All Saints’ Sunday
All Saints’ Sunday
Almighty God, you have knit together your elect in one communion and fellowship in the mystical body of your Son Christ our Lord: Give us grace so to follow your blessed saints in all virtuous and godly living, that we may come to those ineffable joys that you have prepared for those who truly love you; through Jesus Christ our Lord, who with you and the Holy Spirit lives and reigns, one God, in glory everlasting. Amen.
Support Saint Thomas Church
Pledge to the 2025 Annual AppealYou can also text "give" to (855) 938-2085
Array ( [post_id] => 329405 [status_only] => [position] => above [media_type] => unknown [url] => [called_by] => [do_ts] => )[sdg-gmp] featured_AV: Array ( [0] => video )
[sdg-gmp] media_format: Array ( [0] => youtube )
[sdg-gmp] Multimedia FALSE
[sdg-gmp] player_position: 'above' / position: 'above'
[sdg-gmp] media_type REVISED: 'video'
[sdg-gmp] video_id: 'Lk1drx0J3es'; video_file src: ''
[sdg-gmp] media_format REVISED: 'youtube'
[sdg-gmp] webcast_status: 'on_demand'; webcast_url: ''
[sdg-gmp] src: 'https://www.youtube.com/embed/Lk1drx0J3es?enablejsapi=1&playlist=Lk1drx0J3es&autoplay=0&loop=1&mute=0&controls=1'
[sdg-gmp] multimedia: / media_format: youtube
show_cta: TRUE
[sdg-gmp] player_status: ready
+~+~+~+~+~+~+~+
We invite those of you watching this service online to invite Jesus into your hearts during Holy Communion by making an Act of Spiritual Communion.
This morning, the choir sings a Sequence for All Saints by Kenneth Leighton, a five-movement musical sequence which will punctuate the Mass.
My Jesus,
I believe that you are present in the Most Holy Sacrament.
I love you above all things,
and I desire to receive you into my soul.
Since I cannot at this moment
receive you sacramentally,
come at least spiritually into my heart.
I embrace you as if you were already there and unite myself wholly to you.
Never permit me to be separated from you.
Amen.
Kenneth Leighton (1929-1988) always enjoyed writing for a specific performance or for particular musicians; consequently, composing this Sequence, a commission from the West Riding Cathedral Festival, must have given him particular pleasure. Not only was the Wakefield Cathedral Choir (in which Leighton’s musical career had begun as a choirboy) participating in the premiere, together with the choirs of Sheffield and Bradford cathedrals, but also All Souls is the dedication of Wakefield Cathedral itself. It was the setting for the first performance, on 14 October 1978, conducted by Jonathan Bielby.The text, taken from The English Hymnal, is a medieval plainsong Sequence (an addition to the liturgy often sung during Mass after the Alleluia on feast days) for the Feast of All Saints (1 November). Whilst composing the work, Leighton confided to his wife that he did not find it easy composing a text that related to death; nevertheless the result is a marvellously consolatory work cast in a span of five sections.The Introit begins with the choir softly intoning the word ‘Gaudeamus’, which blossoms lyrically before bursting into a choral fanfare. A flamboyant, quasi-improvisatory organ solo provides a link to a fast rhythmic section that rises to a climax at ‘in honour of All Saints’, and it fades with hushed awe at the ‘Son of God’ before the opening ‘Gaudeamus’ returns. The baritone’s sombre exhortation to ‘fear the Lord’ opens the Gradual, soon joined by lilting treble ‘Alleluias’. As other voices are gradually added to the texture, the music gathers momentum until they chime ‘Alleluia’ together, before a brief organ postlude.
The Offertory opens with quietly throbbing chords, the trebles’ serene melody expresses the wonder of God, and it concludes with a caressing cadence, whilst the voices enter in imitation, and a tranquil solo treble voice floats above. The Communion represents a profound sense of mystery. An ornate organ solo sets a mood of solemnity and the baritone joins to meditate on the peace the ‘souls of the righteous’ obtain after death. The choir voices steal in, and in an unaccompanied passage of harmonic intensity, the music rises to a fervent climax, only to die away in a cadence of balm.
Initially the Finale hearkens back to the opening of the sequence, yet it erupts into a paean of praise, with music of a celebratory character, heightened by rhythmically syncopated organ accompaniment. After a climactic ‘Alleluia’, the semi-chorus ushers in Issac Watts’s hymn ‘Give me the wings of faith’ (a melody by Orlando Gibbons clothed in the harmony of the Scottish metrical tune No 67), with the rest of the choir adding ‘Alleluias’. Finally the moment of grandeur arrives as in conclusion the congregation joins to sing the hymn.
Celebrant | Fr. Moretz |
Preacher | Professor Sarah Coakley |
Deacon | Fr. Gonzalez-Grissom |
Subdeacon | Mo. Turner |
Sung by | The Saint Thomas Choir of Men and Boys |
The Ordinary of the Mass | Missa De Angelis |
Propers | Gaudeamus (Sequence for All Saints) |
Prelude | Prélude à l’introït from Messe de la Toussaint |
Hymn | 287 – For all the saints, who from their labors rest – SINE NOMINE |
The Liturgy of the Word | |
The Lesson | Wisdom of Solomon 3:1-9 |
The Epistle | Revelation 21:1-6a |
The Holy Gospel | John 11:32-44 |
Sermon | The Rev. Dr. Luigi Gioia: Politics and Reconciliation |
The Liturgy of the Eucharist | |
Middle Voluntary | Subtilité des Corps Glorieux |
Voluntary | Incantation pour un jour Saint |
Resources
LeafletConcerts at Saint Thomas 2024-2025 Season Overview
Saint Thomas Church Self Guided Tour
Array ( [post_id] => 329405 [status_only] => [position] => below [media_type] => unknown [url] => [called_by] => [do_ts] => )[sdg-gmp] featured_AV: Array ( [0] => video )
[sdg-gmp] media_format: Array ( [0] => youtube )
[sdg-gmp] Multimedia FALSE
[sdg-gmp] player_position: 'above' / position: 'below'
[sdg-gmp] player_status: N/A for this position
+~+~+~+~+~+~+~+