Come, Thou Long-Expected Jesus | Of the Father’s Love | O Come, All Ye Faithful | Joy Has Dawned

Come, Thou Long-Expected Jesus | Of the Father’s Love | O Come, All Ye Faithful | Joy Has Dawned

Liturgy Lessons: December 16, 2018 – Advent 3
Prelude
Welcome/Announcements
Musical Introit
Call to worship: Isaiah 40:1-5, 9-11
Opening hymn: Come, Thou Long-Expected Jesus (#196)
Call to Confession: Malachi 3:1-3
Confession: Psalm 51:1-4
Advent Prayer Song: Come Lord Jesus
Assurance of Pardon: from Luke 1, Song of Zechariah
Hymn of Assurance: O Savior of our Fallen Race (Hauck)
Advent Reading: Isaiah 9:1-7
Congregational Prayers
Reading of the Word: Matthew 2:1-11
Advent Doxology: The First Noel(last verse)
Sermon: Eric Irwin
Tithes & Offerings
Supper: Of the Father’s Love Begotten; O Come, All Ye Faithful (#208, vs. 1-3)
Closing Hymn: Joy Has Dawned (Getty)
Benediction
Sung response: Joy to the World (vs. 1)
Postlude

Music on Christmas Morning
By Anne Brontë (1820-1849)

Music I love – but never strain
Could kindle raptures so divine,
So grief assuage, so conquer pain,
And rouse this pensive heart of mine –
As that we hear on Christmas morn,
Upon the wintry breezes borne,

Though Darkness still her empire keep,
And hours must pass, ere morning break;
From troubled dreams, or slumbers deep,
That music kindly bids us wake;
It calls us, with an angel’s voice,
To wake, and worship, and rejoice;

To greet with joy the glorious morn,
Which angels welcomed long ago,
When our redeeming Lord was born,
To bring the light of Heaven below;
The powers of Darkness to dispel,
And rescue Earth from Death and Hell.

Come, Thou Long-Expected Jesus
Text: Charles Wesley (vss. 1,4, 1744); Mark Hunt (vss. 2,3, 1978)
Tune: HYFRYDOL, Rowland Hugh Pritchard (1855)

As a singing people, the church has an astonishing creative legacy! Consider the victory songs of Moses and Miriam (Ex. 15:21), David (1 Sa. 18:7) and Jehoshaphat (2 Ch. 20:21), the laments of the Israelites (Psalm 137), the hopeful praise of Paul and Silas (Acts 16), and the heavenly chorus around the throne (Rev. 5:9-10). God’s creative spirit has breathed through the ancient Psalms, medieval chant, reformation hymnody, gospel refrains, and modern choruses. From Wesley to Watts, Bliss to Bonar, and even Gaither to Getty, songs have poured into the sanctuary in every generation. Among that astonishing arsenal, there are “silver bullet” hymns whose text captures the essence of a moment in the church calendar. Charles Wesley seemed to hit a bullseye with each season, perhaps because of his astonishing output (over 9,000 hymns!). If you fire off enough verse, you are bound to hit the target a few times! For Easter, he gave us “Christ the Lord is Risen Today,” and for Christmas, “Hark! The Herald Angels Sing.” For Advent we have this quintessential text, which perfectly captures the two-fold purpose of the season—remembering the birth of Christ and re-awakening a longing for his second coming. Wesley’s original text consisted of two stanzas of eight lines, and he uses a lot of repetition to hammer home some key themes. Notice how in verse four he repeats the word “born” three times to emphasize the incarnation and highlight its ultimate purpose. Christ was born to “deliver,” “reign,” and “raise us to thy glorious throne.” In contrast to other Advent hymns that focus exclusively on the Christmas narrative or the unfolding drama in Bethlehem, Wesley’s verse contains beautiful eschatology and points us to the hope of Christ’s second coming. This popular hymn has been set to many tunes. Our hymnal uses HYFRYDOL, a Welsh tune composed by Rowland Prichard in 1830, and commonly associated with “Love Divine, All Loves Excelling.”

Scripture references:
Vss.=1-2: Cor. 4:14, Rev. 3:21
Vss.=3-4: Isa. 61:1-2, Luke 4:18-19, Rom. 6:22

Accompaniment and text to vs. 1 and 4
Recording (Fernando Ortega)

Of the Father’s Love Begotten
Music: Plainsong Chant, 12th Cent.
Text: Aurelius Clemens Prudentius, 4th cent.

Aurelius Prudentius Clemens (348-c. 413) was a Spanish poet and lawyer who began writing poetry at the age of 57. Hymnologist Albert Bailey, who considers Prudentius “the earliest Christian writer who was a real poet,” calls this a “fighting hymn.” During the fourth century, the theology of the early church was under attack by heretical perspectives. A teacher named Arius (c. 250-336) was arguing that God the Father and the Son did not co-exist throughout eternity, that Jesus did not exist through all time. Under this false teaching, Jesus was a creature who, though divine, was not equal to the Father. So, in the 4th century, Emperor Constantine called together the First Council of Nicea to discuss the Church’s official stance on the nature of the Trinity. The council condemned the teaching of Arius, and produced The Nicene Creed, written as a statement of faith that clarified and codified the Trinitarian theology for the church.

