I
imroc
Guest
My wife’s bosses, husband and wife, made a claim at the Christmas party this evening that Martin Luther wrote the music for the bells that our Church bells ring.
I read somewhere, briefly that these “songs” are for Christ’s resurrection (morning), crucifixion (noon) and birth (evening). And during Easter other songs are played.
Did Martin Luther really write these? If so, did he write them and the Church incorporate them during his priesthood?
The SDA bosses got a kick out of sharing this with a Lutheran co-worker of my wife, but I decided to stay out of the conversation. One exclamation was, “that made the reform complete!”. I bit my tongue just before I said, “how do you reform a church by leaving?”. I didn’t think it was the time and place, after all, I didn’t think it would turn out to be an enlightening conversation and didn’t want to ruin our Lord’s Advent by starting a debate that could’ve gotten kinda heated.
I read somewhere, briefly that these “songs” are for Christ’s resurrection (morning), crucifixion (noon) and birth (evening). And during Easter other songs are played.
Did Martin Luther really write these? If so, did he write them and the Church incorporate them during his priesthood?
The SDA bosses got a kick out of sharing this with a Lutheran co-worker of my wife, but I decided to stay out of the conversation. One exclamation was, “that made the reform complete!”. I bit my tongue just before I said, “how do you reform a church by leaving?”. I didn’t think it was the time and place, after all, I didn’t think it would turn out to be an enlightening conversation and didn’t want to ruin our Lord’s Advent by starting a debate that could’ve gotten kinda heated.