Micaela392
De BISAWiki
Hallelujah! The Power of the Word
haleluja - A minister I knew once questioned the depth or "the soul" of your song I wrote since it was " music of largely just Hallelujahs". Today Let me take a moment with this issue and check out the phrase "Hallelujah" in certain depth.
Its etymology originates from the Hebrew and means "Praise Jah" or "Praise God". Strangely enough, it is a word that circumnavigates the world and spans most languages. When translated, the word "Hallelujah" (or sometimes "Alleluia") continues to be same: In Spanish it's "Aleluya", in Finnish and German it's "Haleluja", in French it's "Alleluia", in Estonian it's "Haleluuja", in Icelandic it's Halleluja, in Slovak it's "Aleluia" as well as on and on like that. So it's a thing whose four syllables mean the same thing to many of mankind. The word almost around Africa and so they understand how you're feeling. Hardly any words translate that way. Consider the word "God". Even this word changes dramatically in the pronunciation and spelling in translation. "Hallelujah" is really universal.
haleluja - I am aware of not one other word in language or song that carries such joy, such celebration, such depth of spirit and soul. Having its four open vowels, this is a gorgeous utterance to sing and when sung alone or surrounded by itself and repeated again and again oahu is the epitome word of celebration in human language. I find that when I'm writing a sacred song and I am most full of the spirit of God, fundamental essentials words that spill from me again and again since the melodies pour through me from God. Again and again, "Hallelujah". It takes place frequently i must rewrite the lyrics into simple terms, otherwise nearly all of my songs would sing nothing but "Hallelujahs".
A person named George Fredric Handel put on the extender to musically summarize his penultimate tribute for the birth of Christ inside the finale of his "Messiah". Who has not sat in wonder in the singing of the great gift to mankind as the same word cascaded from the choir?
Hallelujah! Hallelujah! Hallelujah! Hallelujah!
For your Lord God Omnipotent reigneth.
Hallelujah! Hallelujah! Hallelujah! Hallelujah!
In no way comparing myself to Frederic Handel, I too used these words to great effect in the song that opened the performance from the Jenny Burton Experience which ran to sold-out audiences for more than seven years here in Nyc.
Let's move on with a Hallelujah
Let's begin with a Hallelujah
Hallelujah
Hallelujah
Hallelujah
Hallelujah
There's music in our lives
There's music in the air all over
There exists a spirit within our lives
As well as the music and also the spirit are certainly one
Hallelujah
Hallelujah
Hallelujah
Hallelujah
An easy statement, but with the body weight and power this phenomenal word you can be certain the audiences knew wherever we had been using the inspirational aim of the performance. It set the spirit from the evening in stone and launched us cleanly and clearly to the realm of spiritual thought.
haleluja - Exactly what is a word but a symbol to have an idea. These sounds which come away from our mouths represent concepts large or small. Repeat the word "streetcar" and we know exactly that which you mean. Repeat the word "God" you'll also find as much definitions of that word as you've listeners. But repeat the word "Hallelujah" and the world is suddenly all on the same page as well as in one method or another feeling and understanding the light that you're experiencing. It is a word that bears repetition, no, in fact, clamors for repetition, for to express it once just isn't enough. It must be repeated and repeated within the wonder of God's grace and power, love, soul, and spirit. Oahu is the penultimate word inside the human language in praise of God.
When every day life is at its best, within the moment when not one other words suffice, for most people here on this planet, out pops the phrase "Hallelujah". This elegant and universal utterance captures the essence of celebration and it is immediately understood deeply within the soul of.