Saturday, April 27, 2019

It Came Upon the Midnight Clear -- Edmund Hamilton Sears


This poet evidently felt a bit like he was suspended between two realities – one that was visible, and another that he saw and heard with the eye of faith and wanted others to pause and recognize. Edmund Hamilton Sears wrote “It Came Upon the Midnight Clear” in 1849 as the Christmas season was upon him and others in Massachusetts (see its seal here). It wasn’t just a Christmas merrymaking sentiment that was on his mind, however. Were the words he crafted also the thoughts of a friend who coaxed Edmund to write something for an upcoming celebration? Were one or both of these men contemplating and feeling anxious about other circumstances in the land in which they lived? One or both of them wanted their fellow men to overcome earthbound troubles by listening to angel voices, a tonic that Edmund recommended at the end of each of his verses.

  
Edmund Sears was a 39-year old Unitarian minister who nevertheless believed not just in the one God – a central tenet of Unitarianism – but also in Christ. So, when asked by a friend (William Lunt), who was also a minister, to craft something to commemorate the Christmas season, Sears agreed. Perhaps he imagined the angel chorus singing about Jesus’ birth, inspiring the many varied references to angels providing music to fascinate humanity and calm events terrestrially. There are hints in Edmund’s poetry that he was pondering conditions prevalent at the time, situations that caused no small amount of concern. It was 1849, and gold rush fever had struck, so was that on Edmund’s mind as he penned the words ‘…the age of gold’ in his last verse? Many have also speculated that the growing polarization of the issue of American slavery and the oncoming Civil War compelled Edmund’s words about ‘Peace on Earth’ (v.1), and ‘the woes of sin and strife’, and ‘man, at war with man’ (v.3). This Unitarian minister’s deep-felt desire for unity is plain throughout his poem, especially as he envisions all earth’s inhabitants pausing to listen to the heavenly creatures’ quiet but penetrating strains. Did the people of Sears’ era on that Christmas in 1849 grasp his meaning? Indeed, though the lack of peace has often betrayed the Christian believer’s disobedience to this foundational principle – peace, harmony with fellow mortals – maybe the delay of war for another 12 years suggests many heard and joined in singing Sears’ words with sincerity for a time.


Do the angels still bend over the earth, looking over you and me, today? Frankly, many corners of the planet might grunt negatively, if asked this. Conflict is normal, someone might even say ‘human’, while Charity is divine, otherworldly. Edmund Sears, judging by what he wrote, probably would have agreed. Did that mean he was a pessimist, unable to vocalize a hopeful note? His song is a resounding ‘no’ to that question. He saw what was going on around himself, but chose to look deeper and listen for the song others could not hear. Maybe that tuned his ears and allowed his eyes to perceive more and more the angels’ song. Don’t wait until the Christmas season to try out this Christmas song.   


Information on the song was obtained from the books  Amazing Grace – 366 Inspiring Hymn Stories for Daily Devotions, by Kenneth W. Osbeck, 1990, Kregel Publications; 101 More Hymn Stories, by Kenneth W. Osbeck, 1985, Kregel Publications; The Complete Book of Hymns – Inspiring Stories About 600 Hymns and Praise Songs, by William J. and Ardythe Petersen, 2006, Tyndale House Publishers, Inc.; Then Sings My Soul, by Robert J. Morgan, 2003, Thomas Nelson, Inc.   

See also this site: http://www.hymntime.com/tch/htm/i/t/c/itcameup.htm

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