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Bear One Another’s Burdens

Bear One Another’s Burdens
Dedicated to Jill (Bock) Sikkema
Galatians 6:2

Preview:

Choral score: $25.00 US
Accompaniment track: $10.00 US

The text of this song is based on Galatians 6:2, where we’re told to care for each other by offering mutual support in the name of Christ. It’s a message of encouragement toward living the Christian life in a way which honors God through interdependence in the church.

The text is the clue in the sense that it refers to the name “Jill Bear” (and, yes, Jill also likes bears). This was an easy clue to manufacture, and the lyrics lent themselves easily to the task.

The other clue is more obscure since it’s couched in Baroque terms. The uppermost half notes in the first two measures of the accompaniment are B-flat, A, C, B-natural. This doesn’t make entire sense until you’re in possession of the historical fact that in the 1700s musicians referred to our B-flat as B and to our B-natural as H. So the half notes spell B-A-C-H – a pun on Jill’s maiden name.

When you see your brother bearing a load that’s hard to lift,
When you see him struggling uphill through the storm,
Then go to him and give your arms and shoulders as a gift,
And carry him to where it’s dry and warm.

We’re to bear one another’s burdens,
We’re to take on one another’s pain,
We’re to bear one another’s burdens,
And present ourselves the price to fulfill the law of Christ,
And to demonstrate our love in Jesus’ name.

When your friend forsakes his bearing for a course he should not take,
When you see him drifting blindly in the night,
Then seek to turn his wayward heart around for Jesus’ sake,
And gently lead his life back to the light.

Purchasing this score gives you permission to print and maintain the number of copies needed by your ensemble – so you only need to pay once. Purchase also gives permission for performance, broadcasting, live-streaming and video-sharing online. See our licensing agreement for full details, and please remember to mention the title and arranger of the piece on video-sharing sites, social media and any printed materials such as concert programs.

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