New English Scripture-songs in the lineage of the Reformed Skrifberymings and the Scottish Paraphrases.
Master Framework · Working Document v0.1
1 complete · 1 in progress1% toward 72
Purpose and Posture
Paraverses is a bounded body of newly composed worship songs — original lyrics and original music — that borrow the spirit, discipline, and rigour of two Reformed metrical-Scripture traditions: the Afrikaans Skrifberymings of the GKSA and the Scottish Translations and Paraphrases of 1781. It does not translate either corpus, nor reproduce their selection of passages or their numbering. It builds its own canon, worked out in full before it is filled, so that the finished body can be read back as a single architecture in which the Gospel is visible — not merely as a collection that accumulated.
When the work is complete, a listener moving through it should traverse the whole Gospel — from the being of God, through the fall, to redemption accomplished and applied, and on into glory — and should be able to see the intent in the very shape.
Design Principles
Fused spine
A redemptive-historical vertical (what God has done) carries the arc; a worship-response horizontal (what the gathered church does — adore, confess, lament, thank, commission) cross-weaves every movement.
Catechetical macro-frame
The whole is shaped by Heidelberg's guilt–grace–gratitude (ellende–verlossing–dankbaarheid), the confession native to the GKSA tradition, with the redemptive-historical movements nested inside.
Weighted, yet liturgically complete
Grace remains the largest arc, but the work is built as a working hymnal: every movement holds enough songs for ordinary weekly use. Opening adoration (Movement 1) and grateful-life closers (Movement 8) are deliberately full, since these are what a congregation reaches for most Sundays. Distribution is weighted toward Grace without starving the high-traffic movements.
Roughly bounded
Target ≈72 songs — between the Scots' 67 and the GKSA's 79, situating the work in the lineage; richly divisible (6×12, 3×24); quietly resonant (the seventy-two of Luke 10). Fixed enough to be a finished body, flexible enough to breathe.
Thematic thread, not literal
Unity comes from three theological motifs resurfacing across movements in new dress — never a repeated lyric or musical fragment: light, the Name, and water/thirst.
Congregation-led, simple melody
Songs are written to be carried by an ordinary congregation without a band or lead singer — singable a cappella or from a single keyboard. Modest range (about an octave, comfortably mid-voice), stepwise motion over wide leaps, strong regular metre, and phrases that resolve rather than hang. The idiom sits at the modern-hymn end (Getty/Townend register), closer to the paraphrase DNA than to band-led contemporary worship.
The Architecture
Three arcs, nine movements. Song counts are indicative targets, weighted toward Grace.
Our Need (Ellende)target 18
The canon opens with God, not with us, so need is felt against holiness rather than mere unhappiness. Built full enough to supply most opening-adoration repertoire.
Movement 1 — The God Who Is
Adoration of the divine nature.
Aseity, simplicity, infinity, immutability, and the Triune God — worship of who God is before the story begins. The Sanctus movement; it is load-bearing that the work opens here.
Anchor passages: Isaiah 6; Revelation 4; the Athanasian confession of the divine nature; Romans 11:33-36.
The largest arc, built for use, not only for the retrospective arc. The cross-resurrection movement remains the densest single cluster, yet each movement here is independently usable in ordinary worship.
Movement 4 — The God Who Promised
Covenant and longing.
Patriarchs, exodus, the Song of Moses, the prophets' ache and hope — the Advent register of waiting.
The redeemed life lived forward, opening onto glory. Built full: Movement 8 supplies most of the grateful-life and closing repertoire. The canon ends as Scripture ends — in unceasing worship.
Movement 8 — The Grateful Life
Obedience as thanksgiving.
The law as the shape of gratitude (the third use), love, the church, the Lord's Supper, vocation, and the daily Christian walk.
Anchor passages: Exodus 20 as thankful obedience; 1 Corinthians 13; the communion paraphrase (1 Cor 11); vocation and love of neighbour.
0 of ~11 · 0% · Dedication, communion.
Movement 9 — The God Who Comes
Consummation and doxology.
Judgment, the marriage of the Lamb, the new Jerusalem, all things made new, the eternal doxology and the final Amen.
