Featured Hymn for April 1, 2013

"Christ the Lord is Risen Today" by Charles Wesley(1708-1788)

In every worship service, the words we say and the actions we participate in are somehow shaping us. Perhaps without even being aware of it, worship is doing something to us – it’s forming habits and language inside of us to both teach us why we are in relationship with God, and how to be in relationship with God. One practice that many liturgists and hymn authors have brought into worship is describing an event that happened in the past (usually a moment from the Gospel story) as if it were happening today, in order to instill in us the understanding that, just as God worked in the lives of people two thousand years ago, He is still working today.

The hymn “Christ the Lord is Risen Today” is a perfect example of this. Right in the title is an indicator of the present tense: the word 'is.' As we sing this song, we are first brought back two millennia as 'witnesses' of the resurrection, and then we are also made aware that though the actual event of the resurrection happened once, it is in a sense an on-going event with ever-present effects. We are called today to follow our risen Lord in newness of life, and to ever lift our “alleluias” in praise.

View this Featured Hymn at Hymnary.org