• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer
  • LCA Portal
  • LAMP2
  • LCA Online Donations
  • IT Help
  • Contact

Lutheran Church of Australia

where love comes to life

  • ABOUT US
        • A BIT ABOUT US

          The Lutheran Church is the largest Protestant church in the world, with over 70 million members. This website tells the story of Australian and New Zealand Lutherans, following Jesus Christ – where love comes to life. Whoever you are, whatever your story, you’re welcome here with us.

        • MORE ABOUT US

          • ABOUT US
          • OUR PEOPLE
          • LUTHERANS WORLDWIDE
          • WHAT WE BELIEVE
          • HOW WE WORSHIP
          • OUR STRUCTURE
          • OUR HISTORY
          • OUR LOGO, OUR MISSION
  • THE LATEST
        • NEWS & RESOURCES

          • NEWS
          • CALLS – EMPLOYMENT – VOLUNTEERING
          • DAILY DEVOTION
          • WORSHIP PLANNING RESOURCES
          • ONLINE WORSHIP
          • PRAYER
          • BULLETINS AND ANNOUNCEMENTS
          • THE LUTHERAN
          • LCA FACEBOOK
        • EVENTS

          • CONVENTION OF GENERAL SYNOD 2024
        • PROJECTS

          • NORTH ADELAIDE PROPERTY SALE
          • MINISTRY FUTURE
          • LOCAL MISSION FUND
          • RELIGION AND DOMESTIC VIOLENCE REPORT
  • SERVICE AREAS
        • FAITH & WORSHIP

          • OFFICE OF BISHOP
          • WORSHIP
            • WORSHIP PLANNING PAGE
            • VISUAL ARTS
          • THEOLOGY AND INTER-CHURCH RELATIONS
          • SOCIAL AND BIOETHICAL QUESTIONS
            • LUTHERAN EARTH CARE
            • LUTHERANS FOR LIFE
        • MISSION & MINISTRY

          • AGED CARE & COMMUNITY SERVICES
          • CROSS-CULTURAL MINISTRY
          • CHILD YOUTH AND FAMILY MINISTRY (GROW MINISTRIES)
          • INTERNATIONAL MISSION
          • NEW AND RENEWING CHURCHES
          • PASTORAL CARE
        • GOVERNANCE & ADMIN

          • LCANZ SERVICE CENTRE
          • ARCHIVES
          • CHURCH WORKER SUPPORT
          • COMMUNICATIONS
          • FINANCE & ADMINISTRATION
          • INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY
          • INSURANCE
          • PROFESSIONAL STANDARDS
            • CHILD SAFETY
        • AGENCIES & AUXILIARIES

          • LANDING PAGE
          • AUSTRALIAN LUTHERAN COLLEGE
          • AUSTRALIAN LUTHERAN WORLD SERVICE
          • FINKE RIVER MISSION
          • LUTHERAN AGED CARE AND COMMUNITY SERVICES
          • LUTHERAN EDUCATION AUSTRALIA
          • LUTHERAN MEDIA
          • LUTHERAN WOMEN
        • MINISTRY PARTNERS

          • LLL
          • MERCER (LUTHERAN SUPER)
  • CONGREGATIONAL LIFE
        • WORSHIP & FAITH

          • LANDING PAGE
          • WHAT WE BELIEVE
          • WORSHIP
          • BIBLE STUDIES
          • DEVOTIONS
          • PRAYER
          • GIVING
        • MISSION & MINISTRY

          • LANDING PAGE
          • GENERAL RESOURCES
          • IN YOUR CONGREGATION
          • NEW AND RENEWING CHURCHES
          • IN YOUR COMMUNITY
          • IN AUSTRALIA AND NEW ZEALAND
          • OVERSEAS
          • FUNDING
        • PASTORAL CARE

          • LANDING PAGE
          • RESOURCES FOR SPECIFIC ISSUES
          • VISITING
          • CHAPLAINCY
          • PREVENTION OF DOMESTIC AND FAMILY VIOLENCE
        • ADMINISTRATION

