Harry B. Partin - "The Second Fall" (March 24, 1968)
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Transcript
Transcripts may contain inaccuracies.
- | Absolve us, oh God, from every kind of sin, | 0:04 |
forgive us for trying to be clever | 0:08 | |
when we should have sought wisdom. | 0:11 | |
Heal us from the disease of trying to make names | 0:14 | |
for ourselves when we should | 0:17 | |
have been seeking to glorify thy name. | 0:20 | |
Enable us, oh Lord, to find pardon now | 0:24 | |
and to attain everlasting redemption in the world to come | 0:27 | |
through Jesus Christ, our Lord. | 0:32 | |
Amen. | 0:35 | |
And hear these words of assurance, of pardon, | 0:38 | |
as the heaven is high above the earth, | 0:44 | |
so great is God's mercy to them that fear him. | 0:48 | |
Like as a father pitieth his children | 0:54 | |
so the Lord pitieth them that fear him. | 0:58 | |
If we confess our sins, God is faithful and just | 1:03 | |
to forgive us our sins and to cleanse us | 1:10 | |
from all unrighteousness. | 1:15 | |
Therefore, be of good courage. | 1:18 | |
(bright organ music) | 1:26 | |
(women singing brightly in Latin) | 1:49 | |
(bright organ music) | 2:12 | |
(women singing brightly in Latin) | 2:19 | |
(bright organ music) | 2:34 | |
(women singing brightly in Latin) | 2:39 | |
(bright organ music) | 2:49 | |
(women singing brightly in Latin) | 2:56 | |
(bright organ music) | 3:22 | |
Let us hear the Word of God as it is contained | 3:59 | |
in the scriptures of the New Testament. | 4:03 | |
First in the book of the Acts 17:22. | 4:07 | |
"So Paul standing in the middle of the Areopagus said, | 4:18 | |
"'Men of Athens, I perceive that in every way, | 4:24 | |
"'you are very religious. | 4:29 | |
"'For as I passed along and observed the objects | 4:33 | |
"'of your worship, I found also an altar | 4:35 | |
with this inscription, to an unknown God. | 4:39 | |
"'What therefore you worship as unknown, | 4:47 | |
"'this I proclaim to you. | 4:52 | |
"'The God who made the world and everything in it, | 4:57 | |
"'being Lord of heaven and earth does not live in shrines | 5:01 | |
"'made by man, nor is he served by human hands | 5:05 | |
"'as though he needed anything. | 5:12 | |
"'Since he himself gives to all men life | 5:15 | |
"'and breath and everything, and he made from one | 5:20 | |
"'every nation of men to live on all the face of the earth, | 5:26 | |
"'having determined allotted periods | 5:31 | |
"'and the boundaries of their habitation, | 5:34 | |
"'that they should seek God in the hope | 5:38 | |
"'that they might feel after him and find him. | 5:42 | |
"'Yet, he is not far from each one of us. | 5:48 | |
"'For in him, we live and move and have our being. | 5:54 | |
"'As even some of your poets have said, | 6:01 | |
"'for we are, indeed his offspring.'" | 6:04 | |
And in the epistle of Paul to the Romans 1:18. | 6:10 | |
"For the wrath of God is revealed from heaven | 6:21 | |
"against all ungodliness and wickedness of men, | 6:25 | |
"who by their wickedness suppress the truth. | 6:30 | |
"For what can be known about God is plain to them | 6:36 | |
"because God has shown it to them. | 6:41 | |
"Ever since the creation of the world, | 6:45 | |
"his invisible nature, namely, his eternal power and deity | 6:48 | |
"has been clearly perceived in the things | 6:54 | |
"that have been made. | 6:57 | |
"So they are without excuse. | 7:00 | |
"For although they knew God, they did not honor him as God | 7:04 | |
"or give thanks to him. | 7:12 | |
"But they became futile in their thinking | 7:15 | |
"and their senseless minds were darkened. | 7:18 | |
"Claiming to be wise, they became fools, | 7:22 | |
"and exchanged the glory of the immortal God | 7:28 | |
