“I Go to Sing”

Last night I picked up the winter edition of the magazine of the Hymn Society in the US and Canada—The Hymn: A Journal of Congregational Song—and I read an article that I think I missed when the magazine first arrived. It was an article by poet and hymn-text writer Lindy Thompson about her poem “I Go to Sing,” which begins:
I might be exhausted and the children might be cranky,
but I will be going to church on Sunday.
Don’t know who is preaching, doesn’t matter —
the sermon may be helpful or not, holds my attention or doesn’t —
it’s the singing.
I go to sing.

I know I’ve heard some Shipmates express a similar sentiment, and I started to simply mention and link to this poem in the “What did you sing in church today” thread. But then I thought it might make for a good thread on its own.

Why do you go to church—if, of course, you do go to church? Is it the singing? The liturgy? The community? Habit? Something else, perhaps something that might strike others as odd? Is it because it’s your job? And if that’s the case, what meaning (if any) do you find in the job?

I put this thread in Ecclesiantics rather than Purgatory because I envision more a sharing of personal thoughts and experiences, listening to and learning a little more about each other, rather than debate.

So if you go, why do you go?


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Comments

  • CaissaCaissa Shipmate
    When I went to church it was for the community.
  • OblatusOblatus Shipmate
    To receive the Sacrament and, I hope, be edified by God through other means: texts, music, preaching, interaction. And give something to God by my presence and assent to prayers.
  • I go for the community. And for communion!
  • NenyaNenya All Saints Host, Ecclesiantics & MW Host
    I too go for the community. I do also go for the sung worship; I was thinking about how I'd feel if there was no singing at the meeting and I'd definitely feel deprived.

    I disagree a bit with the poem; we are fortunate enough to have a choice of two morning services and I confess I do look at who is doing the talk which sometimes influences which one I go to.

    There's also some nebulous reason around the fact that it feels odd not to go. Maybe that's just to do with habit.
  • To ring God's doorbell, and then run away.

    You can probably guess from that that I am a bellringer.
  • Thomas RowansThomas Rowans Shipmate
    edited May 2024
    I go to church 6-7 days a week and 5 of those days are for work. The other 1-2 days is for the entirety of the experience and to be transformed by the sacrament.

    Edit to add: The 5 days I go for work are also to partake in the entirety of the experience and to be transformed by the sacrament.
  • PuzzlerPuzzler Shipmate
    To worship God, to hear and receive both Word and Sacrament, and especially through music. May I add the organ as well as the singing? We love to sing traditional church music. Being a member of the choir means a lot to all of us: we are a mini-community of our own. The fellowship and mutual support especially through and beyond the pandemic is immeasurable.
  • KarlLBKarlLB Shipmate
    I'm not sure what community is.

    I think I go because I still have this vague feeling something is it it.
  • The_RivThe_Riv Shipmate
    I doubt many would say so out loud, or in public, and maybe I don't understand the nuances of it, but as the parish musician of a larger RC community, I have to wonder how many there would say "obligation."
  • Alan29Alan29 Shipmate
    It's hard to be a church organist without going to church!
    I have friends there. It has been my community for 35 years. Its a happy place for me. And I love the Liturgy as a piece of human activity that balances speech and music and silence, and physical stillness and movement. I find it aesthetically very satisfying.
  • Why do I go? Most of the reasons others have given.

    1. To worship and to receive the Sacrament.
    2. To hear the sermon, to have conversations with my fellow Christians, and hopefully to gain insight in to how to apply the Word of God in my life.
    3. Habit. Don't underestimate the power of habit. Habit will keep you going through patches where faith seems distant.
    4. Obligation. I'm not RC, and don't take as strict a line on the obligation to attend Mass as RC Canon law does, but I still feel an obligation to show up regularly.

    I like to sing, although I'm bad at it, but I'd still show up without singing.
  • Nick TamenNick Tamen Shipmate
    To ring God's doorbell, and then run away.

