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Kevin Law, Australia, participates as
a reader at the 2005 event. Participants have included church
members from all over the world, including India, Tahiti, Kenya,
Russia, and Fiji. |
Emma Hymn Festivals
The Reorganization “is the story of the faith, courage, and
tenacity of Emma Smith,” Prophet-President Stephen M. Veazey said in his April 5
address to the church. “Without her we would not be here.”
In celebration of Emma’s life, leadership, and the hymnals she
compiled, the John Whitmer Historical Association will hold a hymn festival on
the morning of September 27 in Independence, Missouri. Visit
www.jwha.info for more
information. A similar event takes place every year at the Kirtland Temple in
Ohio, and we invite congregations to host their own hymn festivals (visit
www.kirtlandtemple.org/hymns for details and resources).
A revelation in July 1830 instructed Emma “to make a selection
of sacred hymns...which is pleasing unto me...for my soul delighteth in the song
of the heart” (Doctrine and Covenants 24:3b). Emma took this instruction
seriously and in 1835 compiled the first hymnal for the church in Kirtland,
Ohio. In 1841 she worked on a second hymnal in Nauvoo, Illinois, and in 1861 she
compiled the first hymnal of the Reorganization.
Sarah Crowley and I organized the first annual Emma Hymn
Festival in Kirtland for July 10, 2004, on the 200th anniversary of Emma’s
birthday. Sarah describes the hymn festival as “a great opportunity to celebrate
the church and the contributions of the early years to our song history.”
Recalling the effort necessary to research the hymns, write them up, and produce
the booklet for the festival, Sarah said: “It was a first-hand experience of
what Emma would have done to compile the hymnal, except her hymnal had ninety
hymns, and she had additional responsibilities as wife of the prophet and as a
19th-century woman.”
The Emma Hymn Festival usually lasts a little over an hour. It
includes readings about significant events in Emma’s life, as well as hymns from
her lifetime and from her hymnals. The original intention of the festival was to
allow various Latter Day Saint denominations to participate and celebrate a
prominent figure in our shared history. Some of the hymns still are found in the
Community of Christ hymnal and some in the LDS or Restorationist hymnals. Others
no longer are familiar to any group.
The hymn festival has been a popular event in Kirtland, reaching
the Temple capacity of 300 people each time. We invite you to join us in
Independence, Kirtland, or your own congregation.
—David Bolton reporting
Emma Hymn Festival Locations
Kirtland, Ohio:
Monday, July 13 at 7:30 p.m. at Kirtland Temple; doors open at 7:00 p.m. Because
of limited seating, tickets must be reserved. Call (440) 256-1830 for
information.
Independence, Missouri:
Sunday, September 27. Hosted by the John Whitmer Historical Association’s annual
conference. For more information, visit
www.jwha.info.
Your congregation: Download materials at:
www.kirtlandtemple.org/hymns and let us know where you plan to host a
similar event, info@kirtlandtemple.org.
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