
14/07/2013
Glory to God: The ѿý Philharmonic and local Salford choirs sing Vivaldi's Gloria with ѿý Radio 2 Young Chorister of the Year 2012 Louisa Stirland. Conductor: Richard Davis.
Glory to God
The ѿý Philharmonic and local choirs sing Vivaldi's Gloria. ѿý Radio 2 Young Chorister of the Year 2012 Louisa Stirland joins 43 choirs from across the country in MediaCity, Salford to reflect on the glory of God in the city in all its diversity.
Canon Andy Salmon and Canon Steve Williams introduce the service and look at how Vivaldi's music has inspired people through time and across generations.
Leader: Yuri Torchinsky
Conductor: Richard Davis
Producer: Clair Jaquiss.
Last on
Vivaldi Gloria - Come and Sing
MUSIC: Gloria
Andy: Welcome to Salford and in particular to the ѿý Philharmonic’s Studio here at MediaCity on the banks of the Ship Canal – with its wide sky, its open spaces and soaring modern architecture.
We’ve just listened to Vivaldi’s wonderfully joyous opening to his Gloria sung by members of choirs and choruses from across the region. We’re in celebratory mood as we rejoice in God’s glory revealed among us. Great beauty in Nature, art or people and great music can transport us into the presence of God. I’m frequently surprised though by the strange places and unexpected people where I catch a glimpse of God’s Glory.
Today we pray that God would surprise us.
Steve: For the beauty that transforms
People: Glory to God
Steve: For the love that redeems
People: Glory to God
Steve: For the vision that inspires
People: Glory to God
Steve: For the kindness that gives life
People: Glory to God
Steve: The glory of God is a human being fully alive.
For the light that darkness cannot overcome,
we give you thanks and praise.
People: Amen.
Andy: Choirs have come here today to perform Vivaldi’s wonderful music from 18th century Venice. Some might smile but, I’m actually struck by some of the similarities between Venice and here. Both cities built wealth through trade. Both cities have famous canals, admittedly we used to make more things here in Salford and it does rain more. We think of Venice as a wealthy city but behind the rich façade of any city, there will be places of poverty and distress. When Vivaldi wrote his Gloria it was to be performed by the orphans of the Ospedale Della Pieta, people who were in some way or another rejected but despite their own circumstances, lifted the lives of others through beautiful music. We live in a complex world of beauty & ugliness; wealth and poverty; goodness and evil and we look for God’s help to be his agents for change in this world.
Steve: From the bright, confident opening, Vivaldi slows the pace right down with his setting of the simple prayer: Now comes Et in terra pax - On earth, peace, goodwill to all people. The vision of heaven inspires those who know and experience the fragile nature of earth... and here the harmonies don't quite resolve themselves... there is a longing - a vision of a peaceful state of existence for which we still hope.
MUSIC: Et in terra pax
Andy: God’s loving-kindness given to the world as healing for what seems broken or neglected. Art, faith and music all provide fresh dimensions for perceiving life. At both of my churches we have a lot of art activities, art groups, painting classes, photographic group, exhibitions and concerts. Brenda is a stalwart at St Philip’s, and particularly loves coming to the classical recitals and to hear the ѿý Phil. Here's how she weaves together her love of music with her view of the world.
Brenda: When I was young, my parents were in the church choir. Dad was a tenor, mum was an alto and my Uncle John was a bass, we’d have musical evenings and I’d have to sing soprano! At St Phil’s we used to sing quite a bit of Moody & Sankey. They were used in the missions because they were rousing and cheerful. I wasn’t keen on the more miserable hymns. Music makes me tingle. And I love the way it can express different moods whether it’s Mendelssohn, Handel or Vivaldi. I love to sing with other people. I like to join in! There is a thrill in the music and there’s a feeling of elation in all those voices joining together.
Andy: That's what all great works of art can do.
Words from three thousand years ago express how they can place us within the perspective of one whose vision reaches further than our senses. With me, Brenda reads Psalm 46
Brenda: God is our refuge and strength, • a very present help in trouble;
Andy: Therefore we will not fear, though the earth be moved, • and though the mountains tremble in the heart of the sea;
Brenda: Though the waters rage and swell, • and though the mountains quake at the towering seas.
Andy: There is a river whose streams make glad the city of God, • the holy place of the dwelling of the Most High.