    You can probably guess from that that I am a bellringer.
    :lol:

    Nenya wrote: »
    I disagree a bit with the poem; we are fortunate enough to have a choice of two morning services and I confess I do look at who is doing the talk which sometimes influences which one I go to.
    I think in the poem, the poet was speaking only for herself when she said she didn’t care who was preaching. Different strokes . . . .

    (Interesting, though, that you have a choice. At most churches that I’m familiar with that have more than service, the same preacher preaches pretty much the same sermon at each service.)


    I’ve been on the road since starting this thread, so I’ve been pondering my own answer. I think when it boils down to it, I’d say I go to remember who I am—part of a community that is called together to be shaped by a story, our story, and gathered around a Table where Christ meets us. And singing is definitely part of it; I am a person for whom singing, and singing with others, is necessary.


  • To ring God's doorbell, and then run away.

    You can probably guess from that that I am a bellringer.

    Another ringer here. I go to ring, we wake people up and call them to worship, then we head off for our varying reasons, mostly not staying for the service.
  • I used to go for the music, singing, and liturgy - having a small part to play in the provision of those things - but find online services (from various places) acceptable substitutes now that I'm disabled.

    Community? Never found much of that at Our Place - too cliquey by half.
  • PigletPiglet All Saints Host, Circus Host
    I suppose that for the 40-odd years I spent in various Cathedral choirs, "I go to sing" would sum up a good chunk of my reason for being there. Now that that option is no longer available, I go because I want to be part of a church community, to pray, make confession and receive Communion and, well, yes - to sing.
  • SojournerSojourner Shipmate
    The_Riv wrote: »
    I doubt many would say so out loud, or in public, and maybe I don't understand the nuances of it, but as the parish musician of a larger RC community, I have to wonder how many there would say "obligation."

    Fewer and fewer these days ( can only speak as a recovering RC). I doubt that younger RCs have been fed the idea that missing Sunday Mass is a hanging offence. It may be that those who attend The_Riv’s shack are of a more traditional/ triumphalist bent.

  • Sojourner wrote: »
    The_Riv wrote: »
    I doubt many would say so out loud, or in public, and maybe I don't understand the nuances of it, but as the parish musician of a larger RC community, I have to wonder how many there would say "obligation."

    Fewer and fewer these days ( can only speak as a recovering RC). I doubt that younger RCs have been fed the idea that missing Sunday Mass is a hanging offence. It may be that those who attend The_Riv’s shack are of a more traditional/ triumphalist bent.

    It's also possible that American Catholics are fed something different than your own (Australian? if I remember correctly, forgive me if I am mistaken.)
  • SojournerSojourner Shipmate
    I don’t know what RCs in Oz are fed these post-conciliar days; certainly the party line hasn’t changed. Attitudes certainly have and the concept of “ obligation” ( apart from in trad circles) appears to have flown out the window.
  • SojournerSojourner Shipmate
    I might add that I spent 3 years in elementary school the USA (1957-9) at the height of the Cold War. I recall my first grade teacher telling us the cautionary tale of the family who skipped Sunday Mass for a picnic, were all killed in a car smash on the way home and of course went straight to Hell.
  • For sure, but I know young RCs in America who still understand attendance at Sunday Mass to be an imperative and so do so, if they consider themselves to be practicing RCs. I also know young RCs who don't attend every Sunday, consider themselves to be RC, and are fine with missing. I'm sure that sense has to do with a myriad of factors.
  • SojournerSojourner Shipmate
    Never heard anything like that in subsequent Catholic schooling ( 2 years in Singapore then the remaining 8 in Oz)
  • MaryLouiseMaryLouise Shipmate, Host Emeritus
    edited May 2024
    No particular sense of Catholic 'obligation' out here in southern Africa but I go to daily Mass when possible and make the effort to get to Mass when travelling in Europe or Asia, or back home in Zimbabwe. Since I work in ecumenical circles, I go to Protestant services and even Orthodox Masses as well from time to time.

