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At Church of Beethoven, Music is the Message

Posted: 08/ 5/2011 8:44 am

"Music," Ludwig van Beethoven said, "is the mediator between the spiritual and the sensual life."

Transcending dogma, creed, culture and even language, music has the power to elevate the soul as well as the mind. It's the source of a type of faith as often discovered outside traditional organized religion as within it.

While spirituality and religion are not mutually exclusive, in the parlance of our time, music is "spiritual but not religious."

It's a paradox understood and embodied by the late classical cellist Felix Wurman, creator of the enigmatic Church of Beethoven, founded in an abandoned gas station on old Route 66 in Albuquerque, N.M.

Wurman first convened the Church of Beethoven, a nondenominational Sunday morning meeting where music is the message, in 2008. It now has two more "congregations" in Durham, N.C., and more recently in Oak Park, Ill., a suburb of Chicago.

Oak Park, my hometown for more than a decade until I relocated to Southern California, is a progressive, quirky and artistic community where the writer Ernest Hemingway and the iconoclastic architect Frank Lloyd Wright once resided -- and where Wurman was raised.

Home to Wright's famed Unity Temple and dozens of other churches and houses of worship, the Church of Beethoven held its first Sunday morning meeting in an Italian trattoria nestled among some of the village's many art galleries, where music worshippers listened to a Bach cello suite
and poetry before sticking around for brunch.

"It's a spiritual thing that doesn't necessarily have a specific religious thing, but it definitely touches the same chords in people," said Jean Lotus, one of the conveners of the Oak Park Church of Beethoven.

"I felt like this is the kind of thing you can do that can bring people together. It can make people have a sort of spiritual, uplifting experience. And the poetry actually does put ideas into words."

Calling the gathering a "church" is not intended to be disrespectful to traditional faith communities, some of whom bristled when the music-as-worship services began in New Mexico and North Carolina.

"We're not declaring war on religion or anything like that," said Lotus, who is Catholic and regularly attends Mass with her family of seven. "Not all people go to church. I do. ... On Church of Beethoven days we go to an early Mass and then go to the Church of Beethoven."

Wurman's sister, Candida Wurman Yoshikai, convener of the Durham Church of Beethoven, said her brother was not traditionally religious. The idea behind the church was to have a house of worship where "music was a principal element and not just an afterthought," she said.

"Felix was always trying to understand," Wurman Yoshikai said. "But he wasn't interested in organized religion and it's fair to say that he was put off by it. But at the same time he wanted to bring music and its spiritual connection to people -- the depth of something that can move
us at a really deeply profound level."

Just as silence forms the central element of worship in a Quaker meeting, in the Church of Beethoven the music is the worship, the homily and the anchor of the community of believers, if you will.

Wurman's concept for the Church of Beethoven, where the music itself is the preacher, reminds me of a favorite spiritual quote, often attributed to St. Francis of Assisi: "Preach the gospel; when necessary, use words."

The son of pianist and composer Hans Wurman, an Austrian Jew who escaped the Holocaust and immigrated to Chicago, Felix Wurman received his first cello when he was 7 years old and began performing publicly at age 12.

"When Felix was dying, he told me, 'I was definitely handed something,"' Wurman Yoshikai said. "He was very brilliant. We're all in music, but he was really gifted."

With his chamber group, Domus, Wurman sought to bring classical music to folks who weren't familiar with it or didn't have the means or the will to purchase tickets for the symphony or opera.

It was in the spirit of those early Domus performances that Wurman founded the Church of Beethoven. Musically speaking, the church is nondenominational. It may be named for Beethoven but the music offered isn't limited to the German composer.

Beethoven, who was raised Catholic and composed many religious works during his lifetime, including the great "Mass in C Major" and "Missa Solemnis," seemed to find his greatest spiritual connection in the music itself.

As her brother's legacy, Wurman Yoshikai hopes the Church of Beethoven will spread, creating more musical congregations across the nation and the world where those of no faith (or any faith) can find sacred community and spiritual connection.

"Go on; don't only practice your art, but force your way into its secrets," Beethoven said. "Art deserves that, for it and knowledge can raise men to the Divine."

 
 
 

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"Music," Ludwig van Beethoven said, "is the mediator between the spiritual and the sensual life." Transcending dogma, creed, culture and even language, music has the power to elevate the soul as w...
"Music," Ludwig van Beethoven said, "is the mediator between the spiritual and the sensual life." Transcending dogma, creed, culture and even language, music has the power to elevate the soul as w...
 
