Structure and scoring Bach structured the cantata in seven movements, beginning with a biblical quotation for the
vox Christi, Jesus speaking. A sequence of recitative, aria, recitative is followed by another biblical quotation of a verse spoken by Jesus. It is followed by an aria and the closing chorale. Bach scored the work for three vocal soloists (
alto (A),
tenor (T) and
bass (B)), a
four-part choir only for the closing chorale, and a
Baroque instrumental ensemble of two
oboes (Ob), two
oboes da caccia (Oc), two
violins (Vl),
viola (Va) and
basso continuo. In the following table of the movements, the scoring follows the
Neue Bach-Ausgabe. The
keys and
time signatures are taken from Dürr's standard work
Die Kantaten von Johann Sebastian Bach, using the symbol for common time (4/4). The continuo, playing throughout, is not shown.
Movements 1 Similar to the cantata for the same occasion in Bach's first year in Leipzig, , the text begins with words of Jesus from the gospel, sung by the bass as the
vox Christi: "" (Until now you have asked for nothing in my name). It is accompanied by the strings, doubled by the oboes. The movement is titled
Aria in some of the parts, but is formally free. It resembles a
fugue because the instruments enter in imitation, and the voice sings a similar
theme.
Christoph Wolff notes that the "voice is supported by an elaborate polyphonic orchestral texture".
John Eliot Gardiner, who conducted the
Bach Cantata Pilgrimage in 2000, notes that the reaction to "man's reprehensible neglect" of Jesus's promise is expressed with "stern, declamatory energy".
2 A recitative for alto, "" (O word that terrifies spirit and soul), expresses the fear caused by failure.
3 An alto aria with two
obbligato oboes da caccia is a prayer for forgiveness: "" (Forgive, o Father, our guilt). The repentance is illustrated by sighing
motifs. Gardiner notes a "mood of sustained reverence and penitence" and sees that in repeated slurred duplets illustrate "vergib", while ascending arpeggios in the continuo sometimes sound at the same time. The urgency of the prayer is intensified in the middle section by a continuo line in seven chromatic steps.
4 The second recitative is for tenor intensified by accompanying strings. It begins "" (When our guilt climbs up all the way to heaven). and ends in an
arioso on the words "" (therefore seek to comfort me). Dürr speculated that this recitative, which is not part of Ziegler's text but inserted by Bach himself, for a less abrupt turn of the mood.
5 In the fifth movement, the bass renders another word of Jesus from the Gospel, "" (In the world you have fear; however be comforted, I have conquered the world). This music is marked
Basso solo in the score, but the melody lines are closer to an aria than in the first movement. The music is serious, with the voice only accompanied by the continuo, referring to the
Passion as the price for the "comfort". Wolff notes the "almost hymn-like emphasis through measured, arioso declamation ... In the central fifth movement Bach reduces the accompaniment to the continuo, another means of underscoring the importance of Jesus’ words." Schulze interprets the accompaniment by the continuo alone as "a symbolic expression of the avoidance of everything earthly". The continuo plays motif like an
ostinato, repeated at the end in a short .
6 In response, the last aria expresses joy in suffering: "" (I will suffer, I will be silent, Jesus will show me help). Its
pastoral mood, created by dotted rhythm in
time, has been compared to the
Sinfonia beginning Part II of Bach's
Christmas Oratorio. Gardiner describes the mood as tender and lyrical but "spiced with momentary dissonance" when suffering, pain and despair are expressed.
7 The closing chorale, "" (Must I be troubled?), on the melody of "" by
Johann Crüger is set in four parts. The
pietistic text mentions "pain being sweeter than honey", and the music in D minor stands for "the necessary simultaneity in the world of suffering and of the divine love that ultimately overcomes it", according to Chafe. In the end, chromatic passages modulate to
D major. The melody is well-known from Bach's motet
Jesu, meine Freude with its several
chorale settings. == Manuscripts and publication ==