I'm open to fraternal correction of course.

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All very good points, IT!IncenseTom wrote: Wed May 10, 2017 3:51 pm My only contribution to this topic is to consider the length of the Offertory hymn.
Can you get through the whole thing before the priest is ready to carry on with the liturgy or are you going to hold things up to fit in all 8 verses for the sake of it, thus making the liturgy the servant of the music, rather than music servant of the liturgy???
If you go for a short hymn are you able to 'cover' what's going on once it's finished by improvising during the incensing, etc?
And a step on from that, are you able to modulate, include other fireworks and conclude your improvisation so it's perfectly timed with the incensing of the congregation?
I find timings and length of hymns impact on choice much more than I realise........
But why would you want to? Just select the verses/section which (1) best fit the feast and (2) are the right length for the job.IncenseTom wrote: Wed May 10, 2017 3:51 pmCan you get through the whole thing before the priest is ready to carry on with the liturgy...
Because who bothers to try and get the congregation to do verse 2, 3 and 6?Nick Baty wrote: Fri May 26, 2017 10:24 pmBut why would you want to? Just select the verses/section which (1) best fit the feast and (2) are the right length for the job.IncenseTom wrote: Wed May 10, 2017 3:51 pmCan you get through the whole thing before the priest is ready to carry on with the liturgy...
Totally agree. One of the many reasons we never use hymn books.IncenseTom wrote: Sat May 27, 2017 6:41 pmGetting folk to pick up a hymn book, open it at the right page at the right time and join in is tricky enough without randomising which verses are going to be used.
Any self-respecting song leader can and does announce which verses of the opening (or final) hymn we're going to sing. And then sing with the people, making sure that you sing the correct ones yourself!IncenseTom wrote: Sat May 27, 2017 6:41 pmBecause who bothers to try and get the congregation to do verse 2, 3 and 6?
As with some of the suggestions made earlier in this thread, I would question the suitability of most of these for the Offertory.dmu3tem wrote: Fri May 26, 2017 9:43 am Here are some more possibilities - some very old! I hope I am not duplicating other suggestions:
O Bread of Heaven, beneath this veil : Originally in the Crown of Jesus Music. Brilliant tune by Hemy! However it has a tendency to sound a bit slushy and sentimental if it is not performed cleanly and only a minimum of rubato. No swooping onto the notes either!
Let us break bread together on our knees (in Hymns Ancient and Modern) - nice revivalist tune
Lord, accept the gifts we offer - text is a bit creaky but very much to the point with its enunciation of the doctrine of transubstantiation! Tune is the old Tantum Ergo setting adapted by Samuel Webbe the elder.
Bring flowers of the rarest: really a May hymn in honour the BVM; but the theme of 'offering' might render it suitable. The music needs to be rearranged so that it clicks along at a light fast waltz type pace (its really a folk tune collected by Hemy). This is a good exercise in arranging a hymn for melody instrument and vamp style keyboard.
Don't forget hymns that focus on a devotional attention as well e.g. 'Be Still for the presence of the Lord' (excellent tune by Evans - I think) or 'Be Still My Soul' (tune is an adaptation for Finlandia by Sibelius. I don't like this very much; but in my experience congregations enjoy it very much.
There is quite a nice setting by Dom Gregory Murray of 'Reap me the earth'. Also on a related theme 'Now the Green Blade Riseth' (not strictly an offertory hymn but will certainly do during and immediately after Easter).
It' also the third of the four processions during Mass and, as the other three all take their theme from the Gospel, so should the Presentation of Gifts. I like Southern Comfort's "hinge" idea – but I also think of it as the Act Two overture in a musical show – that usually reminds us of what's gone on in the first half. I don't think we've ever (well, 13 years in present parish) used anything from the Offertory section in a hymnal. After all, there is so much more to choose from.Southern Comfort wrote: Sun Jun 11, 2017 2:24 pmThat being so, the Song during the Presentation of the Gifts is like a kind of hinge, joining the two Tables together.