I am four days late on starting my CAROL LINES for Advent/Christmas/Epiphany. Sorry about that, but I've been shipping copies of HYMN LINE Books and posting new carol texts online! I hop you have seen some of those! My intention is to keep these up daily... so check in to see how I'm doing with that!!!
CAROL LINE: “Hope of all the earth thou art. Dear desire of ev’ry nation…”
Carol: “Come, Thou Long-expected Jesus” – Charles Wesley (1707-1788)
Common Tune: HYFRYDOL
If
you attend a church that still sings hymns, you might well have sung
this Advent carol recently. It’s one of those that comes up once a year,
usually on the first Sunday of Advent… which in many congregations is
the day the “hope” candle is lighted.
This mash-up of two ideas from Wesley approaches anticipation from two sides. On the one hand Messiah is the “HOPE of all the earth”; on the other hand, the long-expected One is the “DESIRE" of every nation.” Similar, but not exactly the same.
As Christian people, we have a deep and abiding hope which is more akin to confidence than to some event or object we want to happen or come our way. During this season of awaiting, we start with the word “hope” because it looks forward; for believers, we don’t “wish” for what might happen in the future; we are confident that it will happen. Our hope is in Christ Jesus, as Paul says consistently in the epistles. That blessed assurance is ours.Desire is something else altogether. This half of Wesley's mash-up is the state in which the yet-to-know-salvation nations find themselves – those peoples who yet await the arrival of a Messiah… a Savior. Almost every time explorers have uncovered a new people-group (tribe), they have found that they await some god-like redeemer. While their descriptors may vary, the Christ of Christmas may well be exactly what they’re waiting for – the desire of every nation.
Hope IS a state of looking forward. Absolutely. We who have already known the joy of the manger, the tragedy of the cross and the mystery of the resurrection can be SURE… sure enough to expose the desiring nature of all humanity to the beauty of that in which we are confident: the Lord Jesus Christ.
A Celtic Setting of This Carol
No comments:
Post a Comment
You are welcome to comment on any of the posts. They are sent to ME directly. Thanks for any feedback you would like to make.