    Mass for me is primarily to do with participating in the Eucharist and sacraments, but when travelling I will try to attend Masses known for the music or watch live-streaming Masses around the world just to hear the choirs or sung liturgies. Music touches places nothing else can reach. I do appreciate the sermons or homilies because the priests or preacher have taken time and trouble to prepare them. And in my home parish, the community is very important, friendship as well as the opportunity to do service and help with readings, taking Comunion to the sick, filling the church with flowers.

    @Sojourner, I wonder if that wicked family was related to the family who skipped eating fish on Friday and were poisoned by pizza before descending into the torments of Hell? They don't make fire & brimstone preachers like they used to do...
  • SojournerSojourner Shipmate
    Thank God for that; though some traditionalist clergy are doing their best to emulate the species.

    As for the pizza eating family, who knows? It was the Schadenfreude what got to me, even at the age of 5.
  • AravisAravis Shipmate
    Definite:
    To sing and/or play.
    To see people I know.
    Possible:
    To be inspired and learn something
    To have a sense of God’s presence.

    The “possibles” are what I hope to find, but don’t always.
    The Eucharist was very important to me when I first switched to Anglican, but has become less so. I was surprised how little I missed it in lockdown, though was aware many people felt differently.
  • rhubarbrhubarb Shipmate
    It is through music that I worship most fully. I feel that God wants me to use my musical gifts in his service and that I am negligent if I fail to do so. I go to church for many other reasons but a service without music feels incomplete.
  • PuzzlerPuzzler Shipmate
    Agreed.
  • Alan29Alan29 Shipmate
    @rhubarb. However I would rather go to a said service than one where the music (of any genre) is badly done. It then becomes a distraction rather than aid to worship.
  • ForthviewForthview Shipmate
    I go to church because I feel that I can better appreciate the readings and the general message when it is done on a community basis rather than me reading or thinking alone at home.
    I wouldn't be too worried about the sense of obligation which perhaps some people may have. There are lots of times in life when we are obliged to do certain things. Most(but not all) people pay their taxes. Surely they don't just pay their taxes because they are afraid that may may be punished by the state in some way if they don't pay. Surely, although we may grumble about paying tax , we see that it is our responsibility to contribute to the upkeep of our state and society in general.

    If we believe in God - if we believe in his love for us - if we believe that we are invited to respond to that love then we do have an obligation to respond. Just as we pay our taxes for the good of society in general, so does our attendance at community worship help the Christian community of which we may claim to be members.
  • NenyaNenya All Saints Host, Ecclesiantics & MW Host
    Nick Tamen wrote: »
    To ring God's doorbell, and then run away.

    You can probably guess from that that I am a bellringer.
    :lol:
    Nenya wrote: »
    I disagree a bit with the poem; we are fortunate enough to have a choice of two morning services and I confess I do look at who is doing the talk which sometimes influences which one I go to.
    I think in the poem, the poet was speaking only for herself when she said she didn’t care who was preaching. Different strokes . . . .

    (Interesting, though, that you have a choice. At most churches that I’m familiar with that have more than service, the same preacher preaches pretty much the same sermon at each service.)

    Pre-lockdown that was the case with us - two services at 9.15am and 11am, carbon copies of each other apart from children's groups were only at the 9.15. Same songs, same speaker, same worship team... it was a long and intense morning for those involved in facilitating.

    Now we have two services, 9am without children's groups: shorter and more meditative with maybe only two or three songs. 10.30am: a completely different worship team, speaker, set of songs. Much better than the previous arrangement, in my opinion.

    Having said that, the theme of both talks will be the same and if it's a week for communion that will happen at both services.

    I'm interested that a number of people have said they go to take communion. That doesn't happen every week at our church and on the occasions I arrive and realise it's going to my heart sinks. I don't know why that is. Probably a subject for a separate thread.
  • Nenya wrote: »
    I'm interested that a number of people have said they go to take communion. That doesn't happen every week at our church and on the occasions I arrive and realise it's going to my heart sinks. I don't know why that is. Probably a subject for a separate thread.
    In at least two of "my" churches there have been people who have deliberately not attended on Communion Sundays.

