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“Greatest hymn”? Sacred song enthusiasts vote in ‘madness’ tournament

RNS

Four months after “March Madness”, US hymn lovers are awaiting the outcome of a different kind of tournament that will answer this question: “What’s the greatest hymn of all time?”

Will it be Holy, Holy, Holy!? Or how about How Great Thou Art?

Or one of six others in the “Elite Eight” that were announced on Tuesday, 2nd July?

Hymn tournament

The Strophic Division and Refrain Division of the bracket. PICTURE: Courtesy of The Hymn Society in the United States and Canada

The Hymn Society in the United States and Canada decided to use the tournament as a way to draw attention to the music that fills church sanctuaries every weekend. Its contest, where enthusiasts have voted since May on its website and on Facebook, was inspired by a Catholic podcast, Open Your Hymnal, which had a spring tournament focused specifically on hymn tunes.

This contest focuses on both the texts and the tunes of beloved hymns.

Brian Hehn, director of the hymn society’s Center for Congregational Song, said the tournament has been a kind of “teaching moment” that allowed the society’s members to have some fun and helped the uninitiated to learn that there are a variety of hymn styles.

Hymns were divided into different divisions, each with eight entries.

Holy, Holy, Holy! was the number one seed and O for a Thousand Tongues was number eight in the strophic division, which features hymns with a different text in each stanza and no refrain.

The top-seeded song in the refrain division was When Peace, Like a River, known best for the repeated phrase, “It is well with my soul.”

Another division includes chants (such as O Come, O Come, Emanuel) and cyclical songs (like South African hymn Siyahamba).

The last of the divisions, in which In Christ Alone was the number two seed, features a grab bag of choices from hymn society staffers along with employees of Christian Copyright Licensing International, which focuses mainly on contemporary worship songs.

Like March Madness, the hymn tournament has included some early upsets. For Hehn, it was amazing that Amazing Grace was in that number.

“Because it’s such a staple in pretty much every tradition’s song repertoire, it’s surprising that Amazing Grace didn’t make it into at least the semifinals,” he said.

“It made it to only the second round,” said Hehn, where it was defeated by Holy, Holy, Holy!

The hymns were ranked, or seeded, in four divisions based on their popularity in resources such as Hymnary.org, the top 100 list of CCLI and the National Association of Pastoral Musicians’ list of “Songs That Every American Catholic Should Know”.

When Peace, Like a River trounced Leaning on the Everlasting Arms with a 77 per cent-23 per cent vote in the first round but was then defeated in a 58 per cent-42 per cent vote by O Come, All Ye Faithful. That Christmas hymn is now up against My Hope Is Built/On Christ the Solid Rock, which soundly defeated Here I Am, Lord in a 62 per cent-38 per cent tally.

The Elite Eight are: Holy, Holy, Holy!; Be Thou My Vision; O Come, All Ye Faithful; My Hope Is Built/On Christ the Solid Rock; O Come, O Come, Emmanuel; Of the Father’s Love Begotten; Holy God, We Praise Your Name; and How Great Thou Art.

The tournament is fueled by votes from more than 800 people, most of whom Hehn said are affiliated with the 1,200-member society, including church music professors, hymn writers, other musicians and pastors.

The final rounds will play out when about 250 hymn enthusiasts gather in Dallas for their annual conference in mid-July. Voting in person and via Facebook will continue during three more rounds there and Hehn plans to announce the winner on 18th July.

Anyone who submitted a bracket to the society with the correct winner before the voting started will win bragging rights – and a free membership for the next year.

 

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