What hymns are sung around Father’s Day?

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frequency
Author

Joey Stanley

Published

June 16, 2024

It’s Father’s Day here in the United States. Last month, I did an analysis of what hymns are typically sung on Mother’s Day. This post will be structured similarly, except it’ll focus on the third Sunday in June in wards located in the United States. In my dataset, I currently have information from 420 sacrament meetings and 250 wards from 2002 to 2024, so this should be pretty representative of what’s going on more broadly.

Note that the majority of this post will focus on Father’s Day before 2024. The addition of the new hymns has changed the results a small amount. I’ll address those changes towards the end of this post.

What are the Father’s Day hymns?

Looking through the topics index at the back of the hymnal, several categories of hymns could be considered appropriate to choose from for Father’s Day. Of course, the Fatherhood category is best, and list three hymns, O My Father (#292), Our Father, by Whose Name (#296), and See the Mighty Priesthood Gathered [Men’s Choir] (#325). That last one has only been sung as a congregational hymn twice in my over 23,000 sacrament meetings, so we’ll just ignore that one.

However, there are other categories that could be appropriate, such as “Home”, “God the Father”, “Brotherhood”, “Priesthood”, “Leadership”, “Children”, and “Example”. Looking through what hymns are actually sung on Father’s Day (we’ll get to that in a second), only “Home” and “God the Father”, so we’ll ignore the rest. Each of the “Home” and “God the Father” categories is pretty large, but the only overlapping hymns between them are O My Father (#292), Our Father, by Whose Name (#296) (which were the two “Fatherhood” hymns), I Am a Child of God (#301), and Teach Me to Walk in the Light (#304). So, there’s a wide selection hymns that could be chosen, with a few that intersect the most relevant categories—let’s see which ones actually are chosen.

The following figure plots the most common hymns sung around Father’s Day in my dataset before 2024. The hymns are color-coded based on their category in the topics index.

It’s clear from this plot that there are two Father’s Day hymns that stand out as being the most common: O My Father (#292) and Our Father, by Whose Name (#296). Half of the wards I have data from sing one of those two hymns and 11% sing both of them. It’s probably not a coincidence that these are the hymns that are listed in the Topics index under the entry “Fatherhood”, as well as “Home” and “God the Father”. Because Primary children typically sing a Father’s Day song, the number of intermediate hymns is lower than on other weeks. Only about 20% of wards sing an intermediate hymn on Father’s Day, as opposed to the overall average of about 35%.

However, a smaller proportion of wards sing other hymns, and they’ve been color-coded based on broad topic. The green hymns are under the “Home” entry of the Topics index, and those seem to be quite common. The yellow hymns are ones that are in the “God the Father” category. The pink ones are those that are in both “Home” and “God the Father.” So, those categories seem to be the most common overall.

It is worth looking at a few of the gray hymns, which belong to none of those three categories. They include hymns with the word Father in the title, like Faith of Our Fathers (#84), God of Our Fathers, Whose Almighty Hand (#78), and God of Our Fathers, We Come unto Thee (#76). There are a few children-related hymns.

We also see some work-related hymns like Let Us All Press On (#243) and Put Your Shoulder to the Wheel (#252). Now, admittedly neither of those last two are sung more often on Father’s Day than on other weeks of the year (i.e. there isn’t a huge spike in June), so it may be a fluke. But, if it were the case that there were no trend at all, we’d see generic common hymns How Firm a Foundation (#85) or Because I Have Been Given Much (#219) on this list instead. But we don’t. I can’t help but think this is because of the line from the Family Proclamation that states that fathers are “responsible to provide the necessities of life and protection for their families”. Perhaps just as we saw a lot of “home”- and “children”-related hymns on Mother’s Day, we see work-related hymns on Father’s Day.

Finally, we can look at when during sacrament meeting these most popular hymns are sung. Figure 1 shows the data for the top 10 Father’s Day hymns. Most hymns are roughly evenly split between opening and closing hymns with a few exceptions: God of Our Fathers, Whose Almighty Hand (#78) is primarily an opening hymn while I Am a Child of God (#301) and Teach Me to Walk in the Light (#304) are primarily closing hymns.

Figure 1: Top 10 Father’s Day hymns and when they’re sung.

Everything I’ve said up to this point has been a summary of data prior to 2024. However, we recently got some new hymns. So, how did these new hymns change what Father’s Day looked like in 2024? The following plot is the same format as above except it only shows the 2024 data and I’ve added a new color for the new hymns.

Here, you can see that there were a handful of new hymns that were pretty popular, particularly As Bread Is Broken (#1007). This is likely not a Father’s Day–specific trend but rather simply because the new hymns were fresh and wards were still in the process of rolling them out. I think that this sacrament hymn was most common so that wards could leave room for the Father’s Day hymns as opening and closing hymns.

Otherwise, the results look similar. The “fatherhood” hymns are still the most common by far. The “home” hymns were down a little bit and I Know My Father Lives (#302) took the spot as third most popular hymn. But, I don’t want to read too into it because it’s likely that each year has its own flukes and idiosyncrasies.

So that’s it for Father’s Day!