Presentation made for the Northeast Minnesota Chapter, American
Guild of Organists
January 25, 2014 at First Lutheran Church, Duluth, MN
Texts: Luke 9:1-6; Psalm 150
“Wash the dust.”
Are you puzzled? Intrigued? Still waking up? Someone wondered if I might be addressing the
fact that dusting the organ doesn’t seem to really fall under anyone’s job
description. Custodians are often
cautious about touching the instrument, and when you come near, you want to
practice, not dust, though I bet you end up doing it more than you would like
to admit. But that’s not what I want to
talk about.
Jesus tells his disciples, “Whenever they do not welcome
you, as you are leaving that town, shake the dust off your feet as a testimony
against them.” So maybe you are
wondering if I am going to address the relationship between organist and
pastor. There has probably been a little
dust shaking from both sides from time to time, don’t you think? I am going to let my friend and colleague
David Tryggestad handle that one. Good
luck.
Wash the dust. A
number of years ago, I got caught up in watching Ken Burn’s PBS series on
jazz. It rekindled my interest in the
music, more accurately set that small spark aflame. Jazz music since became a part of me in an important
way. Anyway, in the introductory
episode, the jazz drummer Art Blakey is quoted.
“Jazz washes away the dust of everyday life.” Jazz washes away the dust of everyday
life. I like that.
Not long after, though, I was in the home of a pastor who
is also an accomplished musician and organist.
He was serving a smaller church in rural Minnesota as he was moving
toward retirement. Prior to that, he had been the organist and minister of
music in a larger congregation. During
the visit I noticed a small placard on his wall. “Music washes away the dust from everyday
life.” While my memory is a little fuzzy
here, I think the quote was attributed to Tchaikovsky. What I do remember is feeling a little
disillusioned. Imagine Tchaikovsky
stealing from Art Blakey.
So I got the idea that this thought has been around for a
bit, one of those quotes that has probably been mis-attributed countless times,
or borrowed countless times. I ran into
it again just this week, attributed to someone named Bernard Auerbach. I tried checking this out, but discovered
that in all likelihood, the originator of this thought was a German novelist
named Berthold Auerbach, who wrote, Music
washes away from the soul the dust of everyday life.
But it really doesn’t matter who said it or wrote it, or
about which music it was written – classical or jazz, the statement rings
true. There is something about music
which reaches deep inside of us. The
American philosopher, Ralph Waldo Emerson wrote, “Music takes us out of the
actual and whispers to us dim secrets that startle our wonder as to who we are,
and for what, whence and whereto.” In
some ways it is a more elegant way of saying that music washes away the dust of
everyday life.
Music is powerful.
It touches the soul and spirit.
It moves the mind and heart. I
was reminded of this again in a poem written by the recently deceased Irish
poet Seamus Heaney – “The Rain Stick.”
Describing the instrument, Heaney writes:
Who
cares if all the music that transpires
Is
the fall of grit or dry seeds through a cactus?
You
are like a rich man entering heaven
Through
the ear of a raindrop.
I say all this as one who has little training in
music. Perhaps that’s one reason I have
enjoyed such good relationships with church musicians. I know you know more than me! Though I have little formal training in
music, I have been moved by music, all kinds of music – classical, jazz, rock,
pop, reggae, folk, blues, country, world.
Music washes away from the soul the dust of everyday life. I have had those kinds of experiences with
music. I have had music whisper dim
secrets that startle my wonder. I have,
through music, felt like a rich man entering heaven through the ear of a
raindrop. Music is a deeply spiritual
enterprise, and not all my spiritual experiences with music have happened in
church.
But many of them have, and it is in our churches that we
openly acknowledge the spirituality of music.
We find this in our sacred texts.
Praise
God, for God’s mighty deeds.
Praise
God according to God’s surpassing greatness.
Praise
God with trumpet sound…
with
lute and harp… with tambourine and dance… with strings and pipe
with
clanging cymbals… with loud clashing cymbals.
