The following sermon, entitled The First Christmas Carol, was preached by Rev C.H. Spurgeon on 20th December 1857 at the Royal Surrey Garden Music Hall.
"Glory to God in the highest, and on earth peace, good will toward men."—Luke 2:14.
It is superstitious to worship angels; it is but proper to love them. Although
it would be a high sin, and an act of misdemeanor against the Sovereign
Court of Heaven to pay the slightest adoration to the mightiest angel,
yet it would be unkind and unseemly, if we did not give to holy angels a
place in our heart's warmest love. In fact, he that contemplates the
character of angels, and marks their many deeds of sympathy with men,
and kindness towards them, cannot resist the impulse of his nature—the
impulse of love towards them. The one incident in angelic history, to
which our text refers, is enough to weld our hearts to them for ever.
How free from envy the angels were! Christ did not come from heaven to
save their compeers when they fell. When Satan, the mighty angel,
dragged with him a third part of the stars of heaven, Christ did not
stoop from his throne to die for them; but he left them to be reserved
in chains and darkness until the last great day. Yet angels did not envy
men. Though they remembered that he took not up angels, yet they did
not murmur when he took up the seed of Abraham; and though the blessed
Master had never condescended to take the angel's form, they did not
think it beneath them to express their joy when they found him arrayed
in the body of an infant. How free, too, they were from pride! They were
not ashamed to come and tell the news to humble shepherds. Methinks
they had as much joy in pouring out their songs that night before the
shepherds, who were watching with their flocks, as they would have had
if they had been commanded by their Master to sing their hymn in the
halls of Caesar. Mere men—men possessed with pride, think it a fine
thing to preach before kings and princes; and think it great
condescension now and then to have to minister to the humble crowd. Not
so the angels. They stretched their willing wings, and gladly sped from
their bright seats above, to tell the shepherds on the plain by night,
the marvelous story of an Incarnate God. And mark how well they told the
story, and surely you will love them! Not with the stammering tongue of
him that tells a tale in which he hath no interest; nor even with the
feigned interest of a man that would move the passions of others, when
he feeleth no emotion himself; but with joy and gladness, such as angels
only can know. They sang the story out, for they could not stay
to tell it in heavy prose. They sang, "Glory to God on high, and on
earth peace, good will towards men." Methinks they sang it with gladness
in their eyes; with their hearts burning with love, and with breasts as
full of joy as if the good news to man had been good news to
themselves. And, verily, it was good news to them, for the heart of
sympathy makes good news to others, good news to itself. Do you not love
the angels? Ye will not bow before them, and there ye are right; but
will ye not love them? Doth it not make one part of your anticipation of
heaven, that in heaven you shall dwell with the holy angels, as well as
with the spirits of the just made perfect? Oh, how sweet to think that
these holy and lovely beings are our guardians every hour! They keep
watch and ward about us, both in the burning noon-tide, and in the
darkness of the night. They keep us in all our ways; they bear us up in
their hands, lest at any time we dash our feet against stones. They
unceasingly minister unto us who are the heirs of salvation; both by day
and night they are our watchers and our guardians, for know ye not,
that "the angel of the Lord encampeth round about them that fear him."
Let us turn aside, having just thought of angels for a moment, to think rather of this song, than of the angels themselves. Their song was brief, but as Kitto excellently remarks, it was "well worthy of angels expressing the greatest and most blessed truths, in words so few, that they become to an acute apprehension, almost oppressive by the pregnant fulness of their meaning"—"Glory to God in the highest, on earth peace, good will toward men." We shall, hoping to be assisted by the Holy Spirit, look at these words of the angels in a fourfold manner. I shall just suggest some instructive thoughts arising from these words; then some emotional thoughts; then a few prophetical thoughts; and afterwards, one or two preceptive thoughts.
I. First then, in the words of our text. There are many INSTRUCTIVE THOUGHTS.
The angels sang something which men could understand—something which men ought to understand—something which will make men much better if they will understand it. The angels were singing about Jesus who was born in the manger. We must look upon their song as being built upon this foundation. They sang of Christ, and the salvation which he came into this world to work out. And what they said of this salvation was this: they said, first, that it gave glory to God; secondly, that it gave peace to man; and, thirdly, that it was a token of God's good will towards the human race.
