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Hi ladies it's me again and happy Lord's day! Not only happy Lord's day but happy first day of December too! Wow! I can't believe that Christmas is 25 days away! I also can't believe it will be 32 days until New Year's Day 2025! Isn't that something? Anyway y'all the title I have for my first Christmas blog is called "History Behind The Christmas Hymn Hark The Herald Angels Sing". I'm sure we've all Christians and no Christians have sung that Christmas carol lots of times but don't know the history behind it. Well the writer of that Christmas carol is named Charles Wesley. The name may sound familiar because his older brother's name was John Wesley. Him and his brother John were known as the "Wesley Brothers!" They also were born and raised in England not America! Isn't that interesting? Who were those English men? Well let's share about their lives. They were born to Samuel and Susanna Wesley who did their best to raise them in a Christian home. John Wesley was born in 1703 and died in 1791 at 87 years old. Charles Wesley was born in 1707 and died in 1788 and died around the age of 80! Those guys became Christians in their teens and early adulthood and attended "Oxford University" and started a Holy club that encouraged college students to study the Bible, fast, and pray among other Christian disciplines. After college Charles sensed a call to share the gospel with common people as did his older brother John Wesley. John Wesley sensed a call to be a preacher and evangelist which he became and left a revival called the "Methodist Revival" while his younger brother Charles God gifted him to write so many hymns. Some hymns included "Christ The Lord Is Risen Today", "O For A Thousand Tongues To Sing", and "Come Thou Long Expected Jesus" to name a few though he wrote more hymns than that! The most famous hymn he wrote was called "Hark The Herald Angels Sing" written in 1739. He was inspired by the gospel of Luke 2:14 where the angels sang to the lowly shepherds during Jesus' birth and inspired hearing church bells ringing before church service started! So Charles did share the gospel with common folks and had no idea that long after his death that song would be sung in many churches and no Christian circles today! He later married his Sarah 1749 ten years after the hymn was written and had eight children (five of them died during infancy) while three lived to adulthood Charles Jr, Samuel, (named after his grandfather) and Sarah named after her mother. Both his sons would be musicians like their father be organists and composers too. Another thing about the Christmas carol "Hark The Herald Angels Sing" revivalists George Whitefield (he helped promote "The Great Awakening" along with Jonathan Edwards in the United States in the 1700s) was the words were slightly changed from "Hark How The Welken Rings" to "Hark The Herald Angels Sing" and added a change glory to the newborn king after each stanza. Plus the song was included in "Collection Of Hymns For Social Worship", "Collection Of Hymns And Sacred Poems", and "New Version Of The Psalm Of David!" Wow! What a legacy ! As y'all go about your day and with the holidays coming up I hope that y'all are looking forward to Christmas. I hope y'all have a appreciation for the Christmas Hymn like this one and motivates y'all to worship the Lord and thank Him for coming at Christmas time as well too. That's what I wanted to share with y'all. Blessings, happy Lord's day, have a good week, and Merry Christmas!
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