St. Thomas Columbus Choir

St. Thomas Columbus Choir News of and for St. Thomas Episcopal Church Choir in Columbus GA under the leadership of Rick McKnight

03/01/2025

From April Jacobs:
Hey fam, Thank you all so much for singing and enjoying this piece with me. Singing with St. Thomas has given me so much, including friendships that have changed me "for good." Singing with the Ambassadors of Voices of the Valley and having the opportunity to be a small part of VoV in the beginning is a part of my life I will always treasure dearly. My connections to VoV started because of singing in the St. Thomas Choir. Michelle needed kids to sing, but she also needed an assistant. I'm happy to have been able to serve those first two years. I feel lucky to have been at the right place at the right time. Katie Buckley and I are conducting at the concert this spring, and would love to see more of our peeps up there singing with us. Tell Michelle if you want to sing with the Ambassadors. The music is always so wonderful.

"Where the Light Begins" is a piece that the Ambassadors sang last spring. I dedicated this piece to Debbie in honor of her 70th birthday last July. I began taking voice lessons with Debbie shortly after hearing her sing the Caccini Ave Maria on All Saints in 2008. I joined the church in January 2009--thinking that if this music (the Caccini) lived at St. T--I wanted to live there, too. In 2009, I joined TAP as a volunteer for the first time--an organization that Debbie is in charge of--and I've been teaching at TAP every year since then. For me, the roots of our friendship were "knit up" during the choir trip to Well in July 2009. We've traveled together a lot, laughed and cried together a lot, and sung together--a lot. For me, she always helps to remind me that I have light and my specific light is important. My hope for everyone is that they find a person like Debbie for themselves--someone who shines their own light, encourages you to shine yours, and doesn't use their light to put anyone else in the shadows.

Finally, Rick McKnight was excited to learn about this piece and order it for the choir. He, too, had planned to do it in the fall. In my imagination, when I got the opportunity to tell you all about this piece and its dedication, Rick was sitting at the piano, beaming. I hoped he and all of you would love it as much as I did. When I sang it last spring, my first thoughts were about friendship and love and singing this with y'all and Rick, for Debbie. I knew it was a piece for us. I love you all so much!

**They shall laugh (and cry) and sing!**

01/22/2025

A reminder to all choir peeps - choir, and all other St. T activities cancelled for Wednesday. Which means we are going really be putting nose to the grindstone (should that be ‘vocal cords to the grindstone?!?) at rehearsals for a BIG February!!!

   Many of you will remember Jennifer and Mike Canfield who sang with the Choir on our Dublin, Ireland residency in 2022...
01/11/2025

Many of you will remember Jennifer and Mike Canfield who sang with the Choir on our Dublin, Ireland residency in 2022. Ena, Bobsie, Erin and Roger Redden and I were delighted to have dinner with them last night - what gracious hosts they are - and delicious chefs!

Jennifer is the composer of one of the choir’s favorite anthems, ‘Be Still’ - which we are going to sing as the Introit to the Evensong Organ dedication on February 16. We invited her and Mike (a good bass!) to sing with us and I think they will. Nice to meet some new folks at their home - fellow Episcopalians!

It’s another reminder of how Choir builds family. When that culture is nurtured, it’s a beautiful bond that lasts a lifetime.

Sure missed tonight - he would have loved the meal and more importantly the connection.

Have we got an amazing choir made up of the most FABulous people?!?!? This morning's Ledger-Enquirer article, (posted th...
12/23/2024

Have we got an amazing choir made up of the most FABulous people?!?!?

This morning's Ledger-Enquirer article, (posted thru a cut and paste so you can read without a subscription) .

Christmas, Hanukkah overlap this year. But the faiths
are always intertwined in Columbus
By Brittany McGee
December 23, 2024 11:04 AM
Mike Haskey [email protected]

Jews and Christians will both be celebrating this year on Dec. 25, with Christmas and the first night of Hanukkah falling on the same day, which only happens a few times each century.

But while the intertwining of those faiths is rare on the calendar — Hanukkah is determined by the Jewish Calendar and only falls on Christmas once every 19 years or so — it’s common in Columbus’ houses
of worship. With a Christian singer performing at Temple Israel and a Jewish singer performing at St. Thomas Episcopal Church, the two mesh often.