1. First, they said that this salvation gave glory to God.
They had been present on many august occasions, and they had joined in
many a solemn chorus to the praise of their Almighty Creator. They were
present at the creation: "The morning stars sang together, and all the
sons of God shouted for joy." They had seen many a planet fashioned
between the palms of Jehovah, and wheeled by his eternal hands through
the infinitude of space. They had sung solemn songs over many a world
which the Great One had created. We doubt not, they had often chanted
"Blessing and honour, and glory, and majesty, and power, and dominion,
and might, be unto him that sitteth on the throne," manifesting himself
in the work of creation. I doubt not, too, that their songs had gathered
force through ages. As when first created, their first breath was song,
so when they saw God create new worlds then their song received another
note; they rose a little higher in the gamut of adoration. But this
time, when they saw God stoop from his throne, and become a babe,
hanging upon a woman's breast, they lifted their notes higher still; and
reaching to the uttermost stretch of angelic music, they gained the
highest notes of the divine scale of praise, and they sung, "Glory to
God in the highest," for higher in goodness they felt God could
not go. Thus their highest praise they gave to him in the highest act of
his godhead. If it be true that there is a hierarchy of angels, rising
tier upon tier in magnificence and dignity—if the apostle teaches us
that there be "angels, and principalities, and powers, and thrones, and
dominions," amongst these blest inhabitants of the upper world—I can
suppose that when the intelligence was first communicated to those
angels that are to be found upon the outskirts of the heavenly world,
when they looked down from heaven and saw the newborn babe, they sent
the news backward to the place whence the miracle first proceeded,
singing
"Angels, from the realms of glory,
Wing your downward flight to earth,
Ye who sing creation's story,
Now proclaim Messiah's birth;
Come and worship,
Worship Christ, the newborn King."
Wing your downward flight to earth,
Ye who sing creation's story,
Now proclaim Messiah's birth;
Come and worship,
Worship Christ, the newborn King."
And as the message ran from rank to rank, at last the presence angels,
those four cherubim that perpetually watch around the throne of
God—those wheels with eyes—took up the strain, and, gathering up the
song of all the inferior grades of angels, surmounted the divine
pinnacle of harmony with their own solemn chant of adoration, upon which
the entire host shouted, "The highest angels praise thee."—"Glory to
God in the highest." Ay, there is no mortal that can ever dream how
magnificent was that song. Then, note, if angels shouted before and when
the world was made, their hallelujahs were more full, more strong, more
magnificent, if not more hearty, when they saw Jesus Christ born of the
Virgin Mary to be man's redeemer—"Glory to God in the highest."
What is
the instructive lesson to be learned from this first syllable of the
angels' song? Why this, that salvation is God's highest glory. He is
glorified in every dew drop that twinkles to the morning sun. He is
magnified in every wood flower that blossoms in the copse, although it
live to blush unseen, and waste its sweetness in the forest air. God is
glorified in every bird that warbles on the spray; in every lamb that
skips the mead. Do not the fishes in the sea praise him? From the tiny
minnow to the huge Leviathan, do not all creatures that swim the water
bless and praise his name? Do not all created things extol him? Is there
aught beneath the sky, save man, that doth not glorify God? Do not the
stars exalt him, when they write his name upon the azure of heaven in
their golden letters? Do not the lightnings adore him when they flash
his brightness in arrows of light piercing the midnight darkness? Do not
thunders extol him when they roll like drums in the march of the God of
armies? Do not all things exalt him, from the least even to the
greatest? But sing, sing, oh universe, till thou hast exhausted thyself,
thou canst not afford a song so sweet as the song of Incarnation.
Though creation may be a majestic organ of praise, it cannot reach the
compass of the golden canticle—Incarnation! There is more in that than
in creation, more melody in Jesus in the manger, than there is in worlds
on worlds rolling their grandeur round the throne of the Most High.
Pause Christian, and consider this a minute. See how every attribute is
here magnified. Lo! what wisdom is here. God becomes man that God may be just, and the justifier of the ungodly. Lo! what power,
for where is power so great as when it concealeth power? What power,
that Godhead should unrobe itself and become man! Behold, what love is thus revealed to us when Jesus becomes a man. Behold ye, what faithfulness!
How many promises are this day kept? How many solemn obligations are
this hour discharged? Tell me one attribute of God that is not manifest
in Jesus; and your ignorance shall be the reason why you have not seen
it so. The whole of God is glorified in Christ; and though some part of
the name of God is written in the universe, it is here best read—in Him
who was the Son of Man, and, yet, the Son of God.
But, let
me say one word here before I go away from this point. We must learn
from this, that if salvation glorifies God, glorifies him in the highest
degree, and makes the highest creatures praise him, this one reflection
may be added—then, that doctrine, which glorifies man in salvation
cannot be the gospel. For salvation glorifies God. The angels were no
Arminians, they sang, "Glory to God in the highest." They believe
in no doctrine which uncrowns Christ, and puts the crown upon the head
of mortals. They believe in no system of faith which makes salvation
dependent upon the creature, and, which really gives the creature the
praise, for what is it less than for a man to save himself, if the whole
dependence of salvation rests upon his own free will? No, my brethren;
they may be some preachers, that delight to preach a doctrine that
magnifies man; but in their gospel angels have no delight. The only glad
tidings that made the angels sing, are those that put God first, God
last, God midst, and God without end, in the salvation of his creatures,
and put the crown wholly and alone upon the head of him that saves
without a helper. "Glory to God in the highest," is the angels' song.