Brenda: God is in the midst of her; therefore shall she not be removed; • God shall help her at the break of day.
Andy: The nations are in uproar and the kingdoms are shaken, • but God utters his voice and the earth shall melt away.
Brenda: The Lord of hosts is with us; • the God of Jacob is our stronghold
Andy: 'Be still, and know that I am God; •I will be exalted among the nations; I will be exalted in the earth.'
Brenda and Andy: The Lord of hosts is with us; • the God of Jacob is our stronghold.
Steve: Doreen was somebody in whom I could see the glory of God. She was born and bred in Salford. She inspired me with her perseverance, her hope and her ability to turn something bad into something good. For the last ten years, we met to pray together each week. She often talked about the day of her twenty-first birthday. It coincided with a natural calamity that's now part of Salford folk-lore - the great flood of 1946. The River Irwell burst its banks. Doreen would always walk home from her job in downtown Manchester rather than catch the bus.
But, as she headed through the main streets and alleyways that led to her home in the Salford district of Broughton, the water levels rose higher and higher. She walked and she walked. Rather than give up, or seek shelter elsewhere, her only horizon was home.
The water was as high as her chest.
But still she would not give up.
Eventually, she had to swim through the streets nearest her home. When she arrived, her 21st birthday presents were ruined, but she was safe: demonstrating the true grit that she'd display in serving her neighbours in years to come, turning bad situations into good ones.
When she closed her eyes for the last time this January, I remembered the deep waters in which she'd swam throughout her life - bereavement, serious illness, the concerns of a mother - and I knew she'd say, because she'd said it so many times as we'd prayed:
"For the spirit that's seen us through, and the glory that's yet to come. We give thee thanks. We praise thee, we bless thee, we worship thee, we glorify thee.
Laudamus te - sung by the ѿý Radio 2 Young Chorister of the Year, Louisa Stirland with ѿý Singer Elizabeth Poole.
MUSIC: Laudamus te
Andy: The population of any city is constantly changing, especially those with a history of trading with the world. Cities, like Salford, also become the places where refugees flee for safety and where friendships are planted and grown. The whole community also benefits from the gifts and creativity of those who make their home here. Serge fled from persecution in Cameroon. He was working in a human right’s organization and was arrested and tortured when he launched an album by a political artist who criticized the government. He was granted refugee status in 2008.
Serge: I was 14 when I bought my first toy keyboard but had to keep it away from my dad. He wanted me to be an engineer as he was himself. It's only when I had my A level in maths that I took my first music lesson paid for by my mum.
I was interested in fusing African traditions with jazz which in fact is what I'm still doing these days in my compositions
I feel good when I’m playing music. I'm no longer hungry, I’m problemless. I remember when I was seeking asylum, waiting for the ѿý Office to reply. It was long, over a year. The only thing that helped me was music. I had many musicians around me who became my friends. They kept me going.
Andy: A reading from St Luke’s gospel about an unexpected friendship. (Luke 10:25-37)
Serge: ‘A man was going down from Jerusalem to Jericho, and fell into the hands of robbers, who stripped him, beat him, and went away, leaving him half dead. Now by chance a priest was going down that road; and when he saw him, he passed by on the other side. So likewise a Levite, when he came to the place and saw him, passed by on the other side. But a Samaritan while travelling came near him; and when he saw him, he was moved with pity. He went to him and bandaged his wounds, having poured oil and wine on them. Then he put him on his own animal, brought him to an inn, and took care of him. The next day he took out two denarii, gave them to the innkeeper, and said, “Take care of him; and when I come back, I will repay you whatever more you spend.” Which of these three, do you think, was a neighbour to the man who fell into the hands of the robbers?’ He said, ‘The one who showed him mercy.’ Jesus said to him, ‘Go and do likewise.’
Steve: The glory of God is a human being fully alive... and I'm fully alive when I'm a neighbour to a stranger. It's this quality that turns a bad experience into a good one. The victim on the roadside receives help from someone he least expects to give it, from a culture and background different from his own, and his life is saved. The Samaritan offers care to someone he never thought he'd meet when he began his journey, and, starting out as a stranger to the victim, he becomes his friend.
In the act of giving and receiving attention, Samaritan and victim discover themselves in one another.
An act of neighbourly love turns the bad-ness of the assault into the good-ness of a new relationship.
