6/8).
- 8s. - Eights; used to distinguish an eight syllable quatrain that does not contain the iambic stress pattern characteristic of Long Meter (8/8/8/8).
- 8s.7s. - Eights and sevens; a trochaic quatrain with alternating lines of four feet and three and one-half feet, which rhymes in the second and fourth lines and sometimes in the first and third (8/7/8/7); also called Psalm Meter.
- 7s.6s. - Sevens and sixes; a quatrain with alternating lines of three and one-half feet and three feet, which rhymes in the second and fourth lines and sometimes in the first and third (7/6/7/6).
References
See also
External links
- Gospel Hymn and Song Lyrics - Words to old and new gospel music.
- Oremus Hymnal
- Examples of Byzantine Music Hymns 2000 pages of hymns in both staff and neumatic notation
- Examples of Coptic Orthodox Music of Egypt at Saint Takla Haymanout the Ethiopian Church, Alexandria - Egypt
- Hymn (hymns of the Presbyterian Church in Taiwan, 1964 edition)
- http://www.hymnwiki.org/HymnWiki.org (a wiki for hymns and primary songs - upload/download sheet music)
- Hymns of the Spirit Three-- liberal Christian and Unitarian Universalist hymns
- Online resource for Christian worship music
- The Cyber Hymnal — a useful resource for biographical information of hymn writers and composers
- Name That Hymn Discussion Board — An active discussion board where users help others locate lost hymn lyrics
- New England hymns
- The Scottish Metrical Psalter (Singing Biblical Hymns in Meter)
- Christian music lyrics and song information
- Lutheran-Hymnal.Com
- The Hymn Society in the United States and Canada
- The Hymn Society of Great Britain and Ireland
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Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
alto,
arrangement,
baritone, bass, bravura, choral, choric, coloratura, copy, draft, dramatic, edition, falsetto, heroic, hymnbook, instrumental score,
libretto, liturgical, lute tablature,
lyric, music, music paper, music roll,
musical notation, musical score, notation, opera, opera score, operatic, orchestral score,
part, piano score, psalmic, psalmodial, psalmodic, sacred, score, sheet music, short score,
singing, songbook, songster, soprano, tablature, tenor, text, transcript, transcription, treble, version, vocal, vocal score, written
music