Texts and arrangements © by David T. Koyzis
My initial contact with the Genevan Psalms came during my
childhood at Bethel Orthodox Presbyterian Church in Wheaton, Illinois, a
congregation my parents started with another family. My second contact
came at age 21, when during a memorable visit to Prague I purchased a
Czech-language Psalter and Hymnal containing Jiří Strejc's
versifications, although I did not recognize these as Genevan Psalms for
another decade. In 1985 a friend alerted me to the Canadian Reformed
Book of Praise, containing the Genevan Psalms in English. I found it an
impressive collection in many ways, although it struck me that the
versifications therein showed, among other things, the limitations of
the original rhyming schemes, in which the stresses in the music and
those in the text did not necessarily match. An example from the French
will suffice to illustrate. Here is the first stanza of Psalm 13:
Jusques à quand as establi,Note that the rhyming scheme is A-A-B-B-A. However, the alternation of masculine and feminine endings in the tune does not quite match this scheme: M-F-F-M-F. Hence the French verse fails to flow in the way one might expect, which makes for somewhat awkward singing. This same flaw has found its way into all the translations of the Psalms of which I am aware, due to a somewhat slavish fidelity to the traditional rhyming scheme found in the original French.
Seigneur de me mettre en oubli?
Est-ce à jamais? par combien d'aage
Destourneras-tu ton visage
De moy, las, d'angoisse rempli?
Around the same time I came into possession of a copy of the Hungarian Psalms recording reviewed in the annotated discography page
through what was then called the Board of Publications of the Christian
Reformed Church. I was immediately taken with what I heard, especially
the Cantus’ performances of Psalms 23 and 121, which I found
particularly moving. Thus began a near obsession with the Genevan Psalms
with which I have been (probably terminally) afflicted for several
decades. At this point I began to compose my own arrangements of the
tunes. Unable to play the piano, I generally worked out these tunes on
guitar, where they took on something of the flavour of John Dowland’s
compositions for the lute. In my head I heard these tunes in their
Renaissance context, where their similarity to the works of Thomas
Tallis, William Byrd and Orlando Gibbons seemed evident. In addition to
arranging these marvellous melodies, I began also to versify the Psalms
in a contemporary idiom so they could be sung to them. In so doing, I
departed to some extent from the traditional rhyming schemes and, in most cases as it turns out, from rhyme itself.
With respect to the
versifications, I admit that, having little knowledge of Hebrew, I
have relied on the major English translations of the Psalter. I have not sought a word-for-word translation, which
would, in any case, be impossible within a fixed metrical scheme. The
Scottish Psalter of 1650 comes close to a word-for-word translation, but
largely at the expense of comprehensibility and, I would judge,
singability. Moreover, as English has developed, the syllables in some
words have been elided, making it more difficult to sing the 1650 texts
in their intended metre.
My own versifications are paraphrases–sometimes close to the text and sometimes merely communicating the overall sense of the text, as seems appropriate in each case. While the biblical scholar, with her exacting standards, may not like my approach, the poet will be more understanding. Some of the versifications are rhymed (e.g., Psalms 23 and 51), while most are not (e.g., Psalms 24, 35, 44, 119 and many many more). To some extent it has been possible to retain something of the parallelism of the Hebrew poetic form, but this has not always worked within the constraints of the Genevan metres. I have not been overly literalist or legalistic on this score and have taken poetic licence where necessary.
It must also be recognized once more
that it is not always easy to write in English for the Genevan tunes.
The Genevan metrical schemes and the French language both have an
abundance of feminine endings, that is, phrases ending on unstressed
syllables. By contrast, English has fewer of these, which in
large measure explains why English-language psalters have tended towards
the uniformity of common, long, and short metres. Thus in my own
renditions certain kinds of words, e.g., those ending in -ing and -tion,
will be noticed to reappear with some frequency. In any case, I have
attempted to match the stresses in the melodies with those in the text.
Here
is my own versification of Psalm 13, which departs from the traditional
rhyme scheme, using instead A-B-B-A-C, which in my judgement better
corresponds to the metrical structure of the music and eliminates the
entirely unnecessary melisma in the fourth line:
How long, O LORD, must I endure?As for the harmonizations, these were worked out, with the single exception of Psalm 8, in 1999 and following. In these I have attempted to recover something of the modal flavour of the tunes, taking as my inspiration the music of those Renaissance masters mentioned above. Some of the harmonizations may sound a little dissonant to those familiar with the arrangements traditionally sung in the Dutch or Hungarian churches. Moreover, if one follows the suggested tempos, the traditionalist is likely to find them entirely too rapid. To such a person I have a two-fold answer: First, I am rendering them as I have heard them in my head. Coming fresh to the Genevan tradition means that I am working without the benefit and the burden alike of having grown up hearing them sung a certain way. Second, at a time when so much traditional hymnody is being neglected in favour of (to my mind) vastly inferior praise music, with its repetitive phrases and transparently derivative tunes, we need to affirm that the singing of the Psalms need hardly be a dreary business. The liveliest of the Psalms, e.g., 47 and 92, would even seem to call for a supportive percussion instrument, such as the tambourine. At the same time, we should never shrink from singing the laments, which sorely need to be reincorporated into our liturgical life. Our individualistic, consumer-oriented churches often seem to suffer from a lamentable inability to lament. Our congregations need to learn once again to sing Psalms 88 and 137, among many others.