          • LANDING PAGE
          • COMMUNICATIONS
          • INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY
          • FINANCE
          • HUMAN RESOURCES
          • RECORDS MANAGEMENT
          • SAFE CHURCH TRAINING
        • LEADERSHIP & TEAMWORK

          • LANDING PAGE
          • GOVERNANCE
          • CONGREGATIONAL LEADERSHIP
          • LEADERSHIP AND TEAM MINISTRY
        • CHURCHWORKERS

          • LANDING PAGE
          • PASTORAL CALLS AND VACANCY
          • EMPLOYMENT AND VOLUNTEERING
          • MINISTRY PATHWAYS
          • WELLNESS AND SUPPORT PROGRAM
          • HEALTH AND WELLBEING
          • HUMAN RESOURCE SYSTEM
          • LCANZ LEARNING HUB
          • MINISTRY REVIEWS
          • CONTINUING EDUCATION FOR PASTORS
          • PROFESSIONAL STANDARDS
          • LCA PORTAL
  • RESOURCES & TRAINING
      • Faith & Worship
              • BIBLE STUDIES
              • DEVOTIONS
              • DOCTRINAL STATEMENTS & THEOLOGICAL OPINIONS
              • ECUMENICAL DIALOGUES
              • ETHICAL DECISION-MAKING GUIDES
              • FAITH AT HOME (FAMILY MINISTRY)
              • FIND A CHURCH
              • ONLINE WORSHIP
              • PRAYER
              • REGULAR ELECTRONIC GIVING (REG)
              • THE EPAPHRAS PROJECT
              • THE LUTHERAN
              • VISUAL ARTS
              • WHAT LUTHERANS BELIEVE – VIDEO SERIES
              • WORSHIP PLANNING PAGE
            • Looking for something else? Contact us lca.comms@lca.org.au

      • Mission & Ministry
              • BEQUESTS
              • CARING MINISTRIES
                • CHRISTIAN CARE SUNDAY
              • CHILD YOUTH & FAMILY MINISTRY
              • CROSS-CULTURAL MINISTRY
              • DOMESTIC AND FAMILY VIOLENCE, PREVENTION
              • EMPLOYMENT & VOLUNTEERING
              • GOSPEL FLUENCY
              • LOCAL MISSION FUND
              • NEW AND RENEWING CHURCHES
                • THE EPAPHRAS (PRAYER WARRIORS) PROJECT
              • PASTORAL CARE
              • REGULAR ELECTRONIC GIVING (REG)
            • Looking for something else? Contact us lca.comms@lca.org.au

               

               

               

      • Govern & Admin
              • BULLETINS AND ANNOUNCEMENTS
              • BUSINESS PARTNERS
              • CALLS – EMPLOYMENT – VOLUNTEERING
              • CHILD SAFETY STANDARDS
              • CONSTITUTION
              • COPYRIGHT
              • CYBER SECURITY
              • DISASTER & WELFARE FUND
              • EMAILS
              • ENEWS
              • FORMS
              • FACEBOOK
              • FOUNDATIONAL DOCUMENTS
              • GRANTS & SCHOLARSHIPS
              • HEALTH & WELLBEING
              • HUMAN RESOURCE SYSTEM (HRS)
              • INSURANCE
              • LAMP2
              • LCANZ SERVICE CENTRE
              • LEARNING HUB
              • LOGO & BRANDING
              • MINISTRY REVIEWS
              • NOMINATIONS
              • ONLINE WORSHIP AND MINISTRY
              • PODCASTS
              • POLICIES
              • REGULAR ELECTRONIC GIVING (REG)
              • RISK MANAGEMENT
              • SAFE CHURCH TRAINING
              • SOCIAL MEDIA
              • STANDARDS OF ETHICAL BEHAVIOUR
              • TELSTRA PARTNERSHIP
              • THESES OF AGREEMENT
              • TRANSFER FUND
              • WEBSITES
              • WELLNESS AND SUPPORT PROGRAM
            • Looking for something else? Contact us lca.comms@lca.org.au

