Today
is the last Sunday of Advent and time for one more carol special to the season of anticipation and hope. Today’s song is one of the oldest in the English Protestant tradition.
It was one of literally thousands of hymn lyrics written by Charles
Wesley (1707-1788), the brother of John
Wesley, founder of Methodism. The prolific hymnist almost single handedly
established the tradition of congregational singing among Methodists and by
osmosis much of the rest of English language Protestantism.
In
1744 Wesley considered the Old Testament Book of Haggai,
chapter 2: verse 7 and compared it to the desperate
situation of orphans around him
and the class divide in England. Come,
Thou long expected Jesus published as a prayer at the time with the words:
Born Your people
to deliver,
born a child and
yet a King,
born to reign in
us forever,
now Your
gracious kingdom bring.
By Your own
eternal Spirit,
rule in all our
hearts alone;
by Your all
sufficient merit,
raise us to Your
glorious throne.
Wesley
adapted his prayer into a hymn published it in his Hymns for the Nativity of our
Lord and wrote it with an eye toward preparing for the Second Coming
of Christ.
Welshman /Roland Hugh Prichard wrote the tune now frequently used for Come, Thou Long Expected Jesus.
Come, Thou Long Expected Jesus has been set to
a number of tunes. It is not known
which melody Wesley originally intended
for the hymn, which is why it was excluded
from the Methodist Weslyan Hymn Book, until the 1875 Edition. There is some evidence that the first tune it
was set to was Stuttgart by Christian
Friedrich Witt written in 1716. Later
Hyfrydol,
a Welsh tune written in the 1800s by
Rowland Hugh Prichard, was
frequently used. In the United Kingdom, it is now often set to
the 4-line tune Cross of Jesus, by John
Stainer, part of longer his work
The
Crucifixion.
Unitarian Universalists will recognize
Prichard’s tune as the melody for My Blue Boat Home, the signature song of UU bard Peter Mayer.
Christian folk/gospel/Old Time music ensemble Red Mountain.
Today’s
selection by the Christian/folk ensemble Red
Mountain uses the Prichard melody.
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