Jesus Christ the Lord is born

JESUS CHRIST THE LORD IS BORN,
all the bells are ringing!
Angels greet the holy One
and shepherds hear them singing,
and shepherds hear them singing.

2 ‘Go to Bethlehem today,
find your King and Saviour:
glory be to God on high,
to earth his peace and favour,
to earth his peace and favour!’

(Women)
3 Held within a cattle stall,
loved by love maternal,
see the master of us all,
our Lord of lords eternal,
our Lord of lords eternal!

(Men)
4 Soon shall come the wise men three,
rousing Herod’s anger;
mothers’ hearts shall broken be
and Mary’s son in danger,
and Mary’s son in danger.

5 Death from life and life from death,
our salvation’s story:
let all living things give breath
to Christmas songs of glory,
to Christmas songs of glory!

© MRS B PERRY / JUBILATE HYMNS LTD; CCLI Song No. 3233766
Puer Nobis Nascitur, TR Michael Perry (1942–1996)

A look at the authors

Peacock, David Christopher

b Bradford, Yorks 1949. Birmingham Univ (BMus and Cert Ed) Member of Jubilate Hymns from 1970s, and of the music group for Hymns for Today’s Church, 1982); JH Secretary from 1992. Composer, arranger, conference speaker and workshop leader; several years with ‘Spring Harvest’ music team. He has been Music Director at Clarendon School (see also under FMS Palmer) and at Upton Vale Baptist Church, Torquay; latterly, Head of Music and Worship Dept at London School of Theology (formerly LBC), Northwood. He edited, with others, several hymn and song collections including Jesus Praise (1981), Carol Praise (1987 and, with Noël Tredinnick, its completely new 2006 edn), Songs from the Psalms (1990), Hymns for the People (1993), the much-acclaimed World Praise (with Geoff Weaver, vols 1–3 from 1995), Sing Mission Praise (1995–97) and Sing Glory (1999). These and other books include many of his arrangements. An ARSCM, he has some 70 tunes in print. Nos.18, 200*, 219*=225*, 244*, 276=893, 311* 365*, 532*, 553*, 693, 949*, 1237*.

Perry, Michael Arnold

b Beckenham, Kent 1942, d Tonbridge, Kent 1996. Dulwich Coll, Oak Hill and Ridley Hall Theological Colls, London and Southampton Univs (BD, MTh). Ordained (CofE) 1965; after curacies at St Helen’s, Lancs and Bitterne, Southampton, he became incumbent of Bitterne (1972), Eversley, Hants (1981), where Charles Kingsley was a predecessor, and finally Tonbridge from 1989. A contributor to Youth Praise 2 in 1969, he was then an editorial team member for Psalm Praise (1973) and Hymns for Today’s Church (1982, 1987), Canon of Rochester, member of General Synod, Chairman of Church Pastoral Aid Society and (from 1982) succeeding Jim Seddon as Hon Sec of Jubilate Hymns. Under Jubilate auspices he edited a stream of hymn, song, carol and Psalm and prayer books, in collaboration with David Iliff, David Peacock, Noël Tredinnick, Norman Warren and others. He edited The Dramatized Bible (1989), compiled the reference-handbook Preparing for Worship (1995), and wrote and spoke widely on many aspects of worship, in the UK and on visits to W Africa and N America. Over all, he possessed the gift of being able to handle vast amounts of work with a light touch and ready (but never unkind) humour. His 183 texts were collected in Singing to God: Hymns and Songs 1965–1995, a slightly Americanised volume, in the year before his early death from a brain tumour. His first published song (words and music) was ‘The Calypso Carol’ in 1963; see no.374, note. Including paraphrases, 40 of his texts are in HTC (1987 edn), 8 in Baptist Praise and Worship (1991), 18 in Sing Glory (1999), 8 in the N American Worship and Rejoice (2001), 15 in Carols for Today (2005) and 27 in Carol Praise (2006), not counting several versions attributed to ‘Word and Music’ which are predominantly his. For some 20 years he and Christopher Idle would exchange friendly mutual criticism of each other’s texts. MAP believed that ‘Our preparation for worship can only go so far. It is doomed if the Spirit of the Lord is not in it. On the other hand, God is sovereign; he can “take over” any kind of worship, provided that those who lead and those who participate are open to his grace’. He also consistently urged that ‘to be obscure is an indulgence we cannot allow ourselves’.
Michael is published by Praise! numbers 49, 75, 82, 88, 137, 128, 148, 153, 172, 187, 211, 213, 277, 323, 332, 373, 374, 382, 481, 624, 694, 872, 929, 947 and by Praise! online at numbers 1082, 1132.