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A HYMN FOR TODAY – Song of Angels
A HYMN FOR TODAY – Song of Angels
In the morning of creation,
When no human voice was heard,
Angels sang the adoration
Of the Father and the Word.
Shouting in that ancient quiet,
With the morning stars, they sang;
Suns and planets heard them cry it,
And the silent heavens rang,
And the silent heavens rang.
Mantled in eternal glory
On a still Judean night
Angels sang another story
Of forgiveness and delight.
They, the messengers of heaven
Came with gladness to the earth,
Welcoming what God had given,
Praising our Messiah’s birth,
Praising our Messiah’s birth.
Now the angels’ exultation
Echoes out again, again,
For they sing at each salvation
Of the sinner from his sin.
With the saints they join together,
Crying with united voice,
“Blessed be the Lord forever!
All who hear his name, rejoice!
All who hear his name, rejoice!”
8.7.8.7.D – M.W. Bassford, 2007
Tune: SONG OF ANGELS, C.E. Couchman, 2007
# 151 in Psalms, Hymns, and Spiritual Songs, 2012
Reaching Upward video
Check out Ben Hall’s online video series, Reaching Upward!
A HYMN FOR TODAY – Triumphal Entrance
A HYMN FOR TODAY – Triumphal Entrance
“Hosanna, King!” the crowd resounds;
Their branches pave the dusty ground.
Messiah wears no robe or crown,
Yet all the multitudes bow down.
This Prophet-King from Galilee
Is on the road to Calvary.
“Our Lord! The King!” the host resounds;
Their branches sweep the golden ground.
Messiah claims His robe and crown;
Angelic multitudes bow down.
The risen Lamb in victory
Has conquered death at Calvary.
“Our King returns!” the trump resounds,
And angel voices shake the ground.
The saints receive their robes and crowns
As at the throne all men bow down.
The Son of God triumphantly
Will lead us home through Calvary.
8.8.8.8 – S. Jason Hardin, 2002
Tune – C.E. Couchman, 2002
#219 in Psalms, Hymns, and Spiritual Songs, 2012
TRIUMPHAL ENTRANCE depicts three “triumphal entrances” of Scripture: Christ’s triumphal entry into Jerusalem, His subsequent entry into heaven, and our entrance into heaven in His footsteps. (Matthew 21:1-11; 1 Thessalonians 4:16-18; Revelation 2:10; 3:5; 7:9-17)
Footnote 11 – Bernard A. Weisberger, “Reflections on the Dry Season”
Footnote 11 – Bernard A. Weisberger, “Reflections on the Dry Season,” American Heritage, May/June 1990, 28-30.
Through the years, there has been a useful body of pertinent research done by well-recognized historians on the general background of Prohibition.
For example, Bernard Weisberger, a nationally-recognized historian who wrote a current-events column (“In the News”) for the popular historical journal American Heritage, addressed in one such article the widespread (mis)conception that Prohibition “didn’t work.” Among the facts cited by Weisberger are:
“Prohibition did reduce drinking. The average annual per capita consumption of alcohol by Americans of drinking age – that is, the total alcoholic content of all the beer, wine, and distilled spirits they consumed – stood at 2.60 gallons” in 1910. In 1934, after more than a decade of prohibition, Weisberger reports the per capita average of 0.97 gallons.
“Census Bureau studies show that the death rate from chronic or acute alcoholism fell from 7.3 per 100,000 in 1907” to “2.5 in 1932, Prohibition’s last year. Deaths from cirrhosis of the liver, one cause of which is alcohol abuse, dropped from 14.8 per 100,000 in 1907 to 7.1 in 1920 and never rose above 7.5 during the 1920’s. Economic studies estimated that savings and spending on household necessities increased among working-class families during the period, possibly from money that once went to drink.” These are not the propaganda of some biased zealot, but the factual report of a nationally-known historian.
Furthermore, Weisberger reports that one reason why Prohibition may be commonly thought so unsuccessful is that even the above improvements were achieved with a minimum of enforcement. He continues:
“Drinking might have been cut back even further if more resources had been devoted to enforcement. In 1922 Congress gave the Prohibition Bureau only $6.75 million for a force of 3,060 employees (including clerical workers) to hunt for [violators] in thousands of urban neighborhoods, remote hollows, border crossings, and coastal inlets. State legislators were equally sparing: in 1926 state legislatures all together spent $698,855 for Prohibition work, approximately one eighth of what they spent on enforcing fish-and-game laws. Even so, by 1929 the feds alone had arrested more than half a million violators.”
