He had
written so many songs by the time the words came for another song in 1940, that
he really didn’t need a special time of the year to spur the words for this
one. And yet, the poetry he crafted indicates that Adger McDavid Pace was
thinking about a Christmas theme when he penned “Beautiful Star of Bethlehem”. This
58-year old teacher, performer, writer, and editor was probably somewhere near
or at his home in Lawrenceburg, Tennessee (in southern Tennessee, see map) in
that year, though in his mind he was far from there. Gazing at the sky, as shepherds
did nearly two millennia previously, Adger was helping direct the attention of others
to see an undimmed star in a faraway place. Shine on, he called out.
Adger M.
Pace had likely written many hundreds, or even thousands of songs by the time
1940 arrived, and ‘Beautiful Star of Bethlehem’ was one more that illustrated
where his life’s work had been spent and what road he would continue to travel.
He reportedly wrote or co-wrote some 4,000 songs in the Southern gospel tradition,
a brand of music that emphasized the four-part male harmony that Pace and the
Vaughan Publishing Company helped popularize in the early 20th
Century. Adger began his musical career as the editor for the company, but also
performed on the radio and taught at the company’s school, all in Lawrenceburg.
What circumstances transpired in 1940 that prompted his thoughts about the star
over Bethlehem is not clear, but given what we know of Adger, it’s not difficult
to imagine why he took up his pen yet again. It was Christmas, or perhaps he
was looking forward to that time of year, and his musical juices flowed to
generate a song for the four-part harmony with which he was so familiar. Perhaps
many of his acquaintances thought the best work of this 58-year old was in the
past, but this new song became one of his most recognized when people reflected
on his life later on. Adger drew upon the wise men and the Christ-child’s
nativity scene (v.1) in the ancient village in Judea to relate his musical
version of this well-known Christmas story. But, he must have wanted to broaden
the impact of the story, if we can surmise something more from what he wrote. He
suggests that the ‘beautiful star’ can encompass more than the holiday season, something
we can infer from his words ‘Shine on’, which are a refrain in each of his verses.
Was it something that Adger noted in his own corner of the world that made him
focus on this thought poetically and musically? Did Pace believe that the influence
of Christ was too distant at other times of the year? Is it mere speculation,
or is it true that more of our world could profit spiritually if the star shone
brighter – or, instead, if we all looked more intently at it – throughout a calendar
year?
Adger Pace
spent his life teaching, writing, singing, and leading people to see what he saw.
And so, he didn’t deviate from that when it came to the holiday season. ‘Jesus
is the reason for the season’, someone says, a phrase that Adger would have undoubtedly
embraced. He just seems to say that the ‘season’ doesn’t end on December 26th.
Can you see the star that Adger saw, on this June day, when we’re pretty far
distant from the Christmas season? Adger might say it’s always
Christmas time.
See the
following link for biography: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adger_M._Pace
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