  • I could see that for a whole lot of reasons.
  • PuzzlerPuzzler Shipmate
    I probably don’t “ appreciate” communion
    ( wrong word, I know ) apart from in my own church, as I get too anxious about the logistics. Where to go, which way to return, whether to kneel or stand, whether to receive in both kinds or one.
    If I am at a Methodist Church, I don’t like their “ tables”. I see no merit in treating a group of communicants as a unit, dismissed by their own prayer. It just makes the service longer for no reason, especially if it is a large, ecumenical congregation.
    All these concerns get in the way of what communion is supposed to be about.
  • Alan29Alan29 Shipmate
    Well we RCs only really have Eucharistic services in parishes. Pre Vat 2 there were processions and benediction and novena. They were mainly in the vernacular while Mass was in Latin. They sort lost their importance when Mass went into the vernacular. Monasteries etc still celebrate the Hours communally, and some cathedrals will have Evening Prayer.
    For me it now feels odd to go to a RC church and not have communion. I feel a bit deprived of that particular expression of being part of one body.
    I struggle with homilies. I really am not interested in what the preacher has to say unless they are excellent.... and they rarely are.
  • stetsonstetson Shipmate
    Sojourner wrote: »
    I might add that I spent 3 years in elementary school the USA (1957-9) at the height of the Cold War. I recall my first grade teacher telling us the cautionary tale of the family who skipped Sunday Mass for a picnic, were all killed in a car smash on the way home and of course went straight to Hell.

    I've heard of at least one priest in Canada saying the same thing about people who die right after watching supposedly sinful movies.

    You'd really think those are the exact sorta situations where purgatory would apply.
  • MaryLouiseMaryLouise Shipmate, Host Emeritus
    During the Covid pandemic, I could only watch a computer screen and receive 'spiritual Communion' in virtual reality from live-streamed Masses and to be deprived of the daily or weekly Eucharist was one of the hardest things to bear in that time.
  • SojournerSojourner Shipmate
    stetson wrote: »
    Sojourner wrote: »
    I might add that I spent 3 years in elementary school the USA (1957-9) at the height of the Cold War. I recall my first grade teacher telling us the cautionary tale of the family who skipped Sunday Mass for a picnic, were all killed in a car smash on the way home and of course went straight to Hell.

    I've heard of at least one priest in Canada saying the same thing about people who die right after watching supposedly sinful movies.

    You'd really think those are the exact sorta situations where purgatory would apply.

    Oh stetson you’re a lot younger than I am. Pre V2 the catechism was like the 18th century English penal code: 200+ capital offences!



  • Alan29Alan29 Shipmate
    MaryLouise wrote: »
    During the Covid pandemic, I could only watch a computer screen and receive 'spiritual Communion' in virtual reality from live-streamed Masses and to be deprived of the daily or weekly Eucharist was one of the hardest things to bear in that time.

    Yes, this. And missing the communitarian aspect. For me "us and we" have always carried far more weight than "I and me." Our Place didn't live stream, and the couple of times I tried it I felt like a spectator, and that is totally alien to my idea of the Eucharist.
  • ArethosemyfeetArethosemyfeet Shipmate, Heaven Host
    I struggle with the infrequency of communion in the Church of Scotland. It's been 6 months since it was last celebrated in my local church, and even under the best of circumstances it's only 4-5 times a year. As a cradle Anglican it still feels alien to me, like subsisting on thin gruel when we're invited to the banquet table of the Lord.
  • EnochEnoch Shipmate
    edited May 2024
    Sojourner wrote: »
    I might add that I spent 3 years in elementary school the USA (1957-9) at the height of the Cold War. I recall my first grade teacher telling us the cautionary tale of the family who skipped Sunday Mass for a picnic, were all killed in a car smash on the way home and of course went straight to Hell.
    How did your teacher know this, and to which direction they had gone?

