In 2020, we celebrated holidays at home amid the COVID-19 pandemic. We worked at home, attended school at home, even attended worship services at home.
Many Christians also turned to hymns for comfort at home, according to Hymnary.org.
Users of the online database doubled as the novel coronavirus closed many church buildings this spring, and the website now is nearing 40 million page views for 2020, its highest ever.
“I do think that this time we’re in when everything is turned upside down makes everybody search for meaning, opens them up to the presence of God, looking for ways to express their spirituality, so there are more people searching for such things,” said Harry Plantinga, a professor of computer science at Calvin University and founder of Hymnary.org.
In need of resources
“There are also just the people who aren’t going to church to worship.
“They’re worshipping at home, and they need the resources.”
Hymnary.org is an online hymn and worship music database for worship leaders, hymnologists and music lovers, featuring more than 1 million hymns.
Plantinga founded the website in 2007, which now is funded through the Calvin Institute of Christian Worship in Grand Rapids, Michigan.
Over the past year, Hymnary.org saw a jump in users in March and April as many churches moved online to slow the spread of COVID-19, the disease caused by the novel coronavirus. By the end of 2020, nearly 8 million users had accessed the site, up 20% from the year before, according to the website.
Donations to Hymnary.org have nearly doubled, as well, according to Plantinga.
Seeking comfort
“In this time of uncertainty and fear, Christians around the globe turn to Scripture and turn to song for comfort. We remember that our help comes from the Lord, the Maker of heaven and earth,” according to the website.
Hymnary.org also offered a number of resources for churches and home worshippers during the pandemic. Among them: a list of 10 hymns with testimonies of comfort for times of trouble, including “Precious Lord, Take my Hand,” written in the early 1930s by Pilgrim Baptist Church, Chicago’s Thomas Dorsey, considered the father of black gospel music, after the death of his wife and newborn son.
It’s not on the list, but the most popular hymn on the database as the year draws to a close is “Holy, Holy, Holy! Lord God Almighty,” an 1826 song by Reginald Heber that defiantly proclaims God’s holiness “though the darkness hide thee.”
Among trending hymns, “How Great Thou Art,” was in the top 15, along with several Christmas hymns.
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