2. When
they had sung this, they sang what they had never sung before. "Glory to
God in the highest," was an old, old song; they had sung that from
before the foundations of the world. But, now, they sang as it were a
new song before the throne of God: for they added this stanza—"on earth, peace."
They did not sing that in the garden. There was peace there, but it
seemed a thing of course, and scarce worth singing of. There was more
than peace there; for there was glory to God there. But, now, man had
fallen, and since the day when cherubim with fiery swords drove out the
man, there had been no peace on earth, save in the breast of some
believers, who had obtained peace from the living fountain of this
incarnation of Christ. Wars had raged from the ends of the world; men
had slaughtered one another, heaps on heaps. There had been wars within
as well as wars without. Conscience had fought with man; Satan had
tormented man with thoughts of sin. There had been no peace on earth
since Adam fell. But, now, when the newborn King made his appearance,
the swaddling band with which he was wrapped up was the white flag of
peace. That manger was the place where the treaty was signed, whereby
warfare should be stopped between man's conscience and himself, man's
conscience and his God. It was then, that day, the trumpet blew—"Sheathe
the sword, oh man, sheathe the sword, oh conscience, for God is now at
peace with man, and man at peace with God." Do you not feel my brethren,
that the gospel of God is peace to man? Where else can peace be found,
but in the message of Jesus? Go legalist, work for peace with toil and
pain, and thou shalt never find it. Go, thou, that trustest in the law:
go thou, to Sinai; look to the flames that Moses saw, and shrink, and
tremble, and despair; for peace is nowhere to be found, but in him, of
whom it is said, "This man shall be peace." And what a peace it is,
beloved! It is peace like a river, and righteousness like the waves of
the sea. It is the peace of God that passeth all understanding, which
keeps our hearts and minds through Jesus Christ our Lord. This sacred
peace between the pardoned soul and God the pardoner; this marvelous
at-one-ment between the sinner and his judge, this was it that the
angels sung when they said, "peace on earth."
3. And,
then, they wisely ended their song with a third note. They said, "Good
will to man." Philosophers have said that God has a good will toward
man; but I never knew any man who derived much comfort from their
philosophical assertion. Wise men have thought from what we have seen in
creation that God had much good will toward man, or else his works
would never have been so constructed for their comfort; but I never
heard of any man who could risk his soul's peace upon such a faint hope
as that. But I have not only heard of thousands, but I know them, who
are quite sure that God has a good will towards men; and if you ask
their reason, they will give a full and perfect answer. They say, he has
good will toward man for he gave his Son. No greater proof of kindness
between the Creator and his subjects can possibly be afforded than when
the Creator gives his only begotten and well beloved Son to die. Though
the first note is God-like, and though the second note is peaceful, this
third note melts my heart the most. Some think of God as if he were a
morose being who hated all mankind. Some picture him as if he were some
abstract subsistence taking no interest in our affairs. Hark ye, God has
"good will toward men." You know what good will means. Well, Swearer,
you have cursed God; he has not fulfilled his curse on you; he has good
will towards you, though you have no good will towards him. Infidel, you
have sinned high and hard against the Most High; he has said no hard
things against you, for he has good will towards men. Poor sinner, thou
hast broken his laws; thou art half afraid to come to the throne of his
mercy lest he should spurn thee; hear thou this, and be comforted— God
has good will towards men, so good a will that he has said, and said it
with an oath too, "As I live, saith the Lord, I have no pleasure in the
death of him that dieth, but had rather that he should turn unto me and
live;" so good a will moreover that he has even condescended to say,
"Come, now, let us reason together; though your sins be as scarlet, they
shall be as wool; though they be red like crimson, they shall be whiter
than snow." And if you say, "Lord, how shall I know that thou hast this
good will towards me," he points to yonder manger, and says, "Sinner,
if I had not a good will towards thee, would I have parted with my Son?
if I had not good will towards the human race, would I have given up my
Son to become one of that race that he might by so doing redeem them
from death?" Ye that doubt the Master's love, look ye to that circle of
angels; see their blaze of glory; hear their son, and let your doubts
die away in that sweet music and be buried in a shroud of harmony. He
has good will to men; he is willing to pardon; he passes by iniquity,
transgression, and sin. And mark thee, if Satan shall then add, "But
though God hath good will, yet he cannot violate his justice, therefore
his mercy may be ineffective, and you may die;" then listen to that
first note of the song, "Glory to God in the highest," and reply to
Satan and all his temptations, that when God shows good will to a
penitent sinner, there is not only peace in the sinner's heart, but it
brings glory to every attribute of God, and so he can be just, and yet
justify the sinner, and glorify himself.
