Carl Tuttle’s been a worship leader for over 30 years since the
mid-1970s, when a house church experience that he helped initiate in California
spawned many churches in a broad movement (commonly called the Vineyard
movement) of worship renewal in the U.S. His song “Hosanna” appears to be one
that he says was a “God-directed” effort during this time. It was born out of a
time when new adherents to the Christian faith sought a more personal, intimate
bond with God, and so Tuttle shares (see his website address below) that
singing in those times might be sustained for 30 to 45 minutes at a time, as
worshippers sought a passionate experience through simple songs. Hosanna, an ancient word that expresses the
fervent gratitude of Jesus’ disciples in His day, is a reminder that my song to
Him doesn’t need to be complicated – just heartfelt.
Tuttle recalls that the years during which he wrote and
published “Hosanna” (1985) were the best of his life. He had freedom, he says,
to develop his ministry, and to participate in mentoring and spreading the
worship revival inside and outside the U.S. What made the worship rejuvenation
possible? One of Tuttle’s tenets of worship that he relates is that songs
should be ‘singable’, with easy melodies ‘accessible to the masses’. So, when Carl began playing around with some
chords in a basement session one day in 1984, we can presume that he was listening
for some of those ‘singable’ melodies; at the same time, he says he just couldn’t
get out of his mind the scene in which Jesus was acclaimed by a Jerusalem crowd
with palm branches and loud cries of his song’s title – Hosanna! Five minutes
was all it took, Carl declares, for the song to take shape, and he was so
confident in its sound that he called a music executive and pitched it to him,
with success. Nevertheless, Tuttle admits he was amazed to hear “Hosanna” being
sung in the Superdome in New Orleans in the early 1980s by a gathering of
Catholics, since the song had at that point only been recorded once. Yet, you
can tell it’s a Tuttle tune, with a straightforward message and graceful words,
ones that even believers who were not part of the Vineyard churches could (and
still do) appreciate.
Carl Tuttle communicated something in “Hosanna” that is as
true today as it was the day Jesus rode a white colt into Jerusalem. He’s salvation in the flesh, worthy of
adulation. Although Jesus’ name today may also still spark apathy, if not blatant
scorn as it did among some within earshot that day he entered the holy city
(see Matthew 21:15), I need to be unafraid to proclaim my deepest devotion to
Him, despite the unbelief that’s evident around me. ‘Hosanna’ is what I reserve
for Him. Others are bound to notice and ask ‘why’…could it also be, that’s why
I should say it more often? An authentic
admiration for God might just be what your neighbor secretly wants to hear and
see.
The song’s story is found in the book “I Could Sing of Your
Love Forever”, by Lindsay Terry, Thomas Neslon Publishers, 2008.
Biographic information on Carl Tuttle and some information
on the song “Hosanna” can be found at the following site: http://www.carltuttle.com/
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