  • ForthviewForthview Shipmate
    This would have been in the 1950s a fairly standard 'cautionary' tale told in RC circles.
    The teacher .as Enoch rightly asks, could not have known, what direction they were going in, and perhaps the teacher forgot to mention that, as was also standard RC teaching at that time, as long as the Mass missers were sorry for any sins they had committed they would most certainly not have gone to Hell.
  • Alan29Alan29 Shipmate
    This barbaric idea has nothing to do with christianity.
  • SojournerSojourner Shipmate
    Enoch wrote: »
    Sojourner wrote: »
    I might add that I spent 3 years in elementary school the USA (1957-9) at the height of the Cold War. I recall my first grade teacher telling us the cautionary tale of the family who skipped Sunday Mass for a picnic, were all killed in a car smash on the way home and of course went straight to Hell.
    How did your teacher know this, and to which direction they had gone?


    Who knows? i thought it was crap then but was smart enough (at 5) to put up and shut up.
  • SojournerSojourner Shipmate
    Alan29 wrote: »
    This barbaric idea has nothing to do with christianity.

    Of course not, but everything to do with pre-conciliar triumphalist Catholicism

  • SojournerSojourner Shipmate
    My dear maternal grandmother (a daily communicant from whom I learned all my prayers and swear words) recalled attending a “mission” in the 1930s where a tub thumping Redemptorist informed the congregation that “the prostitutes on the street are better than the Mass-missers”…
  • SojournerSojourner Shipmate
    Thanks be to God that “missions” are deader than the dodo
  • Pity he didn't try saying that lot minus his teeth - it would have sounded interesting...

    At the risk of prolonging an entertaining tangent, a young curate at the Church Of My Youth (very low-church Prayer Book C of E) preached a sermon in which he stated categorically that certain Sinful Persons (for the life of me, I can't recall exactly which persons :grimace: ) would Without Doubt All Go To Hell.

    I was in my late teens at this time, and was able to recognise Total Tosh when I heard it. Decades later, and this sort of Tosh is still being preached, albeit to very much smaller congregations...

    Apologies. We seem to have moved away from the subject of Singing, but I do miss (some of) the hymns and liturgical music. Happily, one of the churches I visit online (the Reformed Church in Franeker, NL), puts both words and melody line of its hymns and songs on screen, so I'm able to sing along, not only to the tunes I know, but also to those I'm not immediately familiar with.

    Yes, I need to get out more...
  • ForthviewForthview Shipmate
    This depends on whether we take the Church or indeed the Biblical texts as that which transmits to us the message of Jesus.
    The present Catholic catechism reminds us that Jesus solemnly proclaims that he will send his angels and that they will gather evildoers and that Jesus will pronounce the condemnation 'depart from me,you cursed,into the eternal fire'.
    The affirmation of Sacred Scripture and the teachings of the Church on the subject of hell are a call to the responsibility incumbent upon each one of us to make use of our freedom in view of our eternal destiny.

    We know that many of those who claim to follow Christ find it easier to attempt to explain these ideas in simple black and white ideas of' do this and you will be saved, don't do this and you will be damned'
    I most heartily agree that it is better to concentrate on the positive rather than the negative,but not only in religion,but generally in life we have to be aware that there are consequences for our actions.
    If we deliberately and with full knowledge reject God then we may not wish to spend eternity in the presence of God.
    It may be difficult to really know if anyone can actually with 'full knowledge' reject God
    and it may be difficult to understand really whether the person who deliberately 'misses
    Mass' has made with 'full knowledge' a decision to fully reject God for all eternity,nevertheless we cannot say that these ideas have 'nothing to do with christianity'.
  • SojournerSojourner Shipmate
    But have they?
  • ForthviewForthview Shipmate
    Sorry,Sojourner, have they what ?
    I certainly don't believe that a child who misses Mass will have done that in the full knowledge that they have in practical terms rejected God and the chance to play the harp in heaven.
    It is however a way of instilling the idea that our actions have consequences.

    Assuming that we accept that we as human beings have certain imperfections which sometime the Church calls 'sin' then we should be equally reminded always that 'sorrow for sin' will at least in God's eyes cancel out the punishment due to sin. That is something which does not always happen in our everyday lives,where our imperfections or 'sins' can have real and lasting consequences.
  • Yes, I need to get out more...
    You have a new gangplank, so there's no excuse!

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