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The Lutheran Hymnal

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
1941 Lutheran hymnal of the LCMS and WELS
For the hymnal published by the Lutheran Church in Australia, seeLutheran Hymnal with Supplement § Lutheran Hymnal.

The Lutheran Hymnal
Commissioned byEvangelical Lutheran Synodical Conference of North America
Approved for
Released1941
PublisherConcordia Publishing House
Pages858
No. of Hymns668
PsalmsYes
Service musicYes
← 
 →
Worship Supplement
Commissioned byLutheran Church – Missouri Synod, Commission on Worship
Approved forLutheran Church – Missouri Synod
Released1969
PublisherConcordia Publishing House
Pages253
No. of Hymns92
Service musicYes
← The Lutheran Hymnal'Lutheran Worship (LCMS) →

The Lutheran Hymnal (TLH) is ahymnal first published in1941 byConcordia Publishing House inSt. Louis, Missouri, for theEvangelical Lutheran Synodical Conference of North America. Its development had been started by the conference's largest member, theLutheran Church – Missouri Synod (LCMS), as a replacement for that denomination's first officialEnglish-language hymnal, the 1912Evangelical Lutheran Hymn-Book. In 1969 the LCMS published theWorship Supplement containing additional hymns and service music.

History

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Shortly after the 1929 LCMS synodical convention, LCMS presidentFriedrich Pfotenhauer appointed a Committee on Hymnology and Liturgics to develop a revision of theEvangelical Lutheran Hymn-Book that had been published in 1912 and revised several times thereafter. This committee, chaired by professor William G. Pollock ofConcordia Seminary, first met in November of that year. The second meeting, in January 1930, included representatives of the other synods in theEvangelical Lutheran Synodical Conference of North America—theWisconsin Evangelical Lutheran Synod (WELS), theEvangelical Lutheran Synod (ELS), and theSynod of Evangelical Lutheran Churches (known then as the Slovak Synod)—and the name of the committee was changed to the Synodical Conference Hymn Book Committee.[1]

During the next four years, the committee worked on hymn texts and tunes. Subcommittees were set up to focus on categories of hymns such as German-language, Scandinavian, English and Australian, and ancient and medieval. Hymnals currently in use by the synods were examined to find hymns that needed to be included. A music subcommittee worked to choose which tunes and tune variants would be used.[1]

In 1934, a subcommittee on liturgics was appointed to develop the various church services that would be included in the hymnal.[1]

TLH was published in 1941 by the LCMS's Concordia Publishing House under the authority of the Synodical Conference.[2] It contains 668chorales, hymns, carols, andchants, plus the liturgy for the Common Service,Matins,Vespers, andpropers,collects,prayers, suffrages,canticles,psalms, and miscellaneous tables.

The first attempt to replaceTLH began in 1965, when the LCMS began work on theLutheran Book of Worship and invited other Lutherandenominations in North America to participate in its creation. As a result of disagreements and compromises with the other churches involved inLBW's production, the objections were raised within the LCMS to some of its content, andLutheran Book of Worship was published in1978 without the endorsement of the very church body that had initiated its production.[citation needed] An LCMS revision ofLBW was quickly published in1982 under the titleLutheran Worship (LW).Lutheran Worship was intended to replaceTLH as the official hymnal of the LCMS; however, many congregations were unsatisfied with the final product, leading them to continue usingTLH. According to a 1999 survey by the LCMS Commission on Worship, approximately 36% of the synod's congregations were still usingTLH as their main hymnal, and even more were continuing to use it in combination withLW and/or other hymnals and hymnal supplements. An even newer hymnal,Lutheran Service Book (LSB) was published in 2006 that restored many of the features ofTLH in the hope that more widespread use could be achieved.

In the Wisconsin Evangelical Lutheran Synod,TLH was effectively replaced byChristian Worship: A Lutheran Hymnal in 1993, and few congregations continue to use it on a regular basis. The Evangelical Lutheran Synod published a new hymnal,Evangelical Lutheran Hymnary, in 1996.

The initial editions ofTLH were bound in blue, and the hymnal has been simultaneously available in both red and blue cover versions for much of its history. The red cover version is now more common. The widespread use ofLutheran Service Book has begun the process of resolving the LCMS' hymnal controversy, as initial reviews have been generally quite favorable. Concordia Publishing House has announced that allTLH-related supplemental materials, including specialized accompaniment editions and the agenda, will go out of print when current supplies are depleted, but it plans to continue to produce the pew edition for the foreseeable future.TLH remains an officially authorized hymnal of the synod.

W.G. Polack, the editor ofThe Lutheran Hymnal, is standing in the back row, the fourth from the left.

See also

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References

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  1. ^abcGrime, Paul J. (April–July 2024). "Dissension in the Making ofThe Lutheran Hymnal".Concordia Theological Quarterly.88 (2–3):166–167.
  2. ^Schalk, Carl (1995).God's Song in a New Land: Lutheran Hymnals in America. Concordia Publishing House.ISBN 978-0570048305.

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