You can almost hear the
music in the psalm. The work you do as
church musicians is important work. It
is holy work. Finally we believe that it
is the Spirit blowing that washes away from the soul the dust of everyday
life. It is our task to offer the music
that lets the Spirit do his work, do her work.
Here I want to get very down to earth. Music matters. It is important because it is powerful, but
in our understanding in the church it is powerful for a purpose. Ultimately the purpose of our music is to
open people up to the Spirit of God so that the dust of everyday life can be
washed away, so that they may be moved to wonder and to the praise of God, so
that they might experience what it is like to be a rich person entering heaven
through the ear of a raindrop. Jesus’
remark about shaking the dust off one’s feet is in a passage about the mission
of God’s people – to proclaim the kingdom of God and to heal. That is our purpose, our reason for being as
the church.
There is a creative tension here. Music is powerful. Good music matters. Excellence and skill matter. I have been in some places for worship where
I am sorry to say if the Spirit is going to move at all in a soul, it has to do
that in spite of the music. I know that
is not true for any of you here!
Excellence and skill matter, yet playing the organ in worship is
something more than, other than, different than performance. You offer your best gifts to help others
discover the gift of God that is in them, sometimes buried under the dust of
everyday life.
There is another tension that exists in worship music in
our day and time – a tension that frankly is not always very creative. It is the tension between the organ and other
instruments in worship. We need to
affirm the beauty, the power, the potential of the organ, while also being open
to the trumpet, the lute and harp, the tambourine and dance, strings and pipe,
clanging cymbals, loud clashing cymbals, maybe even electric guitars and drums.
Part of the beauty of the organ is its adaptability and
functionality. It can make so many
wonderful sounds and lead singing so well.
I remember reading a few years ago a thoughtful article about just how
useful an organ is for leading worship.
And it can be played by one person, unlike a worship band where we are
always trying to coordinate multiple people.
For churches that have them, and that is many of our churches, the organ
needs to be seen as an essential part of the worship life of the congregation. Your music is vitally important if we are to
offer worship that helps the Spirit wash the dust from everyday life and evoke
wonder, and the praise of God.
Yet the music that can move the soul and spirit comes in
different varieties. Sometimes we have
made excessive claims for ourselves, as if worship could not really happen
without the organ. And that’s not true
either. And with all that is happening
in our world, the organ will never be the only game in town when it comes to
worship music.
Maybe one way I can put this tension is to say that the
organ is instrumental to the worship life of the church, and yes, I hear the
pun. Organ music is instrumental in two
senses of that word – you help make worship happen in an important and vital
way. It often does not happen without
you. Hold your head high. At the same time remember that the organ is
instrumental, it serves another purpose, opening people to the Spirit of God,
and we need to acknowledge that the music that washes away from the soul the
dust of everyday life comes in other modalities.
It is a
challenging time to be a church organist, but then it is a challenging time to
be the church.
Pulling
all these threads together, I hope you will be proud of what you do and what
you offer to the church. Thank you. Because of the music you play, people are
more open to God, to God’s healing, caring Spirit. I want to encourage you to continue offering
your best. That you would take time
today to be here says a lot about you.
Congratulate yourselves. Finally,
in this challenging time, be gracious and open to the experiments in worship
music that are happening.
There is
another passage in the Bible where cymbals are mentioned. If I
speak in the tongues of mortals and of angels, but do not have love, I am a
noisy gong or a clanging cymbal.
Paul does not think that this kind of clanging cymbal really praises God
well. Music matters because of its
power. It can wash the dust of everyday
life away, but it does so in the service of discovering a love which holds us,
which embraces us, which challenges us, a love in which we discover who we are,
and for what, whence and whereto. If the
music we offer is only blowing dust, and not helping discover that love, then
we are noisy gongs and clanging cymbals.
But I am convinced we are here because we seek a more excellent
way. Blessings.
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