"for images resembling mortal man or birds | 7:33 | |
"or animals, or reptiles." | 7:39 | |
Amen and may God bless unto us the reading of his holy Word. | 7:46 | |
(bright organ music) | 7:53 | |
♪ Glory be to the Father ♪ | 8:02 | |
♪ And to the Son and to the Holy Ghost ♪ | 8:05 | |
♪ As it was in the beginning ♪ | 8:13 | |
♪ Is now and ever shall be ♪ | 8:17 | |
♪ The world without end, amen, amen ♪ | 8:22 | |
- | The Lord be with you. | 8:31 |
- | And also with you. | 8:33 |
- | Let us pray. | |
Most gracious Father, who, for every new generation, | 8:47 | |
preparest thy blessing, | 8:52 | |
we thy people offer this prayer of thanksgiving. | 8:55 | |
For the power thou hast given us | 9:01 | |
to lay hold of things unseen. | 9:03 | |
For the strong sense we have that this world | 9:07 | |
is not our abiding home. | 9:12 | |
For our restless hearts, which nothing finite can satisfy, | 9:15 | |
we give thee thanks, O God. | 9:22 | |
For the invasion of our souls by thy Holy Spirit, | 9:26 | |
for all human love and goodness that speaks to us of thee, | 9:31 | |
for the fullness of thy glory outpoured in Jesus Christ, | 9:39 | |
we give thee thanks, O God, thou author of every good. | 9:45 | |
Let us offer a prayer of intercession for our country. | 9:55 | |
Grant us, O God, a vision of our land, | 10:01 | |
perish, she might be, land of justice | 10:04 | |
where none shall prey on others, | 10:08 | |
a land of plenty where vice and poverty | 10:12 | |
shall cease to fester, | 10:15 | |
a land of brotherhood where success | 10:19 | |
shall be founded on service | 10:22 | |
and honor be given to worth alone, | 10:25 | |
a land of peace where order need no longer rest on force, | 10:30 | |
but on the love of all for their country. | 10:38 | |
And grant us, O God, to pledge our time and strength | 10:42 | |
and thought to hasten the day of her beauty | 10:47 | |
and righteousness through Jesus Christ our Lord. | 10:52 | |
Let us offer a prayer of intercession for the armed forces. | 11:00 | |
O Lord God, our Father, our Savior, our might, | 11:06 | |
we commend to thy keeping all those | 11:13 | |
who are venturing their lives, that whether by life | 11:16 | |
or by death, they may win for the whole world | 11:22 | |
the fruits of their sacrifice and a holy peace. | 11:28 | |
We ask this in the name of him who is the Prince of Peace. | 11:35 | |
Let us offer a prayer of intercession | 11:43 | |
for all who labor for peace. | 11:45 | |
Almighty and merciful God, who wouldest have the kingdoms | 11:49 | |
of this world become the kingdom of thy Son, | 11:53 | |
bestow thy blessing upon all who labor for peace | 11:58 | |
and for righteousness among the peoples, | 12:02 | |
that the day may be hastened when war shall be no more | 12:06 | |
and thy holy will shall govern the nations upon earth | 12:12 | |
through the same Jesus Christ our Lord. | 12:18 | |
Let us offer a prayer of supplication that we ourselves | 12:25 | |
may have a realization of God. | 12:30 | |
Deepen and quicken within us, O God, | 12:35 | |
the sense of thy presence and refresh us with thy power. | 12:37 | |
Quiet our understanding and give ease to our hearts | 12:43 | |
by bringing us close to things, infinite and eternal. | 12:47 | |
Grant us dignity in our own eyes | 12:53 | |
by taking us into thy service. | 12:57 | |
Humble us by laying bare before us our littleness | 13:01 | |
and our sin, and then exalt us by revealing thyself | 13:06 | |
to us as our counselor, our Father and our friend. | 13:11 | |
And let us offer our last prayer for ourselves. | 13:21 | |
Help us this day, O God, to serve thee devoutly, | 13:28 | |
and the world busily. | 13:32 | |
May we do our work wisely, give succor secretly, | 13:35 | |
