Welcome back! Here are Mr. Witte's handouts from the August 18-19 WLA Orientation Days:
Concert Choir - Handout | 2014-15 Syllabus
Music Technology - Handout | 2014-15 Syllabus
Music Theory - Handout | 2014-15 Syllabus
Traveling Choir - Handout | 2014-15 Syllabus
Study Hall - Handout
Monday, August 18, 2014
Sunday, August 10, 2014
We Preach Christ Crucified
This year's theme passage in the Winnebago Lutheran Academy Association is 1 Corinthians 1:23a: "We preach Christ crucified." Each year I challenge myself to compose a song based on the theme passage as a way of embedding the passage in the hearts and memories of our students.
Downloads:
Sheet Music: We Preach Christ Crucified (Dale A. Witte) – To be published by NPH in Oct. 2018!
Bulletin Inserts: Letter half sheet (5.5" x 8.5") | Legal half sheet (7" x 8.5")
Some years, I use the passages before and after the theme passage as lyrics for either the verse or refrain. This year, I decided to center in on developing the meaning of "We preach Christ crucified." For the person who doesn't know what that passage means, I explain that the cross isn't supposed to be a frightening tool of torture and execution. When the believer looks at the cross of Christ, they see hope, salvation, and a victory won, both for Jesus–the Son of God and Son of Man–and for the believer in Jesus.
I pray that this year's theme song, like all the others that I've written, serves to help explain God's Word and to firmly fix it in our minds and hearts. In the coming weeks, I hope to make a recording of the WLA student body singing the theme song and post it on this blog.
Downloads:
Sheet Music: We Preach Christ Crucified (Dale A. Witte) – To be published by NPH in Oct. 2018!
Bulletin Inserts: Letter half sheet (5.5" x 8.5") | Legal half sheet (7" x 8.5")
Some years, I use the passages before and after the theme passage as lyrics for either the verse or refrain. This year, I decided to center in on developing the meaning of "We preach Christ crucified." For the person who doesn't know what that passage means, I explain that the cross isn't supposed to be a frightening tool of torture and execution. When the believer looks at the cross of Christ, they see hope, salvation, and a victory won, both for Jesus–the Son of God and Son of Man–and for the believer in Jesus.
I pray that this year's theme song, like all the others that I've written, serves to help explain God's Word and to firmly fix it in our minds and hearts. In the coming weeks, I hope to make a recording of the WLA student body singing the theme song and post it on this blog.
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