Will you forget me for ever?
Shall I look on your visage never?
How long shall my soul constant pain endure,
and my poor heart be in sorrow?
Shall my foes have the victory?
Answer me, LORD; hear my pleading!
Lighten my eyes – my voice be heeding –
lest mortal sleep should overpower me,
and enemies think me vanquished.
Though my foes sneer at my distress,
yet your love is my foundation.
My heart is glad at your salvation.
I raise my song the faithful LORD to bless,
for he has treated me kindly.
Among the first psalms I set to verse in the 1980s and early ’90s were Psalms 8, 23, 46, 47, 91, 121, 130, and 150. In 1999 I began to post these on a website devoted to the Genevan Psalter. In the following years I added more texts and musical arrangements to this website, eventually numbering more than eighty. After I was nearly laid off from my academic position in 2014, my changing circumstances compelled me to neglect this project, and in 2019, my former employer removed it from its server. I have decided not to try to restore the entire website, but to post a small sample of my work below, along with sample performances from my YouTube channel.
In 2021 The Priscilla and Stanford Reid Trust awarded me a grant to continue my work on this project. I had set myself a goal of setting 30 Psalms to verse over the succeeding months. At the beginning of June, I began working steadily through the Psalms, putting aside for the time being my efforts to arrange the tunes. Up to that point I had set to verse some 86 psalms, scattered throughout the canonical collection. I decided to begin with Psalm 3, as I had already done the first two, and take them in order. I kept a one-volume psalter, given by a close friend, before me at all times. I pulled up an online resource called Bible Hub, which allowed me to compare multiple English translations verse by verse. I input the proper tune into my music notation software, rewording each line to fit the appropriate metre. This more systematic method enabled me to work through the remainder of the Psalms at a faster pace than I had anticipated. Thus, by the middle of August, I had completed the remaining unfinished psalms, at last reaching 150, thereby exceeding the target I had set for myself in the Reid Trust proposal. Here is an excerpt from the introduction to this now complete collection:
In the Dutch language metrical Psalms are referred to as berijmde psalmen, or rhymed psalms. However, in my collection only the psalms set to the most familiar melodies are rhymed, and those that are do not necessarily follow the traditional rhyming schemes. Thus a disclaimer is in order. This is not poetry, and I make no claim to be a poet. Reading the texts below without their proper tunes will not always suggest that we have crossed the boundary between prose and verse. This is due largely to the unusual and irregular metres employed by the authors of the Genevan Psalter. Yet what initially appears to be prose definitely fits the Genevan tunes, as will be evident when we sing them.
In my work, I have diligently compared several English translations of the Bible on a verse-by-verse basis. Often I have been able to retain the Hebrew parallelism of the original texts, but sometimes I have had to combine two parallel lines into a single one, due primarily to the limits of the metrical pattern. Moreover, in reworking these texts I have sought, where possible, to ensure that the stresses in the texts match closely with those in the music, something which is not always the case in the traditional versifications, even in the original French and other languages. My hope and prayer are that this will make the Genevan Psalms more “user-friendly” and thus more likely to be used liturgically in English-speaking congregations, even outside their native Reformed tradition.
Suffice it to say that this project, which takes me well outside my field of professional competence, has been for me a genuine labour of love–of love for the Psalms and for the God who inspired their writers. St. Athanasius wrote of the Psalms that they are a kind of compendium of the whole of scripture. As each book of the Bible is like a garden bearing its own unique fruit, the Psalms bear all the fruit found in the other books. Calvin famously labelled the Psalter “‘An Anatomy of all the Parts of the Soul;’ for there is not an emotion of which any one can be conscious that is not here represented as in a mirror.” I hope and pray that this project may help the larger church to recover the liturgical use of the Psalms. After all, the Psalms are simultaneously the most confessionally Reformed and the most ecumenical worship resource we have. First, the Genevan Psalms are the common heritage of the Reformed churches. Second, the Psalms themselves we share with our fellow Christians of virtually every tradition. Third, the Psalms we have in common with the synagogue, or, as Pope John Paul II called them, our Jewish elder brethren, even if we might interpret differently especially the messianic psalms.
All psalm texts below copyright © David T. Koyzis. All rights reserved.
Here is an interview that the Rev. Uri Brito conducted with me on my completed psalter project:
Now that I have a complete draft of the Genevan Psalter in English, I hope to find a publisher willing to take it on. If there is any interest in this, please contact me at the email in the right sidebar of this blog. May we all sing God's praises now and for ever!
