Hallelujah reflection

This was written for the opening of our 2010 Greenbelt worship session.  Chloe was inspired by a talk she had heard about the roots and meaning of the word 'Hallelujah'.  We knocked some ideas around, Sam put them on paper and then Chloe made it sound like a proper piece of spoken word.

At Greenbelt we used this in the midst of singing the chorus to Leonard Cohen's 'Hallelujah' (there are echoes and quotes of his lyric a couple of times in the piece).  You could do the same, or use another song or hymn which repeats the word (a taize chant could work well).  It will work best if you give it to a good reader, who will put some emotion into it.  The piece serves not only to explain the word but also to encourage people to bring thier own Hallelujah to the meeting, however they are feeling.  For this reason it will probably work best towards the start of your meeting.

Richard Lyall made us 10 fantastic visuals to go with it of the word 'Hallelujah' in varied, everyday places, (download the Zip folder from the box above right) which could be a reflection on their own, or used alongside the poem and singing.  Stick them in a PowerPoint, easyworship, video etc, or maybe even print them out as an exhibition?  You can interact with the poem and images in a host of different ways - post your ideas below!
 

What is your Hallelujah?
Hallelujah Hallelujah
What is your Hallelujah?
A word so big they couldn’t translate it
But took the Hebrew and reshaped it
Hallelu  - to joyously praise
Jah – Yahweh, Jehovah, God

Not a word but a call:
Praise God, you peoples,
Praise God, all creation,
Praise God, O my soul

Hallelujah Hallelujah
What is your Hallelujah?

Sung with majesty in Handel’s chorus
Shouted in a passion of praise
Spoken with hope in a tricky situation
Whispered with relief when it all turns out OK

Sometimes it’s a cold and broken Hallelujah
Deliberately declared as an act of faith
Through doubt
Through tears
Through pain
Hallelujah Hallelujah Hallelujah

Sometimes Hallelujah is an attitude,
A deep breath taken,
A kindness given,
Precious time spent
Practical acts of praise

But it’s never just an expression,
A word to pad out worship songs,
A sarcastic utterance,
A Christian catchphrase

Praise God, you peoples
Praise God, all creation
Praise God, O my soul

Down your tools,
Your lifestyle props,
Your tiredness, your frustrations
Your everyday distractions

And hold this word high:
“Stand before the Lord of Song
With nothing on your tongue but Hallelujah”

Hallelujah Hallelujah
Give him your Hallelujah

 

(c) engageworship.org/Chloe Axford/Sam Hargreaves

images (c) Richard Lyall, shared under a creative commons license

Chloe Axford lives in Devon with her husband Nick and their very new baby girl. They are volunteer worship leaders at their church and run an alternative worship stream in the evening service called Creative Space. Chloe spent two years working in creative arts ministry at a church in London and now works as a journalist (when not dreaming up imaginative uses for tea lights, post-it notes and stones).

Comments / Responses

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Previous Comments:

Dave Wilkinson
31 Aug 2010 22:07
Sometimes Alleluia Lyrics
Performed by- Chuck Girard

Chorus:

Sometimes Alleluia,
Sometimes Praise The Lord
Sometimes Gently Singing,
Our Hearts In One Accord

Oh let us lift our voices,
Look toward the sky and start to sing
Oh let us now return His love,
Just let our voices ring
Oh let us feel His presence,
Let the sound of praises fill the air
Oh let us sing the song of Jesus' love,
To people everywhere.

Chorus

Oh let our joy be unconfined,
Let us sing with freedom unrestrained
Let's take this feeling that we're feeling now,
Outside these walls and let it rain.
Oh let the Spirit overflow,
As we are filled from head to toe.
We love you Father, Son and Holy Ghost,
And we want this world to know.

Chorus
Andy Saunders
13 Sep 2010 14:16
Great idea - worked really well after a sermon on worship
Sam Hargreaves
13 Sep 2010 20:31
Thanks Andy - great to hear! We used it a couple of Sunday's ago to start our morning service, and the church (with loads of kids) went quiet as the poem was read!

And thanks Dave - that looks like a great song to link with it. have you got a web link to a place where we could hear it or get music? I had the thought that you could use this with Ben Cantalon's 'Hallelujah'.
Alex Lloyd Davies
05 Apr 2011 19:04
Hello Lovely Chloe
I used this poem along with 2 of the pictures for a short after-lunch worship session during the LICC Executive Toolbox training that I'm helping with.
It worked really well!
Made me very reminiscent of those great Ascension years.
Thank you for writing it.
much love
Alex (Pennington as was)
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