Into darkness light has broken

Book Number:
  • CP28

INTO DARKNESS LIGHT HAS BROKEN,
Christ has been born!
out of silence God has spoken;
Christ has been born!
Prince of peace, the nations greet him,
thrones and powers cannot defeat him:
sing for joy and come to meet him.
Christ has been born!

2 For to us a Son is given,
Christ has been born!
treasured gift to earth from heaven;
Christ has been born!
wondrous counsellor to guide us,
judge when justice is denied us,
everlasting God beside us.
Christ has been born!

3 Promised child, we tell the story:
Christ has been born!
Son of David, Israel’s glory:
Christ has been born!
in this child our God has sought us,
wisdom from on high has taught us,
hope and healing now has brought us.
Christ has been born!

© DAVID MOWBRAY/JUBILATE HYMNS LTD www.jubilate.co.uk
David Mowbray

A look at the authors

Lloyd, Yvonne

Mowbray, David

b Wallington, Surrey 1938. Dulwich Coll; Fitzwilliam House, Cambridge (MA); Clifton Theological Coll, Bristol (BD). Ordained (CofE) 1963, he served parishes in Northampton (as curate), Watford (lecturer), Broxbourne (Herts, as incumbent), Hertford and (from 1991) Darley Abbey, Derby, until retirement to Lincoln in 2004. His hymnwriting began in 1978 while on a month’s residential clergy conference at Windsor Castle, where 2 of his texts were immediately sung in St George’s Chapel. This was followed by ‘a great burst of writing’ for some 18 months. His own first words-only collections for parish and school were Kingdom Come, Kingdom Everlasting and Kingdom Within (1978–84), mainly recommending standard hymn tunes, and some 50 of these texts are now formally published, from Partners in Praise (1979) onwards. Several are in Jubilate books (6 in Come Rejoice!, 1989, 15 in Sing Glory, 1999, 5 in Carol Praise, 2006), and publications from Stainer and Bell; Come to us, creative Spirit (1979) remains his most popular, while First of the week and finest day is a rare 20thc text on a once much-loved theme (see also J Ellerton, note). Come Celebrate: contemporary hymns (2009) includes his share of 15 texts. ‘The usual flashpoint for writing is the combination of an idea plus a tune’—DM. He was a member of the words group for Sing Glory, and is probably the most outstanding contemporary hymnwriter not yet (by 2011) to have a collected volume of his texts. Nos.119B, 469, 584, 921, 1050, 1226