WINNIPEG, Man. — Over the span of a single weekend, Sean Goerzen sang or played every hymn in Hymnal: A Worship Book. All 658 of them.
“I feel like I know the hymnal in a very intimate way now,” he said with a laugh.
Goerzen organized Sargent Avenue Mennonite Church’s hymnal sing-a-thon, a two-day event to raise funds so the church can purchase copies of the new Mennonite worship and song resource, Voices Together, coming in 2020.
About 80 people came and went over 13 hours of singing, split into four sessions Sept. 27-28. About six people managed to sing every tune.
Church members cooked and served lunch and supper on Sept. 28 and set out donation baskets at the meals, raising about $800. Goerzen said this was an awesome start, although the new hymnals will probably cost more than $5,000.
Everyone from 7-month-old babies to people over 90 gathered at the church to participate. Pastor Marla Langelotz said there were congregants from other Mennonite churches in Winnipeg and from Catholic, Lutheran and Anglican denominations. Even residents of Alberta, Saskatchewan, Ontario and Prince Edward Island joined in while visiting family and friends.
“I didn’t expect that many people to know about it,” said Goerzen, who was surprised how far the word spread. An article in Winnipeg Free Press, shares on Facebook and word of mouth helped draw attention.
Katie Neufeld, a longtime member of Sargent Avenue, was one of the dedicated singers. She attended every session Sept. 28 and returned the next morning to sing with the choir for worship. She wanted to be part of it because she has always liked singing and has sung in the choir for years.
“And it’s sort of a celebration that we as a church are doing,” she said. “Music has been a very important part of our church always.”
Five song leaders and five accompanists, including Goerzen, took turns leading the diverse choir. In order to get through the book, they sang only two verses of each hymn.
Goerzen, 26, grew up attending an Anglican church in Vernon, B.C. When he moved to Winnipeg and started attending a Mennonite church, he didn’t know most of the hymns. Other than some Christmas and Easter songs, “the hymnody was very, very new to me,” he said.
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His father did own a copy of the 1969 Mennonite Hymnal, which Goerzen paged through when he was a kid. But his love of hymns really flourished on trips to southern Manitoba.
“Whenever I came out to Altona to visit my grandparents, going to the Bergthaler Mennonite Church, that’s actually where my interest really started,” he said. “I would’ve heard four-part singing there and I liked it a lot. I always did like going to that church.”
Goerzen, who graduated from Canadian Mennonite University with a bachelor of music degree in 2016, and from the University of Manitoba with a bachelor of education degree in 2018, now teaches junior-high band in Winnipeg and plays piano, French horn and organ. He’s also the chair of Sargent Avenue’s music committee.
Singing every song in numerical order gave him new insight into the “blue book.”
“You realize that there’s a whole arc,” he said. “I think we kind of just pick apart the hymnal, but to see it as one large thing was interesting . . . and it was just neat from a theological perspective.”
After several hours of singing, Neufeld’s voice started to give out, so sometimes she had to just sit back and listen. But she found that as she read the verses, the familiar hymns took on new meaning.
“You read the words, and that sort of means more, because I don’t struggle with the notes and I can take in the meaning of the words,” she said. “There were a few songs as we sang that . . . grabbed me again, what the meaning of the song was.”
Darryl Neustaedter Barg, a member of the committee that curated the new song collection, did a short presentation during the last session. He said about half the songs in Hymnal: A Worship Book, which was published in 1992, and two supplements, Sing the Journey and Sing the Story, will be included in the new resource.
Goerzen is excited for the new hymnal because it is going to leave behind little-used hymns and bring back many of the German texts that were left out last time. He is also looking forward to new compositions by Mennonite composers.
“I think our singing of hymns is such a collective way to praise God,” he said. “Especially with hymn singing, you’re using your voices, there aren’t all sorts of instruments in the background. It’s very simple and I think it’s a very humble way to praise.”
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