Nor was this “new” information, even 20 years ago; a 1968 article by historian of science John C. Burnham of Ohio State University in the Journal of Social History revealed even more data along the lines Weisberger adduces. To imply that attempts to restrict alcohol sales can’t be effective ignores the available evidence. Professor Norman H. Clark’s 1976 study, Deliver Us From Evil, makes a persuasive cause that during Prohibition, arrests for drunkenness and alcohol-related crimes declined markedly.
Of course, a much earlier author reminds us across the ages that “Wine is a mocker, strong drink is raging, and whosoever is deceived thereby is not wise” (Proverbs 20:1).
–Adapted from Truth Magazine XXXVI:15 (August 6, 1992), p. 457
A HYMN FOR TODAY — Come, See the Place Where Jesus lay
A HYMN FOR TODAY
Come, see the place where Jesus lay,
And hear angelic watchers say,
“He lives, who once was slain:
Why seek the living midst the dead?”
Remember how the Savior said
That He would rise again.
O joyful sound! O glorious hour,
When by His Father’s mighty pow’r
He rose and left the grave!
Now let our songs His triumph tell,
Who burst the bands of death and hell,
And ever lives to save.
The first begotten of the dead,
For us He rose, our glorious head,
Immortal life to bring.
What though the saints like Him shall die?
We share our leader’s victory,
And triumph with our king.
No more we tremble at the grave,
For Jesus will our spirits save
And raise our slumb’ring dust.
O risen Lord, in You we live;
To You our ransomed souls we give,
To You our bodies trust.
O ransomed, let your praise resound,
And in your Master’s work abound,
Steadfast, immovable.
Be sure you labor not in vain;
Your bodies shall be raised again,
No more corruptible.
8.8.6.8.8.6 – Thomas Kelly,1806
Tune: PIETY NEW – Funk’s Harmonia Sacra
attrib. C. J. Stanley, 1851
#250 in Psalms, Hymns, and Spiritual Songs, 2012
A HYMN FOR TODAY – Again the Lord of Light and Life
A HYMN FOR TODAY
Again the Lord of light and life
Awakes the kindling ray,
Unseals the eyelids of the morn,
And pours increasing day.
O what a night was that which wrapped
The heathen world in gloom!
O what a Sun which rose this day
Triumphant from the tomb!
This day be grateful homage paid
And loud hosannas sung;
Let gladness dwell in every heart
And praise on every tongue.
Ten thousand different lips shall join
To hail this welcome morn,
Which scatters blessings from its wings
To nations yet unborn.
CM (8.6.8.6) – Ann L. Barbauld, 1772
Tune: ARLINGTON – Thomas A. Arne, 1762
arr. Ralph Harrison, 1784
#258 in Psalms, Hymns, and Spiritual Songs, 2012
Footnote 10 – Atheist Delusions (2)
Footnote 10 – David Bentley Hart, Atheist Delusions: The Christian Revolution and Its Fashionable Enemies (New Haven and London: Yale University Press, 2009), pp. 111-112.
“We are far removed from the days when one’s baptism could be said to be the most momentous event — and perhaps the most dramatic, terrifying, and joyous experience — of one’s life. …For most of the Christians of the earliest centuries, baptism was altogether of a more radical nature. It was understood as nothing less than a total transformation of the person who submitted to it; and as a ritual event, it was certainly understood as being far more than a mere dramaturgical allegory of one’s choice of religious association. To become a Christian was to renounce a very great deal of what one had known and been to that point, in order to be joined to a new reality, the demands of which were absolute; it was to depart from one world, with an irrevocable finality, and to enter another.
“…the period of one’s preparation for baptism could not conclude until one had been taught the story of redemption: how once all men and women had labored as slaves in the household of death, prisoners of the devil, sold in bondage to Hades, languishing in ignorance of their true home; and how Christ had come to set the prisoners free and had, by his death and resurrection, invaded the kingdom of our captor and overthrown it, vanquishing the power of sin and death in us, shattering the gates of hell, and plundering the devil of his captives. For it was into this story that one’s own life was to be merged when one at last sank down into the “life-giving waters”: in the risen Christ, a new humanity had been created, free from the rule of death, into which one could be admitted by dying and rising again with Christ in baptism and by feeding upon his presence in the Eucharist.”
Atheist Delusions is an engaging polemic which is not only a trenchant critique of the pretensions of modern unbelievers, and a learned exposition of some of the history of the tension between Christianity and atheism, but is also filled with insights on many relevant topics encountered along the path of the development of this story. One need not necessarily accept all the premises advanced, nor use all of its terminology, to grasp the essential nature of the truths expounded here. A good read!
A HYMN FOR TODAY – Let All Mortal Flesh Keep Silence
A HYMN FOR TODAY
Let all mortal flesh keep silence,
And with fear and trembling stand;
Ponder nothing earthly minded,
For with blessing in His hand,
Christ our God to earth descendeth,
Our full homage to demand.
