O come, all you faithful
O COME, ALL YOU FAITHFUL,
joyful and triumphant!
O come now, O come now to Bethlehem!
Come and behold him, born the King of angels:
O come, let us adore him,
O come, let us adore him,
O come, let us adore him, Christ the Lord!
2 God of God,
Light of light,
he who was born from the virgin’s womb;
very God, begotten, not created:
3 Sing, choirs of angels,
sing in exultation!
Sing, all you citizens of heaven above,
‘Glory to God in the highest!’
4a Yes, Lord, we greet you,
born for our salvation:
Jesus, to you be glory given!
Word of the Father, now in flesh appearing:
(or on Christmas morning)
4b Yes, Lord, we greet you,
born this happy morning:
Jesus, to you be glory given!
Word of the Father, now in flesh appearing:
F Wade; Trans: Frederick Oakeley & Others
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Oakeley, Frederick
b Shrewsbury, Shrops 1802, d Islington, Middx (N London) 1880. After a private education he studied at Christ Ch Oxford (BA 1824); ordained in 1826; Fellow and Chaplain of Balliol 1827. At Oxford he was influenced towards the young high church ‘Oxford movement’ by Wm G Ward, himself a keen disciple of J H Newman. He became incumbent of Margaret Chapel nr C London’s Oxford Circus (later All Saints Margaret St), in 1839. During his time there it became something of a centre for tractarian or ritualistic activity. But like Newman and Ward, influenced by Prof Chas Lloyd’s Oxford lectures but under pressure from the Anglican authorities, in 1845 he turned to Roman Catholicism. Within 2 years he was re-ordained as an RC, becoming a canon of Westminster in 1852. He then worked for some years in that area among some of its most deprived people. Some of his sermons reached publication, together with other books and frequent articles in the British Critic and the Dublin Review. No.367.
Wade, John Francis
b ?England 1710 or 1711, d Douai, France 1786. An English Roman Catholic Latin teacher and music copyist, whose family or friends may have joined the small community of RCs who settled for security in N France after the ‘glorious revolution’ of the Protestant William’s accession to the English throne in 1688. He then taught at the Dominican Coll at Bornem, Belgium, where he also learned the copying of plainchant. The widely-quoted evidence from an obituary in the 1787 Catholic Directory indicates that he was a layman aged 75, ‘with whose beautiful manuscript books our chapels, as well as private families, abound, in writing which and in teaching the Latin and church song he chiefly spent his time’. No.367.