It came upon the midnight clear
IT CAME UPON THE MIDNIGHT CLEAR,
that glorious song of old,
from angels bending near the earth
to touch their harps of gold:
‘Through all the earth, good will and peace
from heaven’s all-gracious King!’
The world in solemn stillness lay
to hear the angels sing.
2 With sorrow brought by sin and strife
the world has suffered long
and, since the angels sang, have passed
two thousand years of wrong:
the nations, still at war, hear not
the love-song which they bring:
O hush the noise and cease the strife,
to hear the angels sing!
3 And those beneath life’s crushing load,
whose hope is burning low,
who toil along the climbing way
with painful steps and slow-
look up! for songs of joy and peace
through all the heavens ring!
O rest beside the weary road
and hear the angels sing!
4 And still the days are hastening on—
by prophets seen of old—
towards the fulness of the time
when comes the age foretold:
then earth and heaven renewed shall see
the Prince of peace, their King;
and all the world repeat the song
which now the angels sing.
© In this version JUBILATE HYMNS LTD This text has been altered by Praise! an unaltered JUBILATE text can be found at www.jubilate.co.uk
Edmund H Sears
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Sears, Edmund Hamilton
b Sandisfield, Mass, USA 1810, d Weston, Mass 1876. Union Coll Schenectady, NY and Harvard Univ Divinity Sch. He was ordained as a Unitarian minister but (not uniquely in that persuasion) claimed to believe in and preach the deity or ‘absolute divinity’ of Christ. Some have dubbed him more of a Swedenborgian; this was certainly the religion of his educationalist son of the same name (1852–1942), who was also an author. EHS senr served as pastor in Wayland (1838) and Lancaster (1840) in Massachusetts, returning to Wayland in 1847 through ill health and then devoting most of his energies to writing. He co-edited the Monthly Religious Magazine where many of his hymns were first seen, and was clearly aware of the social, national and global upheavals of his time. Although only one hymn has endured, he also wrote another strong ‘Bethlehem’ text (also based on Luke 2:14, and more popular in the USA than in Britain), Calm on the listening ear of night. Among several books he wrote Athanasia, or Foregleams of Immortality (1858), The Fourth Gospel, the Heart of Christ (1872) and Sermons and Songs of the Christian Life (1875). No.362.