Music Makes Community

Arts music Theology workshops

 If you happened to be walking down the halls of United on Saturday, January 21st, you probably heard a lot of singing. That’s because more than 40 people from around the Twin Cities and across the upper Midwest gathered for a day-long interfaith “Music That Makes Community” workshop. Facilitated by director Paul Vasile and local musician Conie Borchardt, the event explored the practice of teaching paperless singing. The group learned new skills for leading community songs to enrich their communities’ worship life, and reflected on strategies for cultivating participatory singing and liturgy.

“In paperless singing, people are freed from being tied to a resource,” said Tom Witt, Music Coordinator at United Theological Seminary of the Twin Cities and one of the organizers for the event. “They don’t have to look down at their paper or even up at a screen. It consists of shorter songs, call and response, echo, rounds, and parts. It frees people up to just sing.”

In a moment of social upheaval, Tom said that this kind of communal worship can connect people to each other and God. “This is a theology of song leading that’s horizontal and gracious. Much of contemporary Christian music is centered around ‘performances.’ But the point of Music that Makes Community is that everyone has a voice.”

United’s seminary chaplain, John Lee, who also participated in the event, agreed. “Musicians are trained to be precise–to know the notes and the changes and not to screw it up. But instead of being about precision, this form of singing is about expression. It’s about being free and finding yourself in the story of the song. And that’s liberating.”

John added that the practice of singing communally helps people take their theology from a cognitive exercise to an embodied way of being in the world. “A lot of the time, we’re focused on the left brain–our linear and logical constructs. That’s vital, but the next bridge is embodied theology. How does our theology tap into the ultimate concern of what it means to be human or to say that God is present? This practice allows us to be free of the notes, to feel them, to live into the uncertainty.”

Tom and John both said that they hope to do a follow-up, three-day workshop in the coming months–and perhaps even develop a local practice group, where participants can teach each other new songs, grow their skills as song leaders, and even devise new pieces of music in community.

“This is what first century churches were doing for a long time,” John said. “Luther did it, Wesley did it. There is something powerful in placing our own words, expressions, and theology into music.”

Below, watch one of the songs from the Music Makes Community workshop hosted at United on January 21.

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These are fraught days for us. Those who call the Twin Cities home persist under the pall of a federal occupation, bracing each day for word of a new atrocity. In the weeks since an ICE agent killed Renee Good, we have seen the good people of Minneapolis and St. Paul show up for one another as armed federal agents patrol our communities, violating due process and cruelly abducting thousands of people.  I think often of our friends and neighbors—including some members of the United community—as they live under the acute terror ICE has wrought on their neighborhoods. Many rely on the aid of a trusted few to meet their basic needs. Facing an oppressive force, our communities have turned outward with resilience, toward one another, embodying anew the command to “love your neighbor as yourself.” I have been deeply moved by the courage of my neighbors and, in particular, United’s students, alums, trustees, and faculty and staff. They model solidarity despite extreme cold, attending vigils, leading music, creating art, and keeping watch with whistles over their neighborhoods while ICE patrols their streets. Chaplains involved in interfaith organizations are supporting local demonstrations and assisting in de-escalation efforts. Lay leaders, prompted to care for their vulnerable neighbors, are picking up groceries, taking kids to school, and meeting material needs in a vast network of mutual aid. Indeed, this is servant leadership. This week, clergy and faith leaders of myriad traditions are answering MARCH’s call to resist this importunate occupation and bear witness to its harm. With members of our United community engaged in rapid response efforts, the seminary will be closed on Friday, January 23. And, in solidarity with fellow clergy and elected officials, I reaffirm my call that ICE must immediately end its terrorizing of the Twin Cities, leave Minnesota altogether, and bring to justice the agent who killed Ms. Good. Social transformation is one of United’s longstanding pillars, and we are seeing the real-world witness of faith and community leaders equipped for the work of justice and peace. In the words of Rev. Dr. Justin Sabia-Tanis, director of our Social Transformation Program, “Faith leaders are shaping Minnesota’s response to be highly ethical and effective.” The common good, though under grave threat, is in the committed stewardship of our very best. In the days ahead, may we be courageous in our convictions for the love and dignity of our neighbors. Rev. Molly T. Marshall, Phd President About United Founded by the United Church of Christ (UCC) as a welcoming, ecumenical school that embraces all denominations and faith traditions, United Theological Seminary of the Twin Cities has been on the creative edge of progressive theological thought and leadership since it was established in 1962. Today, United continues to train leaders who, through the eyes of faith, engage in the dismantling systems of oppression, exploring multi-faith spirituality, and pushing the boundaries of knowledge. Media Contact Nathanial Green (he/him), Director of Marketing and Communications United Theological Seminary of the Twin Cities press@unitedseminary.edu • 651-255-6138

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