Does anyone sing the women’s and men’s arrangements?
At the back of the hymnal, there are 29 hymns that are designated as being for women or for men, either because of the text and/or because of the musical arrangement. This is a continuation from the previous hymnal, which contained many more arrangements, including choir pieces with special piano accompaniment. I don’t think these hymns are intended to be sung as congregational hymns in sacrament meeting and with a few exceptions, I don’t think they’re sung much at all. Let’s look a little closer at these arrangements.
Types of Women’s and Men’s arrangements
We can classify these hymns into a few different categories. First, we can group them based on the type of musical arrangement. Some of the hymns, like
The other main type of musical arrangement is where it a special arrangement geared towards the voices of the gender they are for. For the women, this means it’s a SSA arrangement, with the alto on a separate staff as in
The other way of classifying these 29 hymns is whether the hymn appears elsewhere in the hymnal or not. This classification is pretty closely correlated with the musical arrangement as well. For example, among the 10 women’s hymns, three are unique to women and don’t appear anywhere else in the hymnal; these three are also the ones arranged in a SATB-like format. The other seven women’s hymns are special arrangements of hymns that occur earlier in the hymnal in a SATB format.
For the men’s hymns, the correlation is not quite so tight. Of the six men’s hymns that are not full TTBB arrangements, four do not occur elsewhere in the hymnal. The last is
A summary of all these classifications can be found in Table 1 and Table 2.
# | Hymn Name | Arrangement type | Found elsewhere? | Sung in Sacrament? |
---|---|---|---|---|
309 | As Sisters in Zion | Two-Part | Unique | yes |
310 | A Key Was Turned in Latter Days | Two-Part | Unique | no |
311 | We Meet Again As Sisters | Two-Part | Unique | no |
312 | We Ever Pray for Thee | SSA | Hymn 23 | no |
313 | God is Love | SSA | Hymn 87 | no |
314 | How Gentle God’s Commands | SSA | Hymn 125 | no |
315 | Jesus, the Very Thought of Thee | SSA | Hymn 141 | no |
316 | The Lord is My Shepherd | SSA | Hymn 108 | no |
317 | Sweet is the Work | SSA | Hymn 147 | no |
318 | Love at Home | SSA | Hymn 294 | yes |
# | Hymn name | Arrangement type | Found elsewhere? | Sung in Sacrament? |
---|---|---|---|---|
319 | Ye Elders of Israel | Men | Unique | yes |
320 | The Priesthood of Our Lord | Men (unison) | Unique | yes |
321 | Ye Who Are Called to Labor | Men | Unique | no |
322 | Come, All Ye Sons of God | Men | Unique | yes |
323 | Rise Up, O Men of God | T*TBB | Hymn 324 (lyrics) | no |
324 | Rise Up, O Men of God | Men | Hymn 323 (lyrics) | yes |
325 | See the Mighty Priesthood Gathered | T*TBB | Unique | yes |
326 | Come, Come Ye Saints | T*TBB | Hymn 30 | no |
327 | Go, Ye Messengers of Heaven | T*TBB | Unique | yes |
328 | An Angel from on High | T*TBB | Hymn 13 | no |
329 | Thy Servants are Prepared | TT*BB | Hymn 261 | no |
330 | See, the Mighty Angel Flying | T*TBB | Unique | no |
331 | Oh Say, What Is Truth? | T*TBB | Hymn 272 | no |
332 | Come, O Thou King of Kings | T*TBB | Hymn 59 | no |
333 | High on the Mountain Top | T*TBB | Hymn 5 | no |
334 | I Need Thee Every Hour | TT*BB | Hymn 98 | no |
335 | Brightly Beams Our Father’s Mercy | TT*BB | Hymn 235 (music) | yes |
336 | School Thy Feelings | T*T*BB | Unique | yes |
337 | O Home Beloved | T*TBB | Unique | no |
Let’s now turn to the actual question of which of these are actually sung in sacrament meeting.
Women’s arrangements
Just two of the women’s hymns were ever sung in sacrament meeting in my sample.
There’s really not much more to say about the women’s arrangements! They’re hardly ever sung!
Men’s arrangements
The men’s hymns appear to have a bit more currency in sacrament meetings than the women’s hymns (see Figure 1). Seven of these 19 hymns were sung in at least one of the sacrament meetings in my sample. The most common was
My recommendations for the next hymnal
To summarize, very few of the women’s and men’s arrangements are sung in sacrament meeting, and those that are are rarely done so. Based on this data, I believe these hymns should probably just be removed from the hymnal. There is little reason to print tens of thousands of these 29 hymns that hardly anyone uses. As mentioned above, the previous version of the hymnal had more arrangements—some of which were full-on choir pieces—and they were removed in this 1985 edition. It makes sense to continue that trend. We don’t need to remove them completely though—I think they should be part of an online-only supplement that would be accessible through the church’s apps and website.
It may be the case that these hymns were kept in the hymnal with the intention of them being sung in Relief Society and Elders Quorum meetings. But now that we do not begin those meetings with hymns anymore, there is little reason to keep them. Maybe there is value in singing one of these hymns in some stake priesthood meeting or a women’s session of General Conference, and if the hymnal is treated as “canon” for what can or cannot be sung in church meetings, then it might be worth it to keep some in there simply to hold their place as canon. In my opinion though, an online supplement can serve that purpose.
Some of these hymns can and probably should be repurposed and brought into the main collection of hymns. For example,