For the upcoming feast of the Conversion of St. Paul, anyone may please feel free to use one or both of the following hymns. The first is originally mine, the second is my translation of the office hymn Excelsam Pauli Gloriam. They can be sung to many Long Meter (LM, or 8888) hymn tunes, such as Eisenach or Jesu Dulcis Memoria.
The martyr Stephen met his death
Forgiveness in his final breath.
He interceded for them all
Whose cloaks lay at the feet of Saul.
The Father, hearing Stephen's prayer,
Gave gifts for all the Church to share
When grace and mercy overflowed
In light upon Damascus Road.
Then bless the Lord of heart and mind
Who gives new vision to the blind,
Whose reign throughout the world extends,
Whose loving-kindness never ends.
Very nicely written! I would like to offer this hymn-tune & harmonisation, which I wrote with this text in mind. The tune may be used with any LM (Long Meter) text, of course. This tune & harmonisation is offered for free use.
Gavin, this seems to me to be a very good match, because of the mysterious themes in the text Excelsam... of vocation, election, prayer, etc. The text needs the dramatic texture of Deus...
Martyr's and apostles have different hymn tunes, I do not think it is appropriate to mix them together.
Apostles are the greatest class of all, without them the martyrs, confessors, holy women and virgins would not exist. The Roman Antiphonary hymn melody as used in "Exsultet cælum laudibus" (common of apostles) would be more appropriate than Deus Tuórum militum.
I'm actually not familiar with the hynm "Excelsam Pauli Gloriam" can anyone tell me which region of medieval europe sang this? I have a clue it is anglo-saxon but I dont know. For all I know it could be one of the 1980's compositions of Lord Anselmo Lentini.
The Liber Hymnarius attributes the text to St. Peter Damian, Doctor of the Church.
Here's a routine reminder: Avoid flames: critique principles, not people. Be discriminating but don't nitpick. Be academic not acerbic. Be principled not polemical.
Kathy, I'm considering using the second hymn for an upcoming Evensong service. I noticed the copyright was specified for use in 2009. I'm sure you wouldn't object to its use, but I wanted to check if you would give permission for its use in 2015?
I would have expected such since St. Paul is the titular Saint of the Cathedral of the Diocese of Rome, which celebration, IIRC, ranks above a Sunday in Ordinary Time anyway.
@Kathy, I used your hymn for the conversion of St. Paul today and matched it with TRURO. We sang it as the Processional Hymn for our weekly school mass. Thank you very much.
Offertory was "The King of Love my Shepherd Is" Communion was the antiphon plus "Adoro Te Devote" Recessional was "For All the Saints"
and we used the "Mass of Wisdom."
Altogether a nice mass considering we use Breaking Bread missalettes ;-).
By the way, I have this set to DEUS TUORUM MILITUM if anyone wants it. I also, in a fit of industriousness, engraved it as SATB. If anyone wants either/both version(s), just PM me.
Don’t forget, also, the brilliant “We sing the glorious conquest”.
1 We sing the glorious conquest before Damascus gate, when Saul, the church's spoiler, came breathing threats and hate; the rav'ning wolf rushed forward full early to the prey; but lo! the Shepherd met him, and bound him fast today.
2 O glory most excelling that smote across his path! O light that pierced and blinded the zealot in his wrath! O voice that spake unto him the calm, reproving word! O love that sought and held him the bondman of his Lord!
3 O Wisdom ord'ring all things in order strong and sweet, what nobler spoil was ever cast at the victor's feet? What wiser master-builder e'er wrought at your employ than he, till now so furious your building to destroy?
4 Lord, teach your church the lesson, still in her darkest hour of weakness and of danger, to trust your hidden pow'r: your grace by ways mysterious the wrath of man can bind, and in your boldest foeman your chosen saint can find.
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