Much of what comes to us through the Hebrew Bible can be joyfully (sometimes mournfully) sung by Muslims, Christians, Jews and even by generally secular people who retain some semblance of belief in a non-specific universal spirit. Far too often it has been squeezed into narrow interpretations that kept these wonderful words from EVERYONE. The tunes and arrangements have been off-putting. Stories and poems lose their life and turn into words on paper illustrated, if at all, by artless illustrations. The efforts you'll find here liberate things, from particular tunes, instrumentation, visual aspect and even from religious context. Share and use what you'll find here, letting the pictures take you beyond the text, beyond the music, and beyond yourself.
Très belle mélodie. Elle est utilisée dans quelles églises ? Je ne crois pas qu'elle soit arrivée en France, ou alors avec un texte différent, qui n'est pas une version de ce psaume.
I am an ELCA Lutheran from South Carolina. Today (November 6, All Saints' Sunday), this was our Old Testament Lesson of the Day. And let us give thanks to those who have gone before us.
It was ours in Holland MI today, too (RCA). Our pastor worked with the gospel text, though. Which I also posted as a video recently. I recommend that you listen. You might find it fun.
I'm free enough of the attempts I would have made as a younger man to "spiritualize" the entire book. I had no idea, when I began to set its poetry to music, that it would be SO erotic. This one was probably the most graphic of the 20-odd that came out of the project. I hope you enjoy them all.
@@alexataiwan3 I have used this verse to seduce a modestly devout "Christian" woman. Reminds me of the Eminem/50 cent verse: "I've got scriptures in my brain that I can spit at your dame."
Amen, being God - like is needed in today’s society. I am your newest subscriber. I did a video on how God’s test changed me. Consider checking it out as well.