Note—It’s
an announcement carol two-fer Christmas Eve plus a bonus annual Murfin verse!
In churches around the world this evening announcement carols will be central to the services. Many are bold and glorious whether sung by
massed choirs or by congregations that know them by heart. Adeste
Fideles (O Come All Ye Faithful) and the Hallelujah Chorus from Handel’s Messiah are two of the grander examples, although there
are plenty of others in Christmas song
books. But my personal favorite is much more modest.
It
Came Upon a Midnight Clear is one of the oldest and most beloved of
American Christmas carols. It also never mentions the Christ Child but instead is all about
the announcement that the angles made to the shepherds. It
was a not-so-subtle message for Americans who had just concluded a war that the author considered
horribly unjust and immoral.
Rev. Edmund Hamilton Sears was the minister of the Unitarian Church in
Wayland, Massachusetts in 1849. It
was a small congregation and a not-very-important-pulpit in the insular world of New England Unitarianism.
But like many of his peers Sears
had been an ardent opponent of the
just concluded Mexican War. He considered it an indefensible land grab by a powerful
nation against a weak one. It also had ramifications for his opposition
to slavery. The most voracious War Hawks intended the newly conquered
lands to eventually enter the Union as slave states and thus swing the balance of power in the nation permanently to the South.
And like other Unitarian ministers, the war confirmed Sears in a growing pacifism.
The
war had concluded with the Treaty of
Guadalupe Hidalgo signed in February 1848 and ratified by the two nations by that May. Under its terms Mexico lost nearly half of its territory
including all or parts of the future
states of California, Nevada, Utah, Arizona, Kansas, Colorado, Oklahoma, and New Mexico.
It
was still weighing heavily on Sears’ mind when his friend Rev. William Parsons Lunt of First Parish Church in Quincy,
Massachusetts asked him to write something for a Sunday school pageant. Sears
played and sang the song to friends and
parishioners in his own parlor on Christmas Eve of 1849. It
isn’t known to what tune it was sung.
Sears
ever after called carol his “little
angels song.”
The
next year Richard Storrs Willis, a composer who trained under Felix Mendelssohn, wrote the melody that
quickly became most widely known tune to the song used in the United States. With that tune it was added to the hymnals of not only the Unitarians, but
Universalists, Episcopalians,
Methodists, Lutherans, and most other Protestant denominations.
But
in England and the Commonwealth nations It Came Upon a Midnight Clear is sung to
a melody called Noel by Sir Arthur
Sullivan of Gilbert and Sullivan
fame.
Today
we will enjoy the version by the
great Ella Fitzgerald whose albums of Christmas music have become
almost as important to the canon of great holiday recordings as
those of Bing Crosby.
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