go to our meat appetitely, sit thereat discreetly, | 13:43 | |
arise temperately, please our friend duly, | 13:50 | |
go to our bed merrily and sleep surely, | 13:55 | |
for the joy of our Lord Jesus Christ. | 14:00 | |
Now as our Savior, Christ hath taught us, | 14:06 | |
we humbly pray together. | 14:09 | |
Our Father who art in heaven, hallowed be thy name. | 14:12 | |
Thy kingdom come, thy will be done, | 14:18 | |
on earth as it is in heaven. | 14:22 | |
Give us this day our daily bread, | 14:25 | |
and forgive us our trespasses as we forgive those | 14:28 | |
who trespass against us, and lead us not | 14:32 | |
into temptation, but deliver us from evil. | 14:36 | |
For thine is the kingdom and the power | 14:40 | |
and the glory forever. | 14:44 | |
Amen. | 14:47 | |
- | May the grace of the Lord Jesus Christ be with us all. | 15:17 |
Amen. | 15:23 | |
The apostle Paul addressed his Athenian audience | 15:27 | |
in these words. | 15:35 | |
"Men of Athens, I perceive that in every way, | 15:40 | |
"you are very religious." | 15:45 | |
He continued, "For as I passed along and observed | 15:50 | |
"the objects of your worship, I found also an altar | 15:56 | |
"with this inscription: to an unknown God. | 16:02 | |
"What you therefore worship as unknown, | 16:09 | |
"this I proclaim to you." | 16:14 | |
Paul assumed, and rightly, that his audience | 16:18 | |
was consciously and deliberately religious. | 16:24 | |
While God was not known, he was somehow acknowledged | 16:32 | |
and sought and worshiped. | 16:42 | |
Modern men, and all of us are modern, more or less, | 16:49 | |
all of us are more or less affected by modernity. | 16:57 | |
Modern men are not Athenians. | 17:03 | |
Instead of raising altars to God, known or unknown, | 17:08 | |
we are disposed to ignore or even to entomb him. | 17:17 | |
The gods are dead. | 17:27 | |
More and more, modern man sees the gods | 17:31 | |
as obstacles to his freedom and he believes | 17:34 | |
that he will not be truly free | 17:38 | |
until he has killed the last god. | 17:43 | |
When in 1880, the German philosopher, | 17:48 | |
Friedrich Nietzsche first proclaimed the death of God, | 17:51 | |
he spoke as a prophet of the modern world. | 17:59 | |
In our own time, even some theologians turned atheologians, | 18:04 | |
believe that it is necessary to accept, | 18:15 | |
and even to assume the death of God and to think | 18:19 | |
and to build on the basis of this fact. | 18:25 | |
In his letter to the Romans, Paul assumed again, | 18:32 | |
that men are religious and that at least God's existence | 18:36 | |
can be known to them. | 18:42 | |
Paul writes about men generally. | 18:46 | |
"What can be known about God is plain to them | 18:51 | |
"because God has shown it to them. | 18:57 | |
"Ever since the creation of the world, | 19:02 | |
"his eternal power and deity has been clearly perceived | 19:07 | |
"in the things that have been made," in other words, | 19:13 | |
the creation itself witnesses | 19:20 | |
to the existence of the creator. | 19:27 | |
But for modern man, the very word creation | 19:32 | |
speaks not of God, but of man, the creator. | 19:40 | |
Perhaps the highest compliment that one modern man | 19:47 | |
pays to another is to say of him that he is creative. | 19:52 | |
Paul believed that knowledge of the existence of God, | 20:01 | |
of God's existence, is possible even for fallen man. | 20:08 | |
According to the Biblical tradition, | 20:16 | |
after the fall, man's relationship with God | 20:20 | |
was radically different. | 20:24 | |
Man was estranged from God. | 20:28 | |
Man had lost the possibility of encountering | 20:33 | |
and understanding God, but he kept enough intelligence | 20:38 | |