      • Training
              • LCANZ LEARNING HUB
              • SAFE CHURCH TRAINING
              • PASTORAL CARE
              • CAMPAIGN AGAINST FAMILY & DOMESTIC VIOLENCE
              • CONTINUING EDUCATION FOR PASTORS
              • AUSTRALIAN LUTHERAN COLLEGE
            • Looking for something else? Contact us lca.comms@lca.org.au

  • Find A …
      • FIND A CHURCH
      • FIND A SCHOOL OR EARLY CHILDHOOD SERVICE
      • FIND AN AGED OR COMMUNITY SERVICE
      • FIND A DISTRICT
      • FIND A SERVICE AREA
      • FIND AN AGENCY OR AUXILIARY
      • FIND A MINISTRY PARTNER

Music stirs memories

25 July 2016

by Heidi Smith
Print Friendly, PDF & Email

Since her childhood Heidi Smith has known about the influence music can have on people’s physical and mental wellbeing. And having played organ and piano for church services in congregations and aged-care facilities since she was a teenager, she has seen positive changes in people living with Alzheimer’s disease and other forms of dementia. Now as a chaplain, she uses music therapy as one avenue to support people living with dementia.


I grew up with music and singing as part of my home life. We had family devotions, singing Christian hymns and songs within that intergenerational setting. My grandparents loved to sit around the piano and sing while I played. My siblings and I used to put on concerts for elderly ‘shut-in’ people in our lounge room and music was a great connector for community building in that space.

I can’t really remember a time when I didn’t ‘hang out’ with elderly people in care and those living with dementia. My grandmother was diagnosed with dementia and lived with us before moving into a nursing home. Our youth group sang carols in the local hospital at Christmas, and the way people diagnosed with dementia responded by clapping, smiling and singing encouraged me to focus on the power of music to help connect people to their memories.

Additional research in music therapy theories supported my earlier observations.

The SINGING, along with the remembered church – experiences, enabled certain people to REMEMBER what to do for some moments again.

I have worked professionally for six years with more than 40 residents living with dementia since becoming a full-time Lutheran Community Care (LCC) chaplain at Immanuel Gardens Retirement Village, Buderim Queensland, and now at Zion Lutheran Home, Nundah Queensland.

While at Immanuel Gardens, I led story and song sessions. The village had ‘old-time’ large print songbooks and residents would choose songs, calling out the numbers they wanted. Many residents living with dementia love hunting for numbers, since numbers are often the last written texts people remember.

I would play the piano and sing the chosen song with everyone joining in. Residents living with dementia loved to tap and clap along to the music.

As a chaplain at Immanuel Gardens, I also led church services for people who at that time lived in a ‘secure wing’ due to their diagnoses of various forms of dementia. During those worship times, I noticed amazing behavioural changes which occupational therapy students doing research also noted: some residents moved from random roaming, looking off in the distance and/or aggressive behaviours, to walking into the room for church and sitting down. At church, they sat together, holding a hymnbook, looking up the numbers of hymns and singing together. Many would model earlier learned ‘church behaviours’, such as sitting quietly and listening to Bible readings and a sermon. They prayed the Lord’s Prayer and confessed the Apostles’ Creed together, while others joined in rituals such as crossing themselves.

One man who hardly ever spoke would sing with gusto for various hymns – I learned he had been an Anglican choir boy. A woman, who needed to be fed by staff since she was unable to remember how to feed herself, ate lunch with her utensils straight after church. And a resident who ordinarily isolated herself, turned and shook her neighbour’s hand during the ‘passing of the peace’, then remained holding hands until the next song.

The singing, along with the remembered church tactile and community experiences, enabled certain residents to remember what to do for some moments again.

