Reflecting With Joy: A Feast of Hymns at 25

A Feast of Hymns will turn 25 years old this next Sabbath, November 20. Yes, a Feast of Hymns was born on Sabbath, November 20, 1999.

Yet unique elements of this PMC Thanksgiving Celebration go back to at least Thanksgiving 1986, when there was a Processional Offering. And then the November 28, 1987 church bulletin acknowledges a “Notes of Thanks Offering.”

The first celebration had the heading Bring Joy! Give Thanks! A Feast of Hymns, but also had the unique additional title, "Faith Ablaze! Hymns of Heart and Heritage." On that day in 1999, Andrews University president Niels-Erik Andreasen preached on the topic, "Music, Spirituality, and Worship."

And on that day in 1999, two musical pillars were instituted.

First, "This Is a Time for Banners and Bells" was a hymn with a choir stanza, and as of this next Sabbath will have occurred in a total of 17 Feast Sabbath over the years. Second, "What Gift Can We Bring?" also was a congregational hymn, occurring as a congregational invitation to the Procession of Thanksgiving in 22 Feast Sabbaths over the years, including this next Sabbath.

Particularly with "What Gift?", Minnesota composer, Donna Kasbohm's gentle melody, using motifs found in the famous Westminster Quarters carillon pattern, has figured in various versions of the melody and a substantial number of musical arrangements in these services.

Here are some notable features of A Feast of Hymns through the years.

In every one of them, Steven Zork has served as choral conductor, the most frequent participating choir being the Andrews University Chorale. Frequently, premier presentations of new musical works and arrangements have occurred. A brass quartet or quintet has been frequent, as have been string quartets.

Retired Lead Pastor Dwight Nelson spoke the homilies in most of them. Pathfinder youth and leaders have collected and processed many thousands of food items for members of the community in association with the Procession of Thanksgiving. Thousands of notes of Thanksgiving have been written. Many prayers of joy have ascended.

Special features uniquely have included one Feast Sabbath subtitled, "Christ Comes Again!", and one commemorating 500 years from 1517, the famous Martin Luther year of the 95 theses'.

At the core of A Feast of Hymns have been the two elements of Joy and Thanksgiving: "Bring Joy! Give Thanks!" and as on November 23, 2024 choir singers will conclude with the choral response "Take Joy! Live Thanks!", we receive both encouragement and admonition to take from this celebration God’s abundant joy, and to live out a spirit of Thanksgiving!