Anchor passages: Revelation 19-22; the Lamb's song; the new creation; the closing Amens.
0 of ~7 · 0% · Hope, doxology, longing fulfilled.
The Three Threads
Three theological motifs run the length of Paraverses, surfacing in each arc in new form. They are never repeated as a fixed lyric or tune; they recur as images that a careful listener feels returning and deepening — the quiet evidence that the songs are one body.
Light
The uncreated radiance that no eye contains, that enters the dark, and that finally needs no sun.
In Our Need (Ellende). God as unapproachable Light (Movement 1); light spoken over the formless dark at creation (Movement 2); and the light withdrawn — the world in shadow, the people who walk in darkness (Movement 3).
In Grace (Verlossing). The promised light dawning on those in darkness, Isaiah's sunrise (Movement 4); the true Light coming into the world, the star, the Word made flesh (Movement 5); the noon turned to darkness at the cross and the resurrection daybreak (Movement 6); the inward illumination of the Spirit (Movement 7).
In Gratitude (Dankbaarheid). Walking as children of light in the grateful life (Movement 8); the City that needs no sun or moon, for God is its light and the Lamb its lamp (Movement 9).
The Name
The Name too holy to contain, made flesh, and finally written on the redeemed.
In Our Need (Ellende). The unspeakable, incomprehensible Name adored (Movement 1); the Name by which all things were made (Movement 2); the Name profaned and forgotten in the fall (Movement 3).
In Grace (Verlossing). The Name promised — Immanuel, God-with-us (Movement 4); 'you shall call His name Jesus,' the Name above every name confessed (Movements 5–6, Philippians 2); calling on the Name and being saved, baptised into the Name (Movement 7).
In Gratitude (Dankbaarheid). Bearing the Name worthily in daily life, hallowing it (Movement 8); the new Name written on the overcomer, the Name on every forehead in the City (Movement 9).
Water and Thirst
The thirst of the dry ground, the water given freely, the river that never runs dry.
In Our Need (Ellende). God as the fountain of living water and source of all good (Movement 1); the waters of creation, the deep (Movement 2); the parched land, exile, the soul that thirsts and finds no stream (Movement 3).
In Grace (Verlossing). The Servant springing up like a root from dry ground, water promised in the wilderness (Movement 4); 'I thirst' from the cross, and the living water Christ gives (Movements 5–6); the Spirit poured out, washing and indwelling (Movement 7, Pentecost and union).
In Gratitude (Dankbaarheid). The cup of the Supper and the watered, fruitful life (Movement 8); the river of the water of life, clear as crystal, and the free invitation — 'let the thirsty come' (Movement 9).
Decisions
Resolved
Use: working hymnal (songs pulled individually into ordinary worship), so the distribution is weighted toward Grace but kept liturgically complete throughout. Size: ≈72, roughly fixed. Threads: light, the Name, water/thirst (adopted). Style: simpler congregation-led melodies, singable without a band or lead voice. Trinity: Movement 1 adores the divine nature; the explicit Father/Son/Spirit confession is not opened as a separate movement.
Still open
Exact song counts per movement within the 18 / 36 / 18 arc targets — and whether any hinge (e.g. a closing Amen or doxology) is deliberately a single song.
The degree of shared metre across songs: enough common metre (CM/LM/SM) for tunes to be interchangeable and quickly learned, versus each song finding its own form.
Whether to publish with a companion keyboard/accompaniment edition from the outset, given the single-instrument, congregation-led intent.
Lineage
Paraverses does not invent a category; it continues one. The Scottish Paraphrases (1781, ~67 items) versified non-Psalm Scripture in singable metre as a controlled supplement to the metrical Psalter, drawing on Watts and Doddridge — a precedent for reshaping existing devotional material into a Reformed singing tradition. The GKSA Skrifberymings (grown from 50 to 79 under careful synodical oversight) did the same in Afrikaans, largely on Genevan metres. Both arise from the Regulative Principle and both carry a live, unresolved tension about whether versifying non-Psalm Scripture expands or strains exclusive psalmody. Paraverses inherits the form, the rigour, and that argument — and answers it by building with explicit Gospel intent.