Tuesday, November 30, 2021

It Came Upon a Midnight Clear

 


It Came Upon a Midnight Clear - November 30, 2021

 

Luke 2:13-14 Suddenly a great company of the heavenly host appeared with the angel, praising God and saying,

   “Glory to God in the highest heaven,

    and on earth peace to those on whom his favor rests.”

 

“It Came Upon a Midnight Clear” began as a poem called “The Angel’s Song” composed by Edmund Sears, a Unitarian minister in 1849.  The most popular US version of the poem set to music is a tune called “Carol” written by Richard Storrs Willis in 1850.  The pairing of the two makes the popular carol the first Christmas Carol written in the United States.  It was written in the aftermath of the war with Mexico and in the midst of a rising internal conflict in the US regarding slavery.  This conflict would lead to the Civil War just a few years after the poem was written.  Sears himself was recovering from a devastating illness and depression that had forced him to resign his pastorate in 1847.   

 

I find it compelling that Sears wrote these words in the midst of national and personal conflict and struggle: 

"Peace on the earth, goodwill to men,

From heaven's all-gracious King."

The world in solemn stillness lay,

To hear the angels sing.

 

Sears imagines the first-century world being quiet and attentive enough to actually hear the angels song and message.  While it is easy to argue that the original angels message was not heard or heeded by most original hearers, stay with the progression of Sears’ thought.  The second verse proclaims that, “Still through the cloven skies they come with peaceful wings unfurled,” witnessing that the Angels still sing for every generation their “glorious song of old.” The angels message of peace is proclaimed to every generation.

 

Then comes the controversial and thus, most often skipped third verse:

Yet with the woes of sin and strife

The world has suffered long;

Beneath the angel-strain have rolled

Two thousand years of wrong;

And man, at war with man, hears not

The love-song which they bring;

O hush the noise, ye men of strife,

And hear the angels sing.

 

Sears is pleading with humanity to hear the message of peace in a world obsessed with its many conflicts.

 

The fourth verse (in most versions, the third verse) is a more personal appeal aimed at comforting those like Sears himself who are struggling with the burdens of life:

 

And ye, beneath life's crushing load,

Whose forms are bending low,

Who toil along the climbing way

With painful steps and slow. . .

 

He witnesses that the angels never-ending song is for them as well and invites them to “rest beside the weary road and hear the angels sing!”  The poem finishes with the fifth verse imagines a world who finally hears and heeds the message of peace:

 

For lo!, the days are hastening on,

By prophet bards foretold,

When with the ever-circling years

Comes round the age of gold

When peace shall over all the earth

Its ancient splendors fling,

And the whole world give back the song

Which now the angels sing.

 

This song has never been one of my favorites because it does not explicitly mention Jesus.  But I have to say it has moved up in my personal rankings this year because it has helped me hear the angels’ message of peace more than I ever have before.  If ever the world needed to “hear the angels sing” their message of peace and comfort, it is now. 

 

Question:  Can you hear the Angels’ timeless song of peace being sung over you this year?

 

Prayer:  God is Highest Heaven, may we hear your song of peace over “life’s crushing load” this most holy of seasons. Amen.

 

Prayer Focus:  Pray again for all of our health care workers

 

Song:  David Torbett - It Came Upon a Midnight Clear – There are obviously more polished versions of this song, but I wanted a version that included the almost always omitted third verse.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1TYlfl2QVsQ

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