David T. Koyzis, October 2020, updated August 2024
On 18 May 2022 I lectured on the Genevan Psalter to mark the 40th anniversary of the H. Henry Meeter Center for Calvin Studies at Calvin University, Grand Rapids, Michigan, USA. Here is my lecture, titled "Let the People Praise: The Enduring Legacy of the Genevan Psalter":
In 2024 I was interviewed by James Spencer on my work with the Psalms. The interview was posted on the various media hosting the Thinking Christian podcast episodes: How Can the Psalms Help Christians Worship? A Conversation with David Koyzis. Spencer has a PhD in theological studies from Trinity Evangelical Divinity School and has hosted this podcast since 2023. Topics covered here include the Genevan and Scottish Psalters, my own Genevan Psalter project, the Book of Common Prayer, and the Lutheran use of the daily office.
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Psalm 1
(10 10 11 11 10 10)
1. How blest are they who keep from evil ways,
who heed not sinful counsel all their days,
nor seek the company of wicked scoffers,
but take delight in all the Lord God offers
within the statutes of his holy Law:
both day and night they ponder it with awe.
2. They are like trees that grow beside the stream,
whose fruitful limbs with ripened bounty teem,
whose verdant leaves will fade and wither never;
all that they undertake in faith will ever
be blessed by God with great prosperity.
But wicked ones a different lot shall see.
3. For they, like chaff, before the wind are blown
and will not last before the judgement throne,
nor will they stand in council of the holy.
But God protects all those who follow solely
the paths of virtue and of righteousness,
while death shall stalk the ways of wickedness.
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Psalm 8
(11
11 10 10)
1. O LORD, our Lord, your name excels creation!
Your glory far surpasses every nation.
Out of the mouths of children flows your praise
to silence rebels who forsake your ways.
2. When I behold the works your hands have moulded —
sun, moon and stars across the sky unfolded —
man, what is he that you a thought should spare,
the son of man that he should own your care?
3. Yet you have made him to reflect your splendour,
crowned him with glory and with highest honour,
placed him as steward over all you've made;
beneath his feet your earthly realm is laid.
4. Earth's flocks and herds in grace to him you've given,
beasts wild and tame, and birds that soar through heaven;
fish in the sea you've given him to claim,
O LORD, our Lord, how excellent your name!
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Psalm 23
(11 11 11 11 11 11)
1. The LORD's my shepherd, I shall want for nothing.
He makes me lie in pastures lush and verdant.
He leads me to still waters that are peaceful,
restores my strength, leads me to righteous pathways
for his name's sake. Though I may walk in darkness,
I will not fear; for you are always with me.
2. Your rod and staff provide me constant comfort.
Before my foes, a feast you are preparing.
My head with finest oil you have anointed;
with you my cup is full to overflowing.
Goodness and mercy all my days pursue me,
and in the LORD's house I will dwell for ever.
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Psalm 95
(8 8 9 8 8 9)
1. Come, sing our praise to the LORD God;
now let us make a joyful sound
unto the rock of our salvation.
Come, give our thanks in his presence;
and let us make a joyful noise
to him with many songs of praising.
2. For, see, the LORD is a great God,
and a great King above all gods.
The depths of earth are in his keeping;
the mountain peaks are his also.
The sea he made belongs to him;
with skill his hands have formed the dry land.
3. Come, let us bow down and worship;
and let us come on bended knee
before the living LORD who made us!
For he alone is our true God;
we are the people whom he guides,
the sheep that lovingly he pastures.
4. If only you would attend him:
"O harden not your stubborn hearts
as once you did within the desert.
That day your unfaithful forbears
rebelled and put me to the test,
though they had seen my many wonders.
5. "Through forty years of rebellion
these people would not know my ways;
their hearts away from me would wander.
So then I swore in my anger
that none of this rebellious lot
would in my rest find habitation."
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Psalm 119
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Psalm 150
(77 77 8 77 8)
1. Praise the LORD with joyous mirth!
Praise him in his house on earth;
praise him in the heav'nly height.
Praise him for his acts of might.
Alleluia! alleluia!
Praise his all-surpassing grace.
Bow and sing before his face:
alleluia! alleluia!
2. Praise God with the trumpet sound,
harp and lute, his praise resound.
Play the timbrel; dance his praise.
Strings and flute, extol his ways.
Alleluia! alleluia!
Clashing cymbals, praise the Lord;
all that breathe, with one accord
praise the LORD! Sing alleluia!
Just read this blog and sang the psalms included. A wonderful task and well done. I played the Genevan psalter tunes as organist in the Gereformeerde Kerk in the Netherlands from 1956 to 1966. Moving to Canada I continued serving as organist in various CRC's in Ontario until the last church music committee dismissed me and the organ from leading services. It was now piano, guitar, drum and sometimes fluit or violin with the mics turned high and a soloist 'leading' the congregational singing. First the songs were mostly from the CRC gray hymnal but soon more 'evangelical' sources were applied. I think it would be wonderful to get back to psalm singing.
ReplyDeleteHarmen
The tunes are indeed very reminiscent of Dowland, with a floating serenity. You've done a sensitive job of seeking to respect those feminine endings within the limitations of English, and the results dance a line between very speakable prose and singable poetry. I'm looking forward to reading and listening to more of your translations.
ReplyDeleteJudith Alkema (Redeemer 1991)