Prudentius’ hymn, “Of the Father’s Love Begotten,” written shortly after the Council of Nicea, opens with “Corde natus ex parentis ante mundi exordium (literally “Born from the parent’s heart before the beginning of time”). Starting from this point, the lawyer-poet Prudentius sets forth his argument that the Son is co-eternal with God. It is very clear from this hymn text that Christ is both human and divine, and was “begotten” of the Father. The textual themes of transcendence are supported beautifully by the melody, which is a plainchant from the 12th century. The original is a meditative and meter-less chant that is quite haunting. The version we are using this coming Sunday starts out a bit gentler to reflect the humble nature of the incarnation; but it gradually builds in intensity as the verses progress. As we sing it, may we remember this truth from the Gospel of John:

“In the beginning was the Word and the Word was with God and the Word was God. All things were made by Him; and without Him was not anything made that was made. In Him was life; and the life was the light of men. And the light shines in darkness; and the darkness has not understood it….and the Word was made flesh and made his dwelling among us and we beheld His glory (the glory as of the only begotten of the Father,) full of grace and truth.”

Sheet music
Original chant

O Come, All Ye Faithful
Text: John Francis Wade (ca. 1740)
Tune: ADESTE FIDELES, John Francis Wade

“When the angels had left them and gone into heaven, the shepherds said to one another, ‘Let’s go to Bethlehem and see this thing that has happened, which the Lord has told us about.'”
– Luke 2:15

If there was one prayer to sum up the season of Advent, it would be the desperate plea “Come, Lord Jesus!” During these weeks, we echo the yearning of Israel as it longed for the first coming of the Messiah at Christmas. And while we await the second coming, we invite Christ to be born in our hearts anew through his Spirit. But in this beloved hymn there is another sort of invitation that demands an RSVP.

“O Come, All Ye Faithful” is one of the most celebrated Christmas hymns of all time. It is essentially a musical Christmas card, inviting us to the party at the manger! Not once, not twice, but three times in the opening verse alone, we are invited to “come ye, o come ye to Bethlehem.” And, how shall we come? “Joyful and triumphant,” for the Christ child is the answer to our desperate plea. We celebrate and adore him who is the “Word of the father, now in flesh appearing.” As the verses continue on, it’s as if the hymn itself sprouts legs, runs ahead of us toward the Bethlehem Star, shouting “Come on, guys, you gotta’ see this!” After each verse, there is a fugal refrain, where one voice sings the tuneful invitation, and the others echo, as if caught up in the fervor, joy, and unbridled anticipation. I imagine that as we sing this we become the shepherds in the Christmas story from Luke 2. Of course, we cannot literally visit Jesus in the manger. But, each Sunday as we gather at church, we can come to Bethlehem in a sense. As we are called in by God to worship, our hearts and imaginations are rekindled by Him and the re-telling of his salvation story. We come to worship during the Advent season to reflect on the central figure in that story, the miracle of Jesus, “Light of light, begotten not created.” And in our worship service we come to adore the infant king, who, for us and our salvation was born in a manger, walked the earth, suffered on a cross, and was raised from the dead on Easter. So come, fellow suburban shepherds, let us adore him, who now reigns in heaven, welcomes us into his presence, and equips us for every good work as we await His imminent return. This is cause for great rejoicing. Below is a link to an infectious up-tempo version of this that captures the true spirit of this expectant and celebratory hymn. Listen to it and imagine yourself joining in the refrain as the shepherds run and sing their way to the Savior.

“O Come, All Ye Faithful” is a translation of a Latin hymn Adeste Fidelis. There is debate about the origins, but the hymn most likely was written by John Francis Wade in the middle of the eighteenth century. The most popular English translation, which is quite faithful to the original Latin, was written by Frederick Oakeley in 1852.

Sheet music
Recommended recording

Joy Has Dawned
Words and Music by Stuart Townend and Keith Getty, 2004

This hymn takes on the traditional narrative of most Christmas hymns, making sure to give mention to all the usual suspects in the story. But beyond the pageantry is a real sense of purpose in the writing. The prophets, Mary, angels, shepherds, and wise men are all mentioned in the first three verses. However, they are clearly minor characters in the story of Christ and his coming. The first and last verses give us very biblical bookends that frame the hymn in a vibrant sense of adoration and gratitude for the gift of God’s son:

“Joy has dawned upon the world, promised from creation—
God’s salvation now unfurled, hope for ev’ry nation.
Not with fanfares from above, not with scenes of glory,
But a humble gift of love—Jesus born of Mary.

Son of Adam, Son of heaven, given as a ransom;
Reconciling God and man, Christ, our mighty champion!
What a Savior! What a Friend! What a glorious myst’ry!
Once a babe in Bethlehem, now the Lord of hist’ry.”

In the middle two verses we are drawn to the manger to wonder at the mystery of the incarnation and to recall in heart and mind that love is begotten, born, and broken for our sake. It is reason for great rejoicing. Augustine said that “he who loves, sings.” And we love because he first loved us. As the old carol says, “Love came down at Christmas, love all lovely, Love divine.”

Christ once declared that he had kept his Father’s commandments and remained in His love. He told us “As the Father has loved me, so have I loved you. Now remain in my love” (Jn. 15:9). His desire was that his joy may be in us, “and your joy may be full.” When the night was darkest, the Son arose. This makes me think of another great lyric from perhaps the greatest Christmas hymn of them all (more on that next week!):

“Hail the heav’n-born Prince of Peace! Hail the Sun of Righteousness!
Light and Life to all He brings, Risen with healing in His wings!”

Jesus is the light of the world. Just as the sunlight brings life and growth, so Christ’s radiance shines into the soul, bringing the greatest Vitamin D ever. D for Deliverance! Brothers and Sisters, have the gray clouds of sin and sorrow cast your soul into a dark and overcast winter? There is a hope that burns brighter than the sun; it is offered to you. Joy has dawned upon the world. Rejoice and Sing!

Lyrics and recording

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