Tag: a christmas carol

  • Ghosts of Christmas’ Past

    Ghosts of Christmas’ Past

    We are of course familiar with the image of ghosts of Christmas’ past thanks to Charles Dickens, ‘A Christmas Carol,’ penned in A.D. 1843. Dickens points toward a morality of generosity during a great 19th century division between a well-off gentry class and the working poor. Even today his theme of the repentance of Scrooge convicts on a larger Common Era world stage where poverty is no less common.

    My ghosts of Christmas Past include more than just Jacob Marley & friends. I remember when Christmas meant more than the sounds of shopping and included both worship and bells.

    Many Christian families had opened paper doors on Advent calendars reading familiar Scripture from Luke, Matthew and Isaiah in anticipation of opening personal gifts to each other on Christmas morning.

    So in these links and lyrics below I invite you to hear some of what I hear from long-lost ghosts of Christmas’ past. And if you listen to every brief song while reading the lyrics and Scripture behind such glorious Christmas carols you may discover that same moment of transformation as Scrooge after his visits by three ghosts he had never seen.


    The Ghost of Church Bells

    Church Bells proclaiming JOY to the world within the sound of their pealing.

    I Heard the Bells on Christmas Day

    Henry W. Longfellow, A.D. 1864 Scripture: Luke 2:13-14; Romans 5:1

    Lyrics by Henry W. Longfellow, 1864 alt. and v. 5-7 by Harlan D. Sorrell

    Lyrics:

    I heard the bells on Christmas day
    Their old familiar carols play;
    In music sweet the tones repeat,
    “There’s peace on earth, good will to men.”

    I thought how, as the day had come,
    The belfries of all Christendom
    Had rolled along th’ unbroken song
    Of peace on earth, good will to men.

    Born the Prince of Peace

    And in despair I bowed my head:
    “There is no peace on earth,” I said,
    “For hate is strong, and mocks the song
    Of peace on earth, good will to men.”

    Then pealed the bells more loud and deep:
    “God is not dead, nor does He sleep,
    For Christ is here; His Spirit near
    Brings peace on earth, good will to men.”

    When men repent and turn from sin
    The Prince of Peace then enters in,
    And grace imparts within their hearts
    His peace on earth, good will to men.

    Glory to God in the highest, and on earth peace, good will toward men.

    Gospel of Luke 2:14 KJV

    Christians who grew up during the mid-twentieth century will closely associate Christmas, Christmas carols, community fellowship of families on Christmas Eve and Christmas Day worship with church bells celebrating the birth of the Christ child.

    Yet LISTEN?


    361/365: Tuesday, December 27, 2011: Ghost of Christmas Past SONY SLT-A55V | 75mm F4 1/10 ISO640 DSC05457 This is a photograph of a photograph that hangs inside Trinity depicting one of my predecessors on the front steps on a snowy day about a hundred years ago, long before the education wing, kitchen, or social hall (where this picture is on display) were added to the original 1872 church.

    The CHURCH BELLS have been rendered silent —

    stilled from praise of the CHRIST child of CHRISTMAS —

    in the SILENT nights and darkness of these last days…


    A glorious joyful to the world RINGING of BELLS which once called both faithful and repentant Christians to WORSHIP has long ago rusted into an artificially staged sound of ME with the world AND Jesus.

    A Silent Night..

    and joyful singing..

    now lost in the White noise of Christmas’ past ..

    budding in every hand and ear..

    of a multitude of the walking dead.



    Christmas Carols at our neighborhood doors

    What was it we once SANG at the doors of our neighbors?

    You with ears to hear, LISTEN
    and you with eyes to see, LOOK at the lyrics!
    
    Joy to the world - a Christmas carol proclaiming of Jesus Christ "born to give them secon birth"

    Joy to the World

    Composer: George Frideric Handel – German-British Baroque composer (1685–1759)

    Author: Isaac Watts (1719);

    Adapter: Lowell Mason

    Published A.D. 1839 in The Modern Psalmist, Boston

    LOWELL MASON, THE BANKER WHO DISCOVERED ‘JOY TO THE WORLD’

    He crusaded for better music, and heaven and nature sang

    New England Historical Society

    Psalm 98: King James Version

    O sing unto the Lord a new song; for he hath done marvellous things: his right hand, and his holy arm, hath gotten him the victory.
    