to rediscover the traces of God, | 20:45 | |
the traces of God in nature and in his own consciousness. | 20:50 | |
The death of God is an old phenomenon | 21:02 | |
in the history of religions. | 21:07 | |
It is not something new. | 21:09 | |
Among many archaic peoples, one find traces of belief | 21:13 | |
in what the ethnologists called high gods. | 21:18 | |
These are supreme beings who are believed | 21:23 | |
to have created the world and to have sojourned on earth | 21:28 | |
and to have established the laws | 21:36 | |
and the institutions of this world. | 21:39 | |
The high god is believed, subsequently, | 21:44 | |
to have withdrawn from the world, | 21:48 | |
to have retired to the highest heaven, | 21:51 | |
where he is rather indifferent to human life. | 21:54 | |
He became increasingly remote and transcendent, | 22:00 | |
and among many peoples, this high god | 22:07 | |
was ultimately forgotten. | 22:09 | |
This forgetting of the high god, | 22:14 | |
this oblivion of the high god, the creator god, | 22:18 | |
was equivalent to his death. | 22:24 | |
The disappearance of the high gods among primitive peoples, | 22:29 | |
however, did not mean the end of religion. | 22:32 | |
Quite the contrary. | 22:37 | |
For it was with the death of the high gods | 22:40 | |
that there appeared the vivid and dramatic pantheons | 22:44 | |
of divinities representing the powers and vitalities | 22:50 | |
of the world, the powers and vitalities | 22:55 | |
on which man believed his life to depend day by day. | 22:59 | |
The religious life came to center in the worship | 23:07 | |
and propitiation of these concrete vital deities. | 23:11 | |
The high god, the creator god, if some memory of him | 23:18 | |
survived, was usually without any regular worship | 23:25 | |
and was resorted to, if at all, | 23:31 | |
only in times of extreme crisis. | 23:35 | |
In a time of prolonged drought, | 23:41 | |
of severe epidemic and the like. | 23:45 | |
In other words, when life itself, life personified | 23:49 | |
and represented by the vital deities, | 23:55 | |
when life itself was threatened. | 24:00 | |
Something of the same attitude appeared | 24:05 | |
among the ancient Hebrews. | 24:09 | |
Whenever they were living in a time of relative peace | 24:12 | |
and prosperity, they abandoned Yahweh, the God of Israel, | 24:18 | |
and they drew near to the Baals of the Canaanites | 24:27 | |
and neighboring peoples, the gods of field and flock, | 24:29 | |
gods personifying and dispensing the powers of fertility. | 24:36 | |
It took some historical crisis or catastrophe | 24:42 | |
to cause them to turn again to God. | 24:51 | |
Thus one reads, for example, in 1 Samuel the 12th chapter. | 24:56 | |
"And they cried to the Lord and said, | 25:02 | |
"'We have sinned, because we have forsaken the Lord | 25:05 | |
"'and have served the Baals and the Ashtoreths, | 25:11 | |
"but now, deliver us out of the hands of our enemies, | 25:16 | |
"and we will serve thee.'" | 25:25 | |
In Nietzsche's prophecy, the death of God | 25:31 | |
means the end of religion. | 25:38 | |
After the death of the Judeo-Christian God, | 25:43 | |
according to Nietzsche, man has to live by himself, | 25:50 | |
alone in a radically desacralized world. | 25:59 | |
Apart from the question of whether this prophecy | 26:08 | |
of Nietzsche will come true, we have to face the fact | 26:13 | |
that great numbers of modern men have chosen, | 26:19 | |
often, consciously and deliberately to live in this way. | 26:26 | |
Unlike Paul's Athenians, | 26:35 | |
they do not consider themselves religious. | 26:38 | |
Indeed, they cannot. | 26:43 | |
This is a phenomenon of the modern world. | 26:48 | |
Something seems to have happened to man. | 26:53 | |