My research has found the positive effects of music therapy for people living with dementia are due to its brain activity-boosting power. According to the Alzheimers.net website, researchers believe this happens because singing is engaging; music evokes emotions that bring memories, can change moods and manage stress and bring emotional and physical closeness. Musical aptitude and appreciation also are two of the last remaining abilities in people living with dementia.

Zion Lutheran Home has a professional music therapist and what she does musically is almost magical at times in enhancing people’s mood and behaviours as they live with dementia. This ‘music magic’ happens even more potently for some of those same people in worship since most in this age group have come from Christian backgrounds, with the remembered experiences of church and Sunday school. This is why many family members also attend Sunday worship at LCC homes, since they experience a small time of familiar activity, connection and community with their loved one.

Music and singing are really helpful tools we can use to bring God’s love to life for people living with dementia and for those who care for them. It is crucial we don’t leave them alone on this difficult journey. Our Lord promises he will never leave us or forsake us (Deut 31:6,8, Joshua 1:5), so why would we, the body of Christ, leave and forsake those who often forget themselves and therefore need our Lord’s presence the most?


Prayer:

‘Let your word fill my days,
let your music fill my ears,
let your song fill my life,
now and evermore.’

(Robin Mann’s Let Your Word Fill My Days ATN 67 1976)


What can we do to care for people living with dementia?

  • Don’t suffer short term memory loss ourselves and forget that people living with dementia exist
  • Regularly visit people living with dementia who we know in our families, or from our congregation and/or community
  • Invite congregational members living with dementia to church, along with their spouse or carer, and help care for them before, during and after the service in ways that they choose to be supported
  • Help arrange and support regular community worship services, with music and hymn singing, for Christian people living with dementia in a local aged-care home. Volunteer in that community
  • Learn anew that even though we might forget everything we know, including our reason and ability to express our faith, we have a Saviour who has promised we are eternally ‘fully known’ by him (1 Corinthians 13:12), even by the number of hairs on our head!

Heidi Smith is LCC’s full-time aged-care chaplain at Zion Lutheran Home, Nundah

This feature story comes from The Lutheran August 2016. Visit the website to find out more about The Lutheran or to subscribe.

READ MORE STORIES ABOUT chaplaincy, dementia, ministry with ageing, music, Qld

« Living with dementia
Why I’m not celebrating the 500th anniversary »

Primary Sidebar

Categories

These categories are under construction. More links will be added soon.

Serving you where you serve …

  • Congregation Leaders
  • Worship Leaders
  • Mission & Ministry Leaders
  • Safe Church Coordinators

Serving you with …

  • The Latest (News)
  • Resources
  • Prayer Points
  • Events & Training
  • Ways to Get Involved

Tags

Aboriginal/Indigenous aid ALC ALWS appointments awards bishops children Child Safety Standards church workers COVID-19 cross-cultural ministry fundraising Grow Ministries international International Mission LCA bishop Local Mission Local Mission – Resources Lutheran Education Lutheran Media Lutheran Tract Mission mission and ministry leaders music new and renewing churches NSW NZ ordination pastors PNG prayer prayerpoints professional standards Qld refugees resources SA-NT schools social issues synod training Vic-Tas Way Forward worship youth and young adults

Archives for all Updates

  • February 2025
  • January 2025
  • December 2024
  • November 2024
  • October 2024
  • September 2024
  • August 2024
  • July 2024
  • June 2024
  • May 2024
  • April 2024
  • March 2024
  • Don't be the last to find out!

    Join over 4000 people receiving LCA eNews in their inbox every fortnight. It brings you the latest of everything, including updates from this page. It's free, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

    Sign up here

    Footer

    Quicklinks

    • HOME
    • THE LATEST
    • SERVICE AREAS

     

    • FIND A …
    • VISITORS
    • MEMBERS
    • LEADERS

    Contact us

    197 Archer Street
    North Adelaide SA 5006

    PO Box 731
    North Adelaide SA 5006

    08 8267 7300
    email us

    © 2025 Lutheran Church of Australia

    Privacy Policy • Disclaimer

    Designed by LCA Communications