HOW THIS HYMNAL
CAME TO BE
When I was holding the meetings in a one-room country schoolhouse
eight miles west of Eugene, Oregon, in July and August, 1933, which
resulted in the start of the Philadelphia era of the Church of God,
a local 80-year-old Bible student refused to join in singing the
hymns.
Having no hymnal of our own I was forced to use one of the somewhat
thin paperback Protestant song books. The elderly Bible scholar said,
"It is just as sinful to sing a lie as to tell one." I had to agree.
For some time I had realized that many of the standard hymnals
contained songs that were unscriptural.
It is, however, scriptural to sing hymns. Jesus sang hymns. After
His last Passover, it is recorded, "And when they had sung an hymn,
they went out into the Mount of Olives" (Matthew 26:30). I knew
that the Psalms were, in fact, songs--or hymns. It was clear in my
mind that God's people should sing God's inspired words, not man's
uninspired and often unscriptural words. But the Bible has not
preserved nor revealed to us the music. God has left it to us to
compose the music.
This was very much on my mind. One day I heard my youngest brother,
Dwight, play on the piano a piece he had composed. It was not
four-part harmony, but was in the style of a four-part harmony
hymn. I was intrigued. It had quality and character. I had known
from the time my brother was a small child that he had a special
musical talent. I immediately asked him to compose two or three
hymns, setting words from the Psalms to music. It took a little
time, but they were good.
When we moved to Pasadena to found Ambassador College, in 1947, I
asked my brother to devote full time to setting the words of
Psalms--and/or any other Scripture--to music in the four-part
harmony style of hymns. For some little time the Church, then small,
sang the first 12 or 15 hymns that had been composed. The Church
grew, and so did the number of hymns sung with God's own inspired
words.
When we were able to print our first Church of God hymnal, not
yet having a sufficient number of our own new hymns we filled out
our comparatively small hymnals with well-known Protestant hymns
whose words were not non-scriptural--even having to change the
words in a few instances. Gradually through the years succeeding
editions of our hymnal have contained fewer and fewer of the old
Protestant hymns, and more and more of those composed by my brother.
For the past few years our congregations have been singing
our own hymns almost entirely.
Now, at last, the time has come when we can omit the old Protestant
hymns almost altogether, with more new hymns of our own added.
We have retained two national hymns, and a few others whose words are
proper, which we feel our congregations would want to sing
occasionally.
It is, indeed, a happy achievement to have, at last, God's own hymnal
for God's own Church. It is a happy event, also, that we now produce
the hymnal with hard covers, and make them available to members to
have in their own homes. I feel this is another milestone for God's
Church.
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