From Heaven Above, To Earth I Come

 

This Sunday, January 1, is the First Sunday after Christmas and Epiphany. There will be only one worship service, and it will be at 10 a.m.

Verse of the Season: Isaiah 11:1-2

This week’s sermon is: “Where Is He?”  

This week’s readings are:

Isaiah 60:1-6

Galatians 4:4-7

Matthew 2:1-23

Psalm 111

Message: From Heaven Above to Earth I Come

-       By Martin Luther, 1535

-  

Oddly, people often associate Luther with different parts of Christmas

-        The Christmas Tree

-        Away in a Manger

-        Neither of which is likely true

This hymn, however, is by Luther and he wrote it for children.

-        15 verses long, but the melody is pretty easy.

-        v. 1-5 present the message of the Angel to the shepherds

-        v. 6 gives the shepherds’ response

-        v. 7-14 guide us in our response to Jesus’ birth

o   v. 13 - Ah, dearest Jesus, holy Child,
Make Thee a bed, soft, undefiled,
Within my heart, that it may be
A quiet chamber kept for Thee.

-        v. 15 – echoes the heavenly host and is as though we join with them in praising God for sending His savior.

A good word for us to consider:

-        v. 14 - My heart for very joy doth leap,
My lips no more can silence keep;
I, too, must sing with joyful tongue
That sweetest ancient cradle-song:

Listen to it here

 

Read the lyrics here.

 

LSB 358

 

1 "From heav'n above to earth I come
to bear good news to ev'ry home:
Glad tidings of great joy I bring,
Whereof I now will say and sing:

 

2 "To you this night is born a child
Of Mary chosen virgin mild;
This little child of lowly birth
Shall be the joy of all the earth.

 

3 "This is the Christ, our God Most High,
Who hears your sad and bitter cry;
He will Himself your Savior be
From all your sins to set you free.

 

4 "He will on you the gifts bestow
Prepared by God for all below,
That in His kingdom, bright and fair,
You may with us His glory share.

 

5 "These are the signs that you shall mark:
The swaddling clothes and manger dark.
There you will find the infant laid
By whom the heav'ns and earth were made."

 

6 How glad we'll be to find it so!
Then with the shepherds let us go
To see what God for us has done
In sending us His own dear Son.

 

7 Come here, my friends, lift up your eyes,
And see what in the manger lies.
Who is this child, so young and fair?
It is the Christ Child lying there.

 

8 Welcome to earth, O noble Guest,
Through whom the sinful world is blest!
You came to share my misery
That You might share Your joy with me.

 

9 Ah, Lord, thou You created all,
How weak You are, so poor and small,
That You should choose to lay Your head
Where lowly cattle lately fed!

 

10 Were earth a thousand times as fair
And set with gold and jewels rare,
It would be far too poor and small
A cradle for the Lord of all.

 

11 Instead of soft and silken stuff
You have but hay and straw so rough
On which as King, so rich and great,
To be enthroned in royal state.

 

12 And so it pleases You to see
this simple truth revealed to me:
That worldly honor, wealth, and might
Are weak and worthless in Your sight.

 

13 Ah, dearest Jesus, holy Child,
Prepare a bed, soft, undefiled,
A quiet chamber set apart
For You to dwell within my heart.

 

14 My heart for very joy must leap;
My lips no more can silence keep.
I, too must sing with joyful tongue
That sweetest ancient cradlesong:

 

15 Glory to God in highest heav'n,
Who unto us His Son has giv'n!
While angels sing with pious mirth
A glad new year to all the earth.

 

 

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