Members of the two places of worship regularly work together to uplift the broader community and find value in learning more about people from different cultural backgrounds.

“Our primary duty is to serve our memberships,” Temple Israel Rabbi Larry Schlesinger said. “But what might even be considered a higher duty is to reach beyond the full four walls of our individual sanctuaries and join hands with others striving to create peace on Earth and goodwill
towards all men and women.”

With the holidays falling on the same day this year, that gives both communities more opportunity to work together, Rev. Grace Burton-Edwards of St. Thomas told the Ledger-Enquirer.

“The relationship’s always there,” she said. “But it’s nice that we’ll all be celebrating at the same time this year.”

‘You should know that I’m Jewish’

When Michelle moved from Texas to Columbus in 2015, she might as well have been moving to Mars.

No one in her family had left Texas. Still, she was looking forward to furthering her career in music education at Columbus State University and directing the children’s choir Voices of the Valley.

Within one or two weeks of being the music education professor at Columbus State University, one of her students asked her if she had a church job in Columbus. Folta told him she didn’t and was still trying to get settled.

The student invited her to meet with St. Thomas’ music director, Rick McKnight, (who died from cancer in July), about singing at the church. Folta agreed, but she was hesitant.

“That’s fine,” Folta told the student. “But you should know that I’m Jewish.”

Before meeting McKnight, Folta was guarded and defensive. She’d had bad experiences singing at churches in Texas.

“I’m sitting there during Easter services,” Folta said. “And I’ve sung for a long time … there would be little one-shots like ‘the Jews killed Jesus.’”

So, when Folta met McKnight at a coffee shop, she defensively told him her boundaries and all the things she wouldn’t do. The entire time, McKnight sat there listening to her smirking.

Eventually, he responded.

“You’re perfect,” McKnight told her. “Come to rehearsal next week, and you can get started.”

More than just a job Debbie Anderson and her husband, Ron, moved from Milwaukee Columbus in 1996.

Not long after moving, Anderson became a member of St. Thomas and began singing in the choir. Both she and her husband had backgrounds in theatre.

Ron was the education director at the Springer Opera House before he died from cancer in 2016, while Anderson was primarily a gig worker.
One day in the early 2000s, Anderson received a call from Flo Hiatt, the music director at Temple Israel at the time.

In Milwaukee, Anderson had sung at Temple Emmanuel, a 5,000-member Reform Jewish temple. It was just a job back then.

They needed a soprano. So, after verifying the pay, Anderson sang there for two years. But Anderson never met the members throughout her time singing at Temple Emmanuel.

“All of the singers were gentiles,” she said. “And we could not be in there.”

Instead, they were in a small room without seeing or speaking to the members. A system was in place to signal to the organist that it was time to play. Anderson would come in, do her job, and then leave.

It was different at Temple Israel in Columbus.

“I assumed (Hiatt) called for me to do the backup singing for whoever the full-time cantor was who was Jewish,” Anderson said.

After attending a service, she discovered she actually would be the cantor.

Anderson was not trained as a Jewish cantor. “I know how to speak Hebrew,” she said, but, “I don’t know how to read it in its real alphabet.”

“Hebrew is read from right to left, Anderson said, but music goes left to right. So, the prayers are translated phonetically in the music rather than
written in Hebrew. There were initially four singers who rotated services, Anderson said. Over the years the rosters rotated. She’s now the music director for both Temple Israel and St. Thomas.

Building a community

In contrast to Milwaukee, Anderson has gotten to know the members of Temple Israel very well over the years.
She’s become a part of all of their important family moments, Anderson said. She sung at children’s bar and bat mitzvahs and saw them become
adults with their own children.

Anderson is now 70 years old, and many of the members were in their 70s when she began singing there. She now mourns members of the older generation who have died.

She sang at their funerals.

“You just become a part of important times in their lives,” Anderson said. "And when you appreciate and understand how the music of the faith is
connected to all that, and that you’re the one singing it, it just becomes different.”

Folta had a similar experience at St. Thomas.

When she first began directing Voices of the Valley, Folta realized the choir’s roster only consisted of three kids. “This is a trio,” she said. “It’s not a choir.”