A secular, non-religious mode of existence seems | 26:59 | |
to have become a real possibility for human existence, | 27:05 | |
and many are trying to realize this possibility | 27:11 | |
in their own lives. | 27:17 | |
The distinguished historian of religion, Mircea Eliade, | 27:21 | |
has suggested that one may speak, | 27:27 | |
in Judeo-Christian terms of a second fall, a second fall. | 27:29 | |
After the second fall, which corresponds to the death of God | 27:39 | |
as proclaimed by Nietzsche, "Modern man," | 27:45 | |
writes Eliade, "Modern man has lost the possibility | 27:50 | |
"of experiencing the sacred at the conscious level, | 27:59 | |
"but he continues to be nourished | 28:05 | |
"and guided by his unconscious." | 28:10 | |
This is to say that modern man has rejected religion | 28:15 | |
at the conscious level, but that it survives | 28:20 | |
buried in his unconscious. | 28:25 | |
It has descended into the depths of man. | 28:31 | |
Modern man wants to be, and indeed declares himself to be | 28:38 | |
areligious, completely rid of the sacred. | 28:43 | |
Writes Eliade of this modern man, | 28:48 | |
"On the level of everyday consciousness, | 28:52 | |
"he is, perhaps, right, but he continues to participate | 28:55 | |
"in the sacred, through his dreams and his daydreams | 29:00 | |
"through certain attitudes. | 29:09 | |
"His love of nature, for example, | 29:13 | |
"through his distractions," his reading, the theater, | 29:16 | |
"through his nostalgia and his impulses." | 29:23 | |
I believe that Eliade is right in his insistence | 29:30 | |
that much of the experience and behavior of modern man | 29:33 | |
and especially of modern youth is unrecognizably religious | 29:40 | |
for the reason that it is unconscious and unconventional. | 29:48 | |
According to Nietzsche, it was, as a historical being, | 29:56 | |
as a being making history that man killed God. | 30:02 | |
Man's second fall, to use Judeo-Christian language. | 30:08 | |
Man second fall was a historical event, | 30:16 | |
as the first fall, the fall in Eden, was not. | 30:22 | |
After this assassination, this deicide, | 30:29 | |
man is forced to live exclusively in history, | 30:35 | |
as a being made by history and a being who makes history. | 30:41 | |
There is, for him, nothing, nothing which transcends history | 30:52 | |
and no meaning beyond history. | 31:01 | |
But is man's existence totally, completely, | 31:07 | |
a historical existence, or are there kinds | 31:13 | |
of human experience, dimensions of human experience, | 31:18 | |
which reveal man's desire for and his possibilities of | 31:25 | |
transcending the historically conditioned character | 31:31 | |
of his existence? | 31:35 | |
Can a man realize the freedom of the spirit, | 31:38 | |
and achieve liberation in life? | 31:47 | |
I'm convinced that this possibility exists | 31:52 | |
and that indeed, it is being sought, | 31:56 | |
especially by young people, | 32:01 | |
and that its sources and its motivations | 32:05 | |
are profoundly, if unrecognizably religious. | 32:09 | |
The contemporary interest in Oriental religions | 32:17 | |
and the unfortunate experimentation | 32:22 | |
with chemically induced states of consciousness are, | 32:26 | |
perhaps, among the contemporary expressions of it. | 32:31 | |
I think it is important to realize that this desire | 32:37 | |
to transcend the limits of totally historical existence | 32:42 | |
does not necessarily lead to a renunciation | 32:49 | |
of history and its tension. | 32:55 | |
Many young people are profoundly concerned | 32:59 | |
about contemporary historical conditions and events, | 33:04 | |
the racial situation, the destruction of Vietnam and others, | 33:10 | |
