Four hundred years ago, the ancestors of the song leaders who recently gathered in an Ephrata-area church likely would have sung the same hymns in the same way. They would have been sung in German, with a cadence slow enough to sound like a dirge.
The hymns and the singing style changed as different religious sects were created.
So when Amish, Mennonite and Brethren song leaders gathered for a public hymn sing, some of the songs were in English; some were German; some hymns were sung at a slow pace, with each syllable drawn out; others were fast and sung in four-part harmony.
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