The only person in town that she knew was McKnight. So, Folta called him for help. After their next rehearsal at St. Thomas, he brought everyone into a conference room to rally the troops.

What followed next was like a movie montage of church members rallying together to recruit their friends, children and grandchildren for Voices of the Valley.

“You guys don’t even know me,” Folta thought. “You don’t even know if I’m any good. How can you possibly invest in someone you don’t know.”

Folta had 27 new singers in her children’s choir by the end of the night.

Members of the church and choir have become like family to Folta over the years.

“What is at the core of the St. Thomas choir was the relationships and the people,” she said. “The people were always paramount, and music was just the vessel to get us all together.”

Finding similarities, valuing diversity Anderson was raised in a strict fundamentalist Baptist Church that
created a lot of fear in her rather than an appreciation for the love of God, she said.

“I was taught that if you weren’t a part of that, then you were going to
hell,” Anderson said. “It didn’t matter even if you were in other Baptist churches, you were going to hell.” She’d begun rejecting Christianity and the lessons from childhood when she was in her 20s living in Milwaukee. She worked through those teachings with a therapist and took classes.

Anderson joined an Episcopal church in Milwaukee that helped her reclaim her Christianity, she said. The church was more tolerant, she said, and people weren’t kicked out for having different beliefs.

St. Thomas provided a similar experience, Anderson said. But singing at Temple Israel is what gave her even more understanding of Christianity because so much of her religion was born from Judaism, she said.

“I feel like I have deepened my understanding of who Jesus was because I’ve been so involved in Judaism in the last 20 years,” Anderson said.
“That makes me cry in a good way.”

Christianity comes from Judaism, Burton-Edwards said, so the two religions are “very close cousins.

They share biblical stories and many practices, she said. “It’s clear that our patterns and forms of worship are so informed by that Jewish heritage,” Burton-Edwards said.

“It just makes so much sense for Christians and Jews to be able to worship together. It doesn’t feel unusual to me. St. Thomas and Temple Israel have always had a close relationship which existed before Anderson began singing at Temple Israel, she said.

They’ve also shared ministry with other congregations in Columbus. The Wynnton Neighborhood Network is comprised of seven to eight Christian
congregations and two Jewish congregations aiming to provide food for the broader community

People have a tendency to focus on divisions rather than what is common to all, Schlesinger said. What is common between both religions and others is that people long to live meaningful lives with peace and harmony, he said.

“What unites are those basic longings and hopes,” Schlesinger said.

Columbus is not only racially diverse, Anderson said, but it’s also very religiously diverse. Along with the Wynnton Neighborhood Network, different religions can be seen working together through another program called the Thompson-Anderson-Pound Art Program, which brings children from diverse cultures and faiths together.

The program helps children discover the value of self and diversity in their community through the arts and is supported by volunteers from area Buddhist, Christian, Hindu, Jewish, Muslim and other faith
communities in Columbus.

When the art program began, they thought it would only run for one year, Anderson said. She’s the current director of the program, which will celebrate its 35th year in 2025.

Folta teaches a class on diversity at CSU.

Helping students break down stereotypes and walls to find out they have a lot in common with people of other backgrounds is one of her favorite parts of the class.

“We are way more similar than we are different,” Folta said.

Being exposed to different faiths has taught Anderson that the common theme is compassion, she said. “Humans, in whatever way they believe it, have developed connections to God all over the world in different ways,” Anderson said.

Page Editor's note - photos are added from my choir collection for visual effect.

St. T choir members singing two pieces with the AMAZING young singers with Voices of the Valley - we really had to up ou...
12/15/2024

St. T choir members singing two pieces with the AMAZING young singers with Voices of the Valley - we really had to up our game to keep up with them! VOV Director Michelle Herring Folta is doing a magnificent job conducting these young people - and glad to share the stage with the Kendrick High School Cherokees under the direction of Josh Butler. A beautiful night!

  Part III“Come for the music.  Stay for the community.” “May what we say, sing and play be to your honor and glory oh L...
08/07/2024

Part III

“Come for the music. Stay for the community.”
“May what we say, sing and play be to your honor and glory oh Lord.”
“They shall laugh and sing.”

Merely a few of the many “sayings” we have in the St. Thomas Columbus Choir family. And make no doubt about it, this is a F.A.M.I.L.Y.

And this is my love letter to that branch of my family.

It starts with how much each of you were loved by Rick - fiercely and intensely and with laser focus for whatever you were experiencing in your life - good or bad, professionally or personally. He had high standards for each of you and expected nothing less than perfection. He loved telling you the backstory of a hymn, a composer, an anthem, or another choral director. (I always thought he made some of it up - how could you ever know that amount of detail??? And yet, as many times as I google-checked him, I never found out differently.)

He loved to pray for you and with you. Raymond always said he wished I’d make a book of Rick’s prayers - and I regret they weren’t all recorded but it was real and in the moment and it was always with love. He tended his ‘flock’ so well.

He delighted in all musical talent and ability. He loved showcasing so much of that talent in our church, and none more so than when it was a choir member singing or playing, or a young student, sometimes performing for the first time in public. *

He loved all of you and I do too. This past week, this heartbreaking, wrenching week, the choir, current, past and a few special musicians, lifted his spirit up to Heaven - he was there in every glorious, glorious, glorious note you hit or played. My heart was filled with so much joy knowing it was the PERFECT send off for him - one he would have reveled in and would have had some over-the-top exclamations for all of you. How could any musician not want to join the choir after that???

For those of you unable to attend the service, I’ve posted the link below. LISTEN to these musicians, these extraordinary singers and instrumentalists who sang with their voices, their minds, their hearts and their souls. I will forever be indebted to all of you for the majesty of it all. It was not a funeral- it was a magnificent, eloquent, celebration of a beloved man’s life.

Our “choir kids” came from near and far to sing for Rick but they wound up surrounding, loving on, singing to, hugging on, and seeing to my every need. After the service, we went back to the columbarium so they could toss dirt over their beloved choirmaster’s gravesite. They held me as we sang - yes, even more of ricks favorite hymns. We cried some more; we toasted him with appropriate and inappropriate toasts. And they didn’t let up, nurturing me til late in the night, and then right back at it on Saturday, reminiscing, singing, telling tales, laughing, and celebrating their ‘musical dad’ and for some, their stand-in Dad. And continuing thru today with texts, calls, visits and love, Isiah, John, Cristian, Josh, Nathan, Michelle, Chris, y’all will always be my choir kids too.

When the choir was on a choir residency in Norwich Cathedral in England, they had a sign on the door to their rehearsal space that read,

“They shall laugh and sing”

You did that for him … and so much more. And for that St Thomas Episcopal Choir - I will always love you all.

*I never doubted that Rick wanted me, needed me in the choir to share that love of his. Recently I asked him if I could do the duet of the Pie Jesu. His initial response to that was ‘No. Not now, not ever. Never.” If we had more time, I think he might have budged on that. Maybe. Possibly in a few years. It’s still up for discussion.

05/02/2024

“I can’t imagine another employer supporting me as much as the Springer and the board and the people that work here,” Debbie Anderson said.

05/02/2024
Check out the progress!
04/18/2024

Check out the progress!

Do yall recognize where we were?
04/17/2024

Do yall recognize where we were?

Beyond our exciting concert tours, we offer a truly unique opportunity specifically for choral ensembles – Cathedral Choir Residencies!

Imagine your choir taking center stage in a magnificent cathedral for a week (or even shorter). During this residency, your talented singers will become the "Choir in Residence,"

This program offers incredible benefits for your choir such as:

Singing in a breathtaking space: Experience a historic cathedral's awe-inspiring acoustics and atmosphere, which will take your performances to a new level of musicianship.

Living the cathedral life: Immerse yourselves in the daily rhythm of a cathedral, gaining firsthand experience of this unique environment.

This residency program is a chance to:

Share your musical gifts: Your beautiful singing can uplift congregations and foster a sense of community within the cathedral walls.

Challenge yourselves musically: Embrace the rich musical heritage of cathedrals by performing a diverse repertoire in a resonant space.

Bond as a choir: Forge lasting memories and deepen your connections through this shared experience.

Ready to elevate your choir's journey? Contact us today to learn more about Cathedral Choir Residencies!

https://cathedralresidency.com/

Address

2100 Hilton Avenue
Columbus, GA
31906

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