but they come to these historical conditions and events | 33:19 | |
with a freedom which most of us do not possess. | 33:23 | |
They have not renounced history, | 33:31 | |
but they have renounced the idolatry of history. | 33:36 | |
The apostle Paul declared | 33:44 | |
to the consciously religious Athenians, | 33:47 | |
"What you worship as unknown, this I proclaim to you." | 33:53 | |
And what he proclaimed was Jesus Christ, | 34:02 | |
Jesus Christ was coming to the religious Athenians. | 34:06 | |
But how does Jesus Christ, indeed, how can Jesus Christ | 34:15 | |
come to the unconsciously religious modern man? | 34:22 | |
Dare we speak of and hope for a second coming | 34:30 | |
of Christ to man twice fallen? | 34:35 | |
And if so, how will he come? | 34:42 | |
And how shall we recognize his coming? | 34:47 | |
Will he come again from out of the past, | 34:53 | |
will he somehow leap to us | 35:00 | |
across the history that separates us | 35:04 | |
from his first appearance, a history which, perhaps, | 35:08 | |
has hidden him more than it has disclosed him? | 35:14 | |
We have begun to rediscover his humanity. | 35:22 | |
Jesus, the man among men, Jesus, the man for others. | 35:29 | |
But how shall we rediscover his divinity? | 35:42 | |
Jesus, as God's Word to us, | 35:48 | |
and more, God's presence among us. | 35:52 | |
Jesus as Immanuel, God with us. | 35:58 | |
Will he come to us from out of the depths | 36:05 | |
of our unconscious, into the light of consciousness? | 36:08 | |
Will he come by way of resurrection, | 36:15 | |
from his place of burial within us? | 36:20 | |
The Belgian priest, Louis Beirnaert, has written, | 36:25 | |
"The incarnation must not be reduced | 36:33 | |
"to the taking on of the flesh alone. | 36:38 | |
"God has intervened even in the unconscious, | 36:43 | |
"that it may be saved and fulfilled. | 36:48 | |
"Christ descended into hell." | 36:52 | |
While Beirnaert is speaking of a radical | 36:59 | |
and total incarnation of Christ, | 37:02 | |
of a Christ whose coming is not only an historical event, | 37:06 | |
but also an event, if you will, in the human psyche. | 37:12 | |
This is not to substitute psychology for religion | 37:18 | |
or psychoanalysis for the religious transformation | 37:25 | |
of human personality. | 37:29 | |
It is, rather, to acknowledge and affirm | 37:32 | |
Christ's presence in the depths of man's being. | 37:36 | |
When I speak of his second coming, in this context, | 37:41 | |
I mean he is coming forth from the depths | 37:45 | |
into the light of our consciousness. | 37:49 | |
Christ has a recognition problem. | 37:55 | |
Modern men knows some of his historical | 37:59 | |
and traditional images and have rejected most of them | 38:03 | |
as unacceptable or irrelevant. | 38:09 | |
Man's unconscious, as Carl Jung and others have shown us. | 38:15 | |
He is full of images and full of symbols, | 38:22 | |
rich in meaning and import. | 38:27 | |
May it be that in these images and symbols within us, | 38:31 | |
Christ himself is present, and that if we were | 38:39 | |
to become conscious of them, | 38:44 | |
to raise them to the level of consciousness | 38:46 | |
and to live them, Christ, indeed, would have come again. | 38:50 | |
Or may it be that Christ will come again to us | 38:58 | |
through our encounter with people | 39:05 | |
of other religious traditions and communities. | 39:09 | |
That encounter has already begun, and it has begun, | 39:14 | |
especially for students in colleges and universities. | 39:21 | |
That encounter is going to widen and deepen. | 39:26 | |
I welcome it, not only as a historian | 39:33 | |
of religion, but as a Christian. | 39:35 | |
