A parish
priest asked a schoolteacher and organist in a nearby town to put his poem to
music at Christmastime in 1818 in Austria, and that’s the very briefest way to
tell the story of “Silent Night! Holy Night!” A broken organ, ironically, also played
a part in how Joseph Mohr decided to craft a new song for the season. And, not
to be left out of the story, the organ repairman should also get his share of
credit for spreading this simple new song, which needed little or no musical
accompaniment from an organ, throughout the mountains of the central European
country where it originated (see the coat of arms here of Oberndorf, where the
author and composer first performed the song). Perhaps the three men were
struck by the pure nature of the song’s historical setting – Bethlehem – and how
unadorned was the earthly entrance of One so special. He needs no fanfare,
though He deserves everyone’s attention.
The
26-year old Joseph Mohr had been serving at the mountain village church of St.
Nicholas in Oberndorf (in far northwestern Austria) only about a year,
reportedly, when he discovered that the organ that he desperately needed in
just a few days for the Christmas Eve service was out of commission. How could
a proper worship on so special an occasion take place with no musical accompaniment?
It is notable that the song-poem that Joseph had first written some two years
earlier while in Mariafarr (in central Austria), before he was even ordained
into the priesthood, became the vehicle for this priest’s epiphany in his moment
of need. With no organ, but just a guitar available, he asked his friend and
local schoolmaster-organist Franz Gruber if he could write some easy music for the
words he already had on hand. The fusion of Mohr’s words and Gruber’s music
needed little else to become a resonant voice that Christmas of 1818. Yet, the organ
repairman, Karl Maurachen who showed up a few days later, gave the song legs
outside of that small mountain village, when he took the Mohr-Gruber invention
and introduced it to the Tyrol region of the country (western Austria). Since
that time, the song has travelled throughout the world, though each year its inception,
and the Christ-child whom it magnifies, are celebrated where it was first
vocalized, on the site of the small Oberndorf St. Nicholas church. Perhaps that
small setting, or one like it in Mariafarr where its words were actually
written, prompted the poetry that Mohr penned. A small, seemingly insignificant
spot on the globe, high in the mountains and quite remote to most people, allows
the attentive believer to calm the spirit and gaze at Him. Is that what Joseph
and Franz and Karl all experienced, a silent, pretty special – holy – moment,
just to look at his radiant beams (v.3), imagine the shepherds (v.2) and angels
(v.4), and of course the mother and this most unusual babe (v.1)? No organ, and
no other instrument needed, just the heart of the stilled believer.
Who isn’t
moved each year when Joseph Mohr’s words are sung once again? Get into the
moment, and look at the faces around, perhaps lit only by a candle flame. That’s
likely all that Joseph and Franz had available in 1818 to provide any light,
that and maybe some stars or a moon above. It must have struck those fellows in
the 19th Century that removing some of the familiar musical
trappings of Christmas, like their organ, actually improved the experience that
they’d tried to steer on previous occasions. Take away the encumbrances, and what
is left? My creator and me. That will be enough, someday. Christmas is when I can
remind myself of that, thanks to a silent night.
See more
information on the song story in these sources: The Complete Book of Hymns
– Inspiring Stories About 600 Hymns and Praise Songs by William J. Petersen
and Ardythe Petersen, Tyndale House Publishers, 2006; Amazing Grace: 366
Inspiring Hymn Stories for Daily Devotions by Kenneth W. Osbeck, Kregel
Publications, 1990; 101 Hymn Stories, by Kenneth W. Osbeck, Kregel
Publications, 1982; and Then Sings My Soul – 150 of the World’s Greatest
Hymn Stories, Robert J. Morgan, Thomas Nelson Publishers, 2003.
Also see this link, showing all four original verses: http://www.hymntime.com/tch/htm/s/i/l/silnight.htm
Also see this site for song information: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Silent_Night
See this site for details on the place where the song made its
premier: http://www.oberndorf.co.at/museum/StilleNacht/defaultgb.htm
No comments:
Post a Comment