The Crucifixion (Stainer)


The Crucifixion: A Meditation on the Sacred Passion of the Holy Redeemer is an oratorio for a SATB choir and organ composed by John Stainer in 1887, with text by W J Sparrow Simpson. The piece relates the Biblical narrative of the Passion and Crucifixion of Jesus. It is particularly noted for the Christian hymn “All for Jesus, All for Jesus".

Composition

The Crucifixion is scored for a SATB choir and organ, and features solos for bass and tenor. Structurally, it is based on the traditional format of the Passions by Johann Sebastian Bach, with a Biblical narrative interspersed with choruses, solos and hymns reflecting on the Passion story. Stainer intended the piece to be within the scope of most parish church choirs; it includes five hymns for congregational participation.
The text consists of extracts from the King James Bible with poetic material written by W J Sparrow Simpson, the librettist of Stainer's earlier cantata Mary Magdalene. The work is dedicated "to my pupil and friend W. Hodge and the choir of Marylebone Church", who first performed it on 24 February 1887, the day after Ash Wednesday. There have been performances in Marylebone Church annually since then.
The work premiered on 24 February 1887 and continues to be performed today.

Structure

The oratorio consists of the following movements:
  1. And They Came to a Place Named Gethsemane – text from Mark 14:32
  2. The Agony – including text from Mark 14:46, 53, 60, 61–64, 15:1, 15–16
  3. Processional to Calvary and "Fling Wide the Gates"
  4. And When They Were Come – text from Luke 23:33
  5. The Mystery of the Divine Humiliation
  6. He Made Himself of No Reputation – text from Philippians 2:7–8
  7. The Majesty of the Divine Humiliation tenor solo
  8. And As Moses Lifted Up the Serpent – text from John 3:14–15
  9. God So Loved the World – text from John 3:16–17
  10. Litany of the Passion
  11. Jesus Said, 'Father, Forgive Them' – text from Luke 23:34
  12. So Thou Liftest Thy Divine Petition
  13. The Mystery of the Intercession
  14. And One of the Malefactors – text from Luke 23:39–43
  15. The Adoration of the Crucified
  16. When Jesus Therefore, Saw His Mother – text from John 19:26–27, Matthew 27:45, Mark 15:34
  17. Is It Nothing to You? – text from Lamentations 1:12
  18. The Appeal of the Crucified
  19. After This, Jesus Knowing That All Things Were Now Accomplished – text from John 19:28, 30, Luke 23:46
  20. For the Love of Jesus

Critical opinion

Some critics have expressed unfavourable opinions of Stainer's Crucifixion. The composer Ernest Walker dismissed the work, writing in 1924 that "Musicians today have no use for The Crucifixion". Edmund Fellowes said: "It suffers primarily from the extreme poverty, not to say triviality, of the musical ideas dealing with a subject which should make the highest demand for dignity of treatment". Kenneth Long said that Stainer had a libretto "which for sheer banality and naïveté would be hard to beat". Stainer himself characterised his work as "rubbish". In his A Short History of English Church Music, Erik Routley traced The Crucifixion as the archetypal work that others imitated, and often diluted.
Other critics have viewed Stainer's work more sympathetically. Theologian Louise Joy Lawrence argues that, once the listener has set aside relative cultural views of Victorian "vulgarity", The Crucifixion serves well as a spiritual vehicle for conveying "theology and scripture at its most profound", and the melodies "as tools of glorification for God".
Howard E. Smither describes the piece as "the most important English work on the Passion". He observes that structurally the work owes much to J.S. Bach's repertoire of Passions, and also notes its popularity for Passiontide church performances throughout the English-speaking world.
Reviewing a recording of The Crucifixion in Gramophone (magazine), musicologist Jeremy Dibble referred to the piece's "rich, chromatic harmony", asserting that any accusations of "saccharine sentimentality" could be allayed by a sincere performance. He singled out the series of hymns for particular praise:

Contribution to hymnody

Stainer's Crucifixion has contributed two popular hymn tunes to the repertoire of Christian hymnody: "Cross of Jesus, Cross of Sorrow" appears in hymnals and the tune is used as the setting for the hymns "Come, Thou Long Expected Jesus" and "There's a Wideness in God's Mercy". The final hymn in The Crucifixion, "For the Love of Jesus" also appears in modern hymnals; the hymn and its tune are both known by the first line, "All for Jesus, All for Jesus".

Recordings

The oratorio has been recorded several times; among notable recordings are: