On Making a Joyful Noise
January 12, 2025
For
First Congregational UCC Bellevue Choir Retreat
Rev. Tom Sorenson
Scripture: Psalm 100
Let us pray: May the words of my mouth and the meditations of all of your hearts be acceptable in your sight, O God, our strength and our redeemer. Amen.
I don’t know about you. I won’t ever claim to speak for any of you. That’s not my role, and I have no intention of doing it today. But speaking only for myself, I have to say that I don’t find the times we’re living in to be particularly joyful. There is just too much trouble everywhere. I mean, just look at the world around us. Violent Russian aggression against Ukraine. Violent Israeli assault on Gaza. Violent conflict between Israel and Hezbollah in Jordan. Oppression of women in Afghanistan, Iran, and Saudi Arabia. The growth of right wing political movements in many nations including our own. A president-elect about to take office in this country who seems to all appearances intent on destroying our federal government for the benefit only of the uber-wealthy. Assault on the personal autonomy and integrity of women in many of our states that our president-elect apparently intends to attempt to spread nationwide. Irresponsible environmental policies that threaten to cause even more extensive damage worldwide than they already have. A threat that wildly irresponsible trade and taxation policies will make life harder for ordinary Americans. Hundreds of thousands of unhoused people in what we claim is the richest country on earth combined with an apparent unwillingness to do what would have to be done to address the problem in a serious way. Not a pretty picture, is it? It certainly isn’t to me.
Then we encounter scripture passages like the opening lines of Psalm 100 that we just heard. “Make a joyful noise to the Lord, all the earth, serve the Lord with gladness; come into his presence with singing.” And I have to tell you: When I read passages like that my first reaction is: Yeah. Sure. How in heaven’s name am I supposed to do that in today’s world? It just doesn’t seem possible. A joyful noise? Serve God with gladness? Come into God’s presence with singing? I have to confess that I just think: I don’t think so! Not today. Not in the foreseeable future. The world is just too ugly for that.
But then I get to thinking a bit more. These verses talk about music. “Make a joyful noise.” What’s a joyful noise? It isn’t the noise of hotrod cars or motorcycles with punctured mufflers that we often hear in the neighborhood where I live. It isn’t the sound of traffic on the freeway. It isn’t the sound of cries of anguish, despair, or grief that we sometimes hear and sometimes make ourselves. It isn’t incessant, unavoidable, and mostly immensely stupid advertising on television. It isn’t the speech of most of our politicians. It isn’t the demand we hear to deport hundreds of thousands of decent people who play indispensable roles in our economy and who only want peace and a better life for themselves and their children. It isn’t the lies some of our politicians tell us about the threat those people present. It isn’t the demand we hear to let politicians, mostly male, decide what women can and can’t do with their own bodies. In other words, it isn’t most of the noise we hear day after day.
So what is a joyful noise? For me, and I hope for most of you, the most joyful noise we hear is music. Music in general, but more specifically the music we make together in our choir. Some of that music is meant to be joyful. Some of it is more serious or somber than we usually think of joy as being; but joy is both happy and deep. Deep, serious music can be joyful too. I don’t know about you, but I always feel substantially better after we have sung together than I did before we began. I often remember the old saying: The one who sings prays twice. We pray with our lyrics, and we offer a different kind of prayer with our melodies and harmonies. For me, music can be a joyful noise when it seems not much else in the world is.
So as we enter this new year so full of doubt and promise, let me share with you one way that I see music, especially our music. To me, music is a refuge. It is a shelter. It is an escape from a world I’m usually not much pleased with. Sometimes it is a place of peace. Sometimes it is a place of excitement. Sometimes it is a place of inspiration. Sometimes it’s a place of challenge. Something it’s not, ever, is a place of despair, or depression, or fear. The world often oppresses our spirits. Music can raise our spirits better than anything else. The world often gives us violence and injustice. Music can, I suppose, be used in support of violence and injustice. I mean, the Nazis certainly used it that way. But the music we sing is sacred music. It is music of hope and of love not of hatred and despair.
In other words, whether it is expressly joyful or expressly more somber, it is a joyful noise. It speaks of what should be and of what could be but is not. It points to God’s promise that God is with us always and never abandons us, no matter what. It speaks of the hope we can have only in God in this world that so often seems so hopeless. It is, to a considerable extent, a voice that looks the world in the eye and says: No! You are not how things are supposed to be. You are not the way things one day will be. It looks the world in the eye and says: Nonetheless! Nonetheless, we will have hope! Nonetheless, we will make a joyful noise in a world so often full of very different kinds of noises. We will make a joyful noise because be believe that God is with us every minute of every day.
You know, I and other ordained preacher types can use a lot of words to try to convey what God is trying to tell us through Jesus Christ, the one we call Lord and Savior. We can give sermons that are probably too long. We can write books that are definitely too long. But nothing we can do has power that remotely approaches the power of music. Words mostly touch our superficial cognitive abilities. Music goes much deeper than that. Music touches the soul in a way mere words never can. Our words may struggle to be joyful. Our music finds it easy to be joyful. It is joyful because it always points beyond itself to the love of God, and it does that more powerfully than mere words ever can.
So, let us say together: Nonetheless! Nonetheless, we will make a joyful noise to the Lord! We will sing. We will sing with our voices from the depths of our souls. We will sing with joy to the people on earth and to God in highest heaven. Maybe, like me, you can’t find much joy I the world today. So be it. God is still with us, and there is still music. We can still make a joyful noise to the Lord. So let’s keep doing it, shall we? Thanks be to God! Amen.