The Christmas Carols: Past, Present, & Future HopeSample
Day 5
All Praise to Thee Eternal Lord
Read: John 1:14-18
By the beginning of the 16th century, the Church was in desperate need of reform. The Scriptures, songs, and liturgies that filled the worship services were in languages foreign to most people. In the “high church,” God was kept distant from the people who were “lowly” and less educated.
Though this was the pattern of the church in the middle ages, it was not the plan of God. God does not require that we speak Latin to know Him or read His Word, and Martin Luther recognized this. Luther set out on a mission to strip away the mystery of the church regalia and to return the beauty of the Gospel to the people. He translated the liturgy, the Scripture, and the songs of the church from Latin into German — the language of his fellow countrymen.
One song that Luther translated was “All Praise to Thee Eternal Lord,” a Christmas song written by Gregory the Great in the sixth century. One of the lines of this song states, “A little Child, Thou art our guest, That weary ones in Thee may rest; Forlorn and lowly is Thy birth, That we may rise to heaven from earth.”
These lyrics remind us that God has not stayed distant, speaking foreign languages. He came to us in the lowest common denominator - a human baby - so that ALL of us may know who He is and have a chance to find rest and rise to heaven one day.
Luther translated “All Praise to Thee Eternal Lord” into German - what a gift! Jesus “translated” an understanding of who God is to the world - what an unbelievable gift! Today, sing a really, really old song and be thankful for the translation of God’s glory that Jesus has done for us: because He came, we can know God.
All Praise to Thee Eternal Lord
All praise to Thee, eternal Lord,
Clothed in a garb of flesh and blood;
Choosing a manger for Thy throne,
While worlds on worlds are Thine alone.
Once did the skies before Thee bow;
A virgin’s arms contain Thee now,
While angels, who in Thee rejoice,
Now listen for Thine infant voice.
A little child, Thou art our guest,
That weary ones in Thee may rest;
Forlorn and lowly is Thy birth;
That we may rise to Heaven from earth.
Thou comest in the darksome night
To make us children of the light;
To make us, in the realms divine,
Like Thine own angels round Thee shine.
All this for us Thy love hath done;
By this to Thee our love is won;
For this we tune our cheerful lays,
And sing our thanks in ceaseless praise.
Scripture
About this Plan
This 30 day devotional examines one Christmas carol each day and reflects on how that song helps us to better understand and follow Jesus. Most carols are familiar to us…we sing them every year…but do we really grasp what they are talking about? In other words, when we look at “The Christmas Carols,” do we hear the hope of Christmas past, present, and future?
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We would like to thank Wildwood Community Church for providing this plan. For more information, please visit: https://wildwoodchurch.org