834

Draw Us in the Spirit's Tether

Scripture References

834

Draw Us in the Spirit's Tether

Additional Prayers

A Prayer of Acclamation
Lord Jesus Christ, Son of God, for us your body was broken and your blood poured out.
So we break the bread and bless the cup.
You bind us together in union with you.
So we break the bread and bless the cup.
You send us to the world with strength for the journey.
So we break the bread and bless the cup.
Lord Jesus Christ, Son of God, for us your body was broken and your blood poured out.
So we break the bread and bless the cup in your holy name. Amen.
— Cornelius Plantinga, Jr.
834

Draw Us in the Spirit's Tether

Tune Information

Name
UNION SEMINARY
Key
G Major
Meter
8.7.8.7.8.7

Recordings

834

Draw Us in the Spirit's Tether

Hymn Story/Background

This communion hymn was born of many efforts on two continents. The English scholar, teacher, writer and editor Percy Dearmer wrote this text as a continuation of an earlier hymn text set to a different tune; the combined texts were published in Songs of Praise Enlarged in 1931 to another tune. The American teacher and composer Harold Friedel found Dearmer’s text and included it as part of an anthem for choir and organ he composed in 1957. In 1967, Jet E. Turner extracted Dearmer’s text from the anthem and named the tune of that section UNION SEMINARY—after his alma mater in New York City and where Friedel was a professor at the School of Sacred Music. The resulting combination was first published in the Hymnbook for Christian Worship (1970); Jet Turner was a member of that hymnal committee.
 
For congregational use of this meditative hymn, all should sing in unison, though church choirs that can handle this challenging harmony could sing one or two stanzas, inviting all to join on stanza three. 
— Emily Brink

Author Information

Educated at Christ Church, Oxford, England, Percy Dearmer (b. Kilburn, Middlesex, England, 1867; d. London, England, 1936) was ordained in the Church of England in 1892. He served a number of churches and was a Red Cross chaplain in Serbia, where his first wife died. Dearmer also lectured in England and abroad (including the United States) and from 1919-1936 was professor of ecclesiastical art at King's College, London. Dearmer had many interests, and he published books on a wide ran of topics-church history, faith healing, fasting, and art. But he is especially noted for contribution to liturgy and church music. Along with others he edited The English Hymnal (1906), Songs of Praise (1925, enlarged 1931), and the Oxford Book of Carols (1928). He also wrote a hymnal handbook,Songs of Praise Discussed (1933), produced original hymns, and translated hymns from Latin and other languages into English.
— Bert Polman

Composer Information

Harold Friedell (b. Jamaica, NY, 1905; d. Hastings-on-Hudson, NY, 1958) taught music theory and composition at the Guilmant Organ School, the School of Sacred Music at Union Theological Seminary, and the Julliard School of Music. He also served as organist at the Calvary Episcopal Church and St. Bartholomew Church, both in New York City, and at St. John Episcopal Church in Jersey City, New Jersey. Friedell composed a number of hymn tunes, carols, anthems, and service music.
— Bert Polman

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