    2 The Lord hath made known his salvation: his righteousness hath he openly shewed in the sight of the heathen.
    
    3 He hath remembered his mercy and his truth toward the house of Israel: all the ends of the earth have seen the salvation of our God.
    
    4 Make a joyful noise unto the Lord, all the earth: make a loud noise, and rejoice, and sing praise.
    
    5 Sing unto the Lord with the harp; with the harp, and the voice of a psalm.
    
    6 With trumpets and sound of cornet make a joyful noise before the Lord, the King.
    
    7 Let the sea roar, and the fulness thereof; the world, and they that dwell therein.
    
    8 Let the floods clap their hands: let the hills be joyful together
    
    9 Before the Lord; for he cometh to judge the earth: with righteousness shall he judge the world, and the people with equity.
    
    

    Hark the Herald

    Hark! the Herald Angels SingREAD graphic of all the LYRICS

    Christ by highest heaven adored..

    Hail the Son of Righteousness!
    Light and life to all He brings..

    Born that man no more may die
    Born to raise the sons of earth
    Born to give them second birth
    Hark! The herald angels sing
    “Glory to the newborn King!”


    Jesus, the Creator Born to give us a second birth

    And in despair I bowed my head

    When men repent and turn from sin
    The Prince of Peace then enters in,

    And grace imparts within their hearts
    His peace on earth, good will to men.

    Hail the Son of Righteousness!
    Light and life to all He brings

    Gospel of Luke 2:10b-12 ESV

    Comment on Scripture + Share the Gospel

    Will you invite JESUS to be more than a ghost of your Christmas’ Past?

    For Christ was born that you might be born again to the eternal life given only through Him because the Lord has died for our sins.

  • Christmas: past, present, future

    Christmas: past, present, future

    BAH! humbug!

    You know the story; but the man is converted in the end by what has been, what is, and what will be.

    What about you? Do you have a Christmas story to warm our hearts?

    Please share it, by way of a COMMENT. Your witness is important to me and to others.

    Here are just a few from my past:

    • I was told frequently that my parents had to walk to the grocery store for food and milk after the big snow storm of 1950. I was just four months old at Christmas. (Sorry, no pictures – but my sister probably has them.)

    Do your Christmas pictures tell a story? *like the family pictures we used to see on Christmas cards? – Go ahead an send me one at roger.harned@yahoo.com if you would like us to post it.

    • From a long ago as I remember, we all had personal stockings with our own name on it. Roger, Jenny & Eddie *in that order. And then much later, Kenny. Yes, they were hung by the chimney of our real fireplace with care. And on Christmas morning we always had to open all the gifts in the stocking before the big presents. We always had an apple and and orange in it.
    • When Rachel was born, Christmas got much bigger in our home (although we always went to church Christmas eve, went caroling, went to Christmas parties and more). Her stocking was hung by the chimney with care. Yes, it was a real fireplace with real wood fires. Rachel’s stocking *even at Grandma’s was mysteriously bigger than everyone else’s.

    I have a picture of me and Rachel when she was about 5. I’ll see if I’m allowed to post it. (I will not get to spend Christmas with my children this year. Songs about home for the holidays and mistletoe and other warm and artificially nostalgic memories sometimes make me sad instead of able to show ‘joy to the world.’ Even in Christian households, Christ must be more a part of Christmas and the love of God to send His only Son to a manger for a perfect act of love ought to be our memory to break though the silent nights.

    Enough nostalgia. Please share your Christmas stories.

    *Look for my Christmas messages to continue from Advent messages posted this week on Beatitudes for the Multitudes beginning Monday, December 23, 2013.

    Don’t be a Scrooge and keep your Christian Social Witness to yourself.

    Please share it with us.

    Roger

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