Der Geist hilft unser Schwachheit auf, BWV 226


Der Geist hilft unser Schwachheit auf, BWV 226, is a motet by Johann Sebastian Bach, composed in Leipzig in 1729 for the funeral of Johann Heinrich Ernesti.

History

For Der Geist hilft unser Schwachheit auf, the autograph score survives. Bach himself noted on its title: "J. J. Motetta à doi Cori bey Beerdigung des seel. Hrn. Prof. und Rectoris Ernesti di J. S. Bach.". Scholars debate if the performance was 24 October, or rather 21 October, as indicated by the title page of the sermon.
Bach wrote a number of works for occasions of Leipzig University. Twelve such works survive: they are mainly festive in character.
As well as being part of a series of works connected with the university, Der Geist hilft unser Schwachheit auf as a funeral motet is one of a series of Bach motets.

Text

The text is taken from the Epistle to the Romans and Martin Luther's third stanza to the hymn "Komm, Heiliger Geist, Herre Gott". Ernesti himself had chosen the text from the epistle for the funeral sermon.

Scoring and structure

The motet is structured in three movements and scored for two four-part choirs. They sing together in movements 2 and 3. The orchestral parts are extant, indicating that choir I was doubled by strings, choir II by reeds. For the basso continuo, separate violone and organ parts are provided.
  1. Der Geist hilft unser Schwachheit auf
  2. Der aber die Herzen forschet
  3. Du heilige Brunst, süßer Trost

    Music

Bach composed the text according to its meaning, not as music for mourning. The opening contrasts two choirs in imitation. In lively 3/8 time, the word "Geist" is illustrated by a lively melismatic figure. The following idea, "Sondern der Geist selbst vertritt uns", is given as a fugue, first with independent entrances of all eight parts, but concentrated to four parts in the end, "mit unaussprechlichem Seufzen". The sighs are audible in the broken melodic lines of all voices. The thought "Der aber die Herzen forschet" appears as a double fugue in four parts in Prima pratica. Here the word "Heiligen" is illustrated in extended melismatic writing. The closing Pentecostal chorale is set for four parts.