I remember how in T.S. Eliot's Choruses from The Rock, the Stranger arrives to call the city to account.
He asks 'What is the meaning of this city? The poet wonders what the answer will be.
Do you huddle close together because you love each other?'
What will you answer? 'We all dwell together
To make money from each other'? Or 'This is a community'?"
A city is made up of in-comers, refugees, strangers who hold it to account. Salford has many communities that have settled here over the years, strangers in their time, who've become good neighbours... including one of Britain's biggest Jewish communities. And here there's a poignant point of contrast with Vivaldi's Venice. It was there that the term "ghetto" was first coined, in the year 1516, to describe a demarcated zone set aside only for the Jewish community, on the site of a copper foundry. The word ghetto may come from the Venetian word for foundry or the Italian word for foundry. The strangers were to be kept at arm's length. Spiritually, Venice was much the poorer for this segregation, Salford much the richer for its acceptance of the dignity and diversity of those who came to make a home here.
One of Salford's neighbours has a town square in which I see the words, "A stranger is only the friend I haven't made yet." The question is not, "Who is my neighbour?" It is, "To whom can I be a neighbour?" To answer that is to be fully alive with the glory of the Lord God, King of heaven
MUSIC: Domine Fili Unigenite
Andy: We spend a moment asking God’s forgiveness for the times when [we've failed] God, our neighbour and ourselves:
Lord of Glory, we have often taken for granted the wonder of the world and failed to notice your presence
Lord have mercy
All: Lord have mercy
Andy: Lord of Compassion, we have often passed by on the other side and failed to help those in need
Christ have mercy
All: Christ have mercy
Andy: Lord of Glory, we have often failed to be the person that you call us to be
Lord have mercy
All: Lord have mercy
Andy: May God the Father forgive you your sins through Jesus Christ his Son, who takes away the sins of the world. And may you be renewed to live in God’s glory.
All: Amen
MUSIC: Qui tollis peccata mundi
Andy: We pray for the needs of the world
God of Glory, we pray for peace in our world: that the barriers of hatred and fear may be broken down
Lord in your mercy
All: Hear our prayer
Brenda: God of glory we pray for the building of community: that we may be surprised by help that is given.
Lord in your mercy
All: Hear our prayer
Steve: ve:God of Glory, we pray for all musicians and artists: that they may be inspired and may inspire others for good.
Lord in your mercy
All: Hear our prayer
Andy: God of Glory, we pray for all those in need, for orphans, for the sick, for those whose troubles threaten to overwhelm them; that they may receive the help they need.
Lord in your mercy
All: Hear our prayer
Brenda: God of Glory, we pray for ourselves; that we would have the courage & strength to serve you in your world.
Lord in your mercy
All: Hear our prayer
Steve: Merciful Father
All: Accept these prayers for the sake of your Son,
Jesus Christ our Saviour, Amen.
Our Father, who art in heaven,
hallowed be thy name;
thy kingdom come;
thy will be done;
on earth as it is in heaven.
Give us this day our daily bread.
And forgive us our trespasses,
as we forgive those who trespass against us.
And lead us not into temptation;
but deliver us from evil.
For thine is the kingdom,
the power and the glory,
for ever and ever.
Amen.
MUSIC: Qui sedes ad dexteram (soloist ѿý Singer Margaret Cameron)
Andy: We’re approaching the end of Vivaldi’s Gloria and of this service. After some slower music that is full of yearning the mood returns to full-blown joyous celebration again with echoes of his majestic opening. I hope that you are encouraged to share in God’s work by finding that glory in others, by caring for friend, for neighbour, for stranger; by singing in whatever way you can “Glory to God in the Highest”. As the next movement says, “For you alone are the Holy One, you alone are the Lord, you alone are the Most High”
MUSIC: Quoniam tu solus sanctus
Andy: God the Father, who surrounds us with glory; encourage you
All: Amen.
Andy: God the Son, who shows us God’s way; strengthen you
All: Amen.
Andy: God the Holy Spirit, who is with us always; lead you
All: Amen.
Andy: And the blessing of God; Father, Son and Holy Spirit be with you now and always. Amen.
MUSIC: Cum Sancto Spiritu
Come And Sing event at Media City UK

The ѿý Philharmonic perform with the choirs

Broadcast
- Sun 14 Jul 2013 08:10ѿý Radio 4