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Tue Rechnung! Donnerwort, BWV 168
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Tue Rechnung! Donnerwort, BWV 168 : ウィキペディア英語版
Tue Rechnung! Donnerwort, BWV 168

| movements = 6
| text_poet = Salomon Franck
| chorale =
| vocal = solo and choir
| instrumental =
}}
''ドイツ語:Tue Rechnung! Donnerwort'' (Settle account! Word of thunder),〔 BWV 168, is a church cantata by Johann Sebastian Bach. He composed it in Leipzig for the ninth Sunday after Trinity and first performed it on 29 July 1725.
Bach used a text by Salomo Franck which the librettist had already published in Weimar in 1715, however Bach had not set to music then. Franck used the prescribed reading from the Gospel of Luke, the parable of the Unjust Steward, as a starting point for thoughts about the debt of sin and its "payment", using monetary terms. He concluded the text with a stanza from Bartholomäus Ringwaldt's hymn "ドイツ語:Herr Jesu Christ, du höchstes Gut". Bach structured the cantata in six movements and scored it intimately, as he did for many of Franck's works, for four vocal parts, combined only in the chorale, two oboes d'amore, strings and basso continuo. It is the first new composition in his third year as ''ドイツ語:Thomaskantor'' in Leipzig.
== History and words ==

Bach composed the cantata in Leipzig for the ninth Sunday after Trinity as the first cantata of his third cantata cycle, being the first new composition in his third year as ''ドイツ語:Thomaskantor'' in Leipzig.〔 The libretto is by Salomon Franck who was a court poet in Weimar. Bach had often set Franck's texts when he was ''Konzertmeister'' (concertmaster) there from 1714 to 1717. Franck published the text of ''ドイツ語:Tue Rechnung! Donnerwort'' in 1715 as part of the collection ''ドイツ語:Evangelisches Andachts-Opffer'', and Bach would probably have used at the time had it not been for a period of mourning for Prince Johann Ernst of Saxe-Weimar.〔
The prescribed readings for the Sunday were from the Epistle to the Romans, a warning of false gods and consolation in temptation (), and from the Gospel of Luke, the parable of the Unjust Steward ().
Franck's text is closely related to the Gospel, beginning with a paraphrase of verse 2 in the opening aria. The situation of the unjust servant is generalized; he is seen wanting mountains and hills to fall on his back, as mentioned in . Franck uses explicit monetary terms to speak about the debt, such as "ドイツ語:Kapital und Interessen" (capital and interest). A turning point is reached in movement 4, referring to the death of Jesus which "crossed out the debt". The cantata is concluded by the eighth stanza of Bartholomäus Ringwaldt's hymn "ドイツ語:Herr Jesu Christ, du höchstes Gut" (1588).〔〔 Bach had treated the complete chorale a year before in his chorale cantata ''Herr Jesu Christ, du höchstes Gut'', BWV 113, for the eleventh Sunday after Trinity.
Bach first performed the cantata on 29 July 1725.〔

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