- Home
- Books
- Catherine Winkworth
- Christian Singers Of Germany
- CHAPTER VI. HYMNS OF THE REFORMATION. A.D. 1520 1600.
CHAPTER VI. HYMNS OF THE REFORMATION. A.D. 1520-1600.
"[57]All glory be to God on high,"
with its noble [58]chorale, soon came into use all over Germany; it also included men of all ranks -- princes, like the Margraves of Hesse and [59]Brandenburg; soldiers and lawyers, like [60]Reissner, who was at the siege of Rome, and Spengler, the town-clerk of Nuremberg; artisans, like [61]Hans Sachs the shoemaker; and the unknown authors of those popular sacred songs which were on the lips of wandering craftsmen and maids at their work. But the ground-tones of this religious poetry were everywhere the same -- on the doctrinal side a joyful assertion of God's free grace and goodwill towards men, as shown in our Lord Jesus Christ; and on the experimental side an ardent expression of hope in God for the future, and acceptance of His will in the present. These men felt that He had suffered a great new light of Truth to dawn on the world, and so though it might bring much conflict it filled them also with a new life and courage, and with a confident anticipation of a better future, which found its expression even in the services for the dying and the dead. Thus these hymns have a certain manliness, breadth, and fervour about them, which pre-eminently adapted them for use in the church as the common voice of praise and prayer.