 
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07:22 AM on 08/08/2011
As a Lay Minister and Spiritual Director, I frequently use or recommend music as an authentic form of meditation and prayer. There is nothing like music to lift us to an elevated state of consciousness and to stimulate our buried emotions. Thank you for this great reminder. Lauri Lumby Authentic Freedom Ministries http://yourspiritualtruth.com
11:56 PM on 08/07/2011
Wonderful idea. I hope it survives. We need these creative approaches to community that center on common celebrations like music, dance, art, poetry, writing, invention, exploration, etc, etc. This intent fits well with the idea of the E-congregation: www.econgregation.wordpress.com ("E" meaning electric, earth and internet generated). Thanks Ludwig!
03:48 PM on 08/07/2011
Beethoven's spirituality was free-thinking and far ranging. He developed an interest in reading Indian scriptures in translation and was deeply influenced by the Upanishads and the Bhagavad Gita.
12:18 AM on 08/07/2011
The true Holy Trinity

Beethoven's Triple Concerto by Daniel Barenboim, Itzhak Perlman and Yo-Yo Ma
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BDnez2Ip4wM
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Balancement
Timendi causa est nescire. -- Seneca
06:26 PM on 08/07/2011
You should try the transcendent 2nd movement of Tchaikovsky's 2nd Piano Concerto as performed by Igor Zhukov, Gennady Rozhdestventsky conducting the USSR RTV Large Symphony Orchestra. There's a genuine holy trinity there: Zhukov, Tcherniakovsky, and Simon.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yJzlurTMYxk
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Balancement
Timendi causa est nescire. -- Seneca
06:42 PM on 08/07/2011
As Tchaikovsky originally composed it, it should be noted--without the subsequent butchering by Ziloti.
07:33 PM on 08/07/2011
Truly thank you!

I noted on the same You Tube web page there is a link for Art Tatum. When he performed the other musicians commented, "God in in the house."

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jbA_CCKnbB0&feature=related
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juna
gardens and organic vegies (veggies)
09:08 PM on 08/06/2011
Finally. A religion that makes sense.
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polson
08:50 AM on 08/06/2011
God has touched me most through music.
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09:22 PM on 08/05/2011
a couple of CD music recommendations if I may:.... (Bjork- Vespertine...wonderful vocals & organic/ electronic sounds.. & look for the DVD audio version) & ( the secret Mozart.. Christopher Hogwood...works for solo clavichord..on the deutsche harmonia mundi label & not an easy one to find even though it's a 2006 release date....all three clavichords used in these recordings date from the middle to late 1700's including an unfretted one ( maker unknown ) which belonged to Mozart from 1790 until his death the following year...it was in the possesion of his widow Constanze until she moved to Copenhagen in 1810 when she gave it to her youngest son who kept it in Salzburg until 1829 & eventually it was donated to the Cathedral Music Society in 1844
02:21 PM on 08/05/2011
Awesome!
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Binea
Only a fool denies she is a fool, I am no fool
10:01 AM on 08/05/2011
I don't know if my last post made it before my computer froze and had to be shut down.
Music without words seems to be pointless to me :) Here are inspirational modern Gospel/religious songs

Pressing On With Regina McCrary & Chicago Mass Choir?? - YouTube

?Saved .Bob Dyllan?? - YouTube

?gregorian one?? - YouTube

Lord is it Mine Roger Hodgson w Orchestra?? - YouTube
09:24 AM on 08/05/2011
And although the Church of Beethoven does not appear to have singing, may I remind people that there is a familiar quote, "He who sings, prays twice." At times people have asserted that music elevated the practice of the religious service, "to the gods."

Many of the better funded parishes DO have fine pipe organs and a standing ensemble of other instrumenalists who enrich the worship service. In our Catholic service, my parish sometimes uses an organ offertory rather than sung music. And, let us all celebrate the gifted organist who provides the prelude to the service as well as the postlude.

While living in Hyde Park, Chicago, Tom Weisflog was organist at a couple of churches. At St. Thomas the Apostle, he always had an most artistic ending to the mass. There was a dedicated group of parishioners who stayed to enjoy the entire performance, and rewarded it with lengthy and loud applause. How else do we say "thank-you" if not through applause?
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Jeannette Lacey
04:37 PM on 08/06/2011
I rad an aricle about the original Church of Beethoven in NM two years ago. They play all sorts of music from classical to blues to country....and they do sing sometimes. There's something for everyone!
10:54 PM on 08/06/2011
Sounds like a tourist destination. Thanks for the info.