Denn er hat seinen Engeln befohlen (For He shall give His angels charge),[1]MWV B 53,[2] is the incipit of a motet for an eight-part choir a cappella by Felix Mendelssohn. He wrote it in 1844 for the Berlin Cathedral, setting verses 11 and 12 from Psalm 91. Later, Mendelssohn made the motet with accompaniment part of his oratorio Elijah. It was published in 1844, and by Breitkopf & Härtel in 1875 in the complete edition of the composer's works.
History
Mendelssohn composed the motet in 1844 for the choir of the Berlin Cathedral which he conducted from 1843.[3] He dedicated it to Friedrich Wilhelm IV of Prussia, who had survived an assassination attempt shortly before.[4] It was published by Bösenberg in Leipzig in 1844.[3]
The music is in one movement in G major and common time, marked Allegretto non troppo.[7] Mendelssohn wrote it in three sections, ABA', with a recapitulation of text and music of the first verse after the second.[8]
Denn er hat seinen Engeln befohlen über dir,
dass sie dich behüten auf allen deinen Wegen,
dass sie dich auf den Händen tragen
und du deinen Fuß nicht an einem Stein stoßest.
For he shall give his angels charge over thee,
to keep thee in all thy ways.
They shall bear thee up in their hands,
lest thou dash thy foot against a stone.
The German "behüten" is related to "hüten", the job of a shepherd, to guard and protect, captured in the English Guardian angel.
The first line is sung only by the four upper voices in homophony, beginning softly (piano) in steady walking rhythm, with an accent, in high pitch and by double length, on "Engeln" (angels). It is similarly answered by the lower voices. The antiphonal treatment continues for the second line, with a climax in eight-part homophony. A repeat of the first line begins the second verse (line 3, "bear thee up in their hands), which appears as slightly more lively motif in upward motion, first divided again for the two choirs then reaching a climax for all voices on "dich" (you), marked forte for the first time. It leads to the last line, set for all voices with chromatism in dense texture. Text and themes from the beginning return in the upper voices, while the lower voices still end line 4 in long notes. In the recapitulation, the theme from the beginning is treated to some intensifying polyphony. The piece ends, gradually softening, in calmness.[8]