We too readily assume that the encounter | 39:40 | |
with Buddhism, Hinduism, and other forms | 39:43 | |
and expression of religious experience necessarily | 39:48 | |
lead away from Christ. | 39:51 | |
In our meeting with men of other faiths, | 39:56 | |
we have the possibility, the possibility of discovering | 40:00 | |
both the real distinctiveness of Jesus Christ | 40:05 | |
and of grasping new and fresh meanings of Christ | 40:10 | |
to which we are blinded by the provincialism | 40:17 | |
of our own history and culture. | 40:22 | |
Christ may indeed come to us in our meeting with others. | 40:26 | |
The early Christians expected the second coming | 40:36 | |
of Christ as a future event, | 40:41 | |
perhaps in their own lifetime, but in the future. | 40:45 | |
They knew neither when nor how, but they lived | 40:51 | |
in confident and joyful expectation. | 40:57 | |
We must confess that we know neither when nor how, | 41:03 | |
but let us live in their hope, making it our own. | 41:10 | |
Listen to the words, the words with which | 41:19 | |
the New Testament closes. | 41:24 | |
"He who testifies to these things says, | 41:28 | |
"Surely, I am coming soon. | 41:33 | |
"Come Lord Jesus. | 41:37 | |
"The grace of the Lord Jesus be with all the saints. | 41:40 | |
"Amen." | 41:46 | |
Let us pray. | 41:49 | |
O God, in whom we live and move and have our being, | 41:53 | |
whose existence does not depend | 42:07 | |
on our acknowledgement of thee, | 42:10 | |
and whose love and power sustains us unawares, | 42:15 | |
we give thee thanks for thy patience with us, | 42:22 | |
and for thy persistence. | 42:27 | |
O God, who art always present, | 42:32 | |
even when we are far from thee, | 42:36 | |
make thy presence known to us, | 42:41 | |
that we may love and serve thee in newness of life. | 42:45 | |
In Christ's name, amen. | 42:53 | |
(bright organ music) | 43:00 | |
(bright organ music drowns out singing) | 43:52 | |
(bright organ music) | 44:19 | |
(bright organ music drowns out singing) | 44:31 | |
(bright organ music drowns out singing) | 45:06 | |
♪ Amen ♪ | 45:43 | |
(gentle organ music) | 45:52 | |
(heartfelt organ music) | 46:35 | |
(gentle organ music) | 47:29 | |
(somber organ music) | 48:24 | |
(women singing in Latin) | 48:35 | |
(somber organ music) | 49:00 | |
(women singing in Latin) | 49:07 | |
(somber organ music) | 49:26 | |
(women singing in Latin) | 49:33 | |
(somber organ music) | 49:56 | |
(women singing in Latin) | 50:03 | |
(somber organ music) | 50:20 | |
(women singing in Latin) | 50:27 | |
(somber organ music) | 50:48 | |
(women singing in Latin) | 50:54 | |
(somber organ music) | 51:12 | |
(women singing in Latin) | 51:18 | |
♪ Hallelujah ♪ | 51:54 | |
♪ Hallelujah ♪ | 52:04 | |
♪ Hallelujah ♪ | 52:15 | |
(somber organ music) | 52:24 | |
(bright organ music) | 52:31 | |
("Doxology") | ||
♪ Praise God from whom all blessings flow ♪ | 52:57 | |
♪ Praise him all creatures here below ♪ | 53:04 | |
♪ Praise him above ye heavenly hosts ♪ | 53:10 | |
♪ Praise Father, Son and Holy Ghost ♪ | 53:17 | |
♪ Amen ♪ | 53:24 | |
- | All things come of thee, O God, our silver and our gold. | 53:32 |
As of thine own do we give thee, as the symbol of ourselves | 53:39 | |
in the name of Jesus, the Christ, our Lord. | 53:45 | |
And now to God's gracious mercy and protection, | 53:53 | |
do I commit you. | 53:58 | |
May the blessing of God come upon you abundantly. | 54:01 | |
May it keep you strong and tranquil | 54:07 | |
in the truth of his promises through Jesus Christ our Lord. | 54:11 | |
Amen. | 54:19 | |
(bells ringing) | 54:22 | |
(bright organ music) | 54:35 | |
(haunting Baroque style organ music) | 54:45 |
Item Info
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