In days of old your star that shone
Led seekers to the holy place
Where God the Son in human flesh
Was sheltered in a lowly space.
With great rejoicing they gave gifts
Of frankincense and myrrh and gold,
Then traveled back to distant homes
To ponder what they did behold.
When light you give shows us great joy,
Our hearts are drawn to sing your praise.
We glorify your holy name
And seek to love you all our days.
But there are days your light will show
The truths we long to never see:
The roiling violence, rage, and hate
That we insist just cannot be.
We hide our eyes, as best we can,
From seeing what we have become:
A fearful tribe that will not name
The sin to which we now are numb.
The hates of gender, race, and clan
We try to claim aren’t really there
Are rendered clear when you command
That we oppose them everywhere.
So shine your star, unfailing Light,
On hatreds we seek to avoid,
Lest all our witness to your love
Be rendered false and then destroyed.
Annul our fear and charge us now
To name such hate as cruel sin;
And then at last as we speak out,
Refine our souls with fire within.
TEXT: Charles Spence Freeman, 6 January 2021
MUSIC: Suggested tune ST. PATRICK, Irish melody, arr. Charles Villiers Stanford, 1902; alternate tune YE BANKS AND BRAES, Scottish melody, arr. John L. Bell, 1989, copyright 1989 WGRG Iona Community (admin. GIA Publications, Inc.), hence not reproduced here.
I have always (or at least since hymn writing became a thing for me) wanted to write an Epiphany hymn. This wasn’t the circumstance I was seeking for doing so.
Thanks! It's a good tune that we Baptists rarely sing even in March.
ReplyDeleteIt's in the Presbyterian book, but I'm not sure many of us sing it either.
DeleteOnly Episcopalians sing it, usually when a bishop visits.
ReplyDelete