2025.05.18
After a three-
This lengthy passage, comprising the thirteenth ( or fourteenth ) through the seventeenth chapters of John’s Gospel, takes place at the conclusion of the Last Supper ( hence parts of it also appear liturgically on Maundy Thursday ). In it Jesus prepares his followers for the time when he will no longer be physically with them, giving them his peace, his love, the new commandment, and the promise of the Holy Spirit. Various versions of the ‘new commandment’ to love one another have been set to music a number of times; this week at the later celebratoin the choir sings a setting by William Mundy, a late-
The unfolding of that unity in Christ – for which Christ himself prayed in the Farewell Discourse – can be seen in the passage from the Acts of the Apostles. The first part of Chapter 11 recounts the vision in which Peter, refusing to eat ‘unclean’ animals, is told, ‘What God has made clean, you must not call profane’, and the subsequent outpouring of the Spirit upon a group of Gentiles, to the amazement of the Jewish Christians. Two of our hymns make reference to this ever-
An appropriate Communion text at any time is ‘O taste and see that the Lord is good’ ( Psalm 34.8 ). The choir delightedly joins forces with the Children’s Choir to sing Ralph Vaughan Williams’s famous setting of it.