King of kings, yet born of Mary,
As of old on earth He stood,
Lord of lords, in human vesture,
In the body and the blood,
He will give to all the faithful
His own self for heavenly food.
Rank on rank the host of heaven
Spreads its vanguard on the way,
As the Light of light descendeth
From the realms of endless day,
That the powers of hell may vanish
As the darkness clears away.
At His feet the six-winged seraph,
Cherubim with sleepless eye,
Veil their faces to the Presence,
As with ceaseless voice they cry:
Alleluia, Alleluia,
Alleluia, LORD Most High!,
8.7.8.7.8.7. – Liturgy of St. James, 350
tr. Gerard Moultrie, 1864
Tune: PICARDY – French Folk Melody
arr. C. E. Couchman, 2011
#175 in Psalms, Hymns, and Spiritual Songs, 2012
Footnote 9 — Twenty-year-old conversation
| Footnote 9 – Richard John Neuhaus, ed. Theological Education and Moral Formation (Grand Rapids, MI: William B. Eerdmans Publishing Company, 1992), pp. 211-213.
Richard John Neuhaus (1936-2009) was editor of the conservative journal First Things, as well as the Encounter Series of volumes published by Eerdmans, of which this source is volume 15. Readers of these Foootnotes might also be interested in other volumes in the series, particularly volume 2 (Unsecular America) and volume 5 (The Bible, Politics, and Democracy).Typically, each volume reports a conference in which four to six featured speakers delivered prepared addresses, following which those speakers and perhaps a dozen others join in a panel discussion of the issues raised in the prepared speeches. This particular volume reports a conference at Duke University and offers some rare insight into the state of the denominational mentality in America, and I offer excerpts from three different sections of the round-table discussion for your amazement. George Marsden, then Professor of the History of Christianity in America at Duke University Divinity School (later moving to Notre Dame), and author of Fundamentalism in American Culture and Fundamentalism and Evangelicalism in America, speaking of the crisis of authority in many American seminaries today: George Marsden: “What we need to do,” he said, “is to go back to Christianity. We should start talking about God and the authority of the Bible. We should pray and teach the liturgy. But in most Protestant seminaries, if we went back to that kind of Christianity and came out with it as authoritative, we’d get kicked out. You might be able to get away with it at Duke because of its traditionalist ethos.” “Is Duke really that different than, say, Union in New York?” Neuhaus asked the group. Geoffrey Wainwright took up the question: “While teaching at Union in New York, I always felt that the assumption was that Christianity was wrong unless it could be shown to be right. At Duke the assumption is that, on the whole, Christianity is the agreed-upon basic, though there are problems here and there that can be debated.” “At what point would you get kicked out of the University of Chicago Divinity School for authoritatively teaching orthodox Christianity?” Neuhaus asked. “When you offended the feminists or the relativists or the gay caucus,” Marsden answered. “How might you offend the relativists at Chicago?” Neuhaus probed. Marsden replied, “By implying that Christianity is a religion that has some exclusivism. By implying that relativists weren’t Christians. After all, if you’re talking about traditional Christianity, you’re going to have to isolate and argue against ways of believing that are different from traditional Christianity.” “George, you’re saying that there is a normative Christianity,” Neuhaus observed. “For example, if someone doesn’t believe in the resurrection of Christ, then he or she isn’t a classical Christian.” “Yes, and if you say certain people aren’t Christians, you’ll get booted out,” Marsden responded. “Do you really mean you’d get fired from the faculty?” Richard Hays asked with a note of disbelief. “Well, you’d get hooted down and eventually called a crank,” guessed Marsden. “I question that,” said Hays. “I think we’ve allowed ourselves to get buffaloed, to be intimidated into thinking that we could never say anything like that.” Then Neuhaus continued his line of questioning. “How much could be changed if seminary professors taught more confessionally?” Marsden attempted an answer. “In today’s seminaries you have pluralistic institutions, and you have to be careful about whom you offend. if you go into a seminary classroom and say, ‘Your problem is that you need to be converted,’ what you’re saying is that some people there aren’t Christians. That might not be an appropriate thing to say in a school that isn’t restricted to one denomination.” Neuhaus wasn’t so sure. “In a theological faculty,” he said, “it should be inescapable that at some point you’re going to be teaching about the idea of conversion. If you make it clear that your understanding of conversion is that it is constitutive of being a Christian, you’re not browbeating the class. You’re simply making clear what your understanding of the Christian life is. And that includes conversion, in the born-again sense and/or in the baptismal-renewal sense. You wouldn’t be a good teacher of the church if you didn’t teach that.” From Truth Magazine XXXVI: 17 (September 3, 1992) |