I do not
pretend to say that I have opened all the instructions contained in
these three sentences, but I may perhaps direct you into a train of
thought that may serve you for the week. I hope that all through the
week you will have a truly merry Christmas by feeling the power of these
words, and knowing the unction of them. "Glory to God in the highest,
on earth peace, good will toward men."
II.
Next, I have to present to you some EMOTIONAL THOUGHTS. Friends, doth
not this verse, this song of angels, stir your heart with happiness?
When I read that, and found the angels singing it, I thought to myself,
"Then if the angels ushered in the gospel's great head with singing,
ought I not to preach with singing? And ought not my hearers to live
with singing? Ought not their hearts to be glad and their spirits to
rejoice?" Well, thought I, there be some somber religionists who were
born in a dark night in December that think a smile upon the face is
wicked, and believe that for a Christian to be glad and rejoice is to be
inconsistent. Ah! I wish these gentlemen had seen the angels when they
sang about Christ; for angels sang about his birth, though it was no
concern of theirs, certainly men ought to sing about it as long as they
live, sing about it when they die, and sing about it when they live in
heaven for ever. I do long to see in the midst of the church more of a
singing Christianity. The last few years have been breeding in our midst
a groaning and unbelieving Christianity. Now, I doubt not its
sincerity, but I do doubt its healthy character. I say it may be true
and real enough; God forbid I should say a word against the sincerity of
those who practice it; but it is a sickly religion. Watts hit the mark
when he said,
"Religion never was designed
To make our pleasures less."
It is designed to do away with some of our pleasures, but it gives us
many more, to make up for what it takes away; so it does not make them
less. O ye that see in Christ nothing but a subject to stimulate your
doubts and make the tears run down your cheeks; O ye that always say,
"Lord, what a wretched land is this,
That yields us no supplies,"
Come ye hither and see the angels. Do they tell their story with groans,
and sobs, and sighs? Ah, no; they shout aloud, "Glory to God in the
highest." Now, imitate them, my dear brethren. If you are professors of
religion, try always to have a cheerful carriage. Let others mourn; but
"Why should the children of a king
Go mourning all their days?"
Anoint your head and wash your face; appear not unto men to fast.
Rejoice in the Lord always, and again I say unto you rejoice. Specially
this week be not ashamed to be glad. You need not think it a wicked
thing to be happy. Penance and whipping, and misery are no such very
virtuous things, after all. The damned are miserable; let the saved be
happy. Why should you hold fellowship with the lost by feelings of
perpetual mourning? Why not rather anticipate the joys of heaven, and
begin to sing on earth that song which you will never need to end? The
first emotion then that we ought to cherish in our hearts is the emotion
of joy and gladness.
Well, what next? Another emotion is that of confidence.
I am not sure that I am right in calling that an emotion, but still in
me it is so much akin to it, that I will venture to be wrong if I be so.
Now, if when Christ came on this earth God had sent some black creature
down from heaven, (if there be such creatures there) to tell us, "Glory
to God in the highest, and on earth peace, good will toward men," and
if with a frowning brow and a stammering tongue he delivered his
message, if I had been there and heard it, I should have scrupled to
believe him, for I should have said, "You don't look like the messenger
that God would send—stammering fellow as you are—with such glad news as
this." But when the angels came there was no doubting the truth of what
they said, because it was quite certain that the angels believed it;
they told it as if they did, for they told it with singing, with joy and
gladness. If some friend, having heard that a legacy was left you, and
should come to you with a solemn countenance, and a tongue like a
funeral bell, saying, "Do you know so-and-so has left you £10,000!" Why
you would say, "Ah! I dare say," and laugh in his face. But if your
brother should suddenly burst into your room, and exclaim, "I say, what
do you think? You are a rich man; So-and-so has left you £10,000!" Why
you would say, "I think it is very likely to be true, for he looks so
happy over it." Well, when these angels came from heaven they told the
news just as if they believed it; and though I have often wickedly
doubted my Lord's good will, I think I never could have doubted it while
I heard those angels singing. No, I should say, "The messengers
themselves are proof of the truth, for it seems they have heard it from
God's lips; they have no doubt about it, for see how joyously they tell
the news." Now, poor soul, thou that art afraid lest God should destroy
thee, and thou thinkest that God will never have mercy upon thee, look
at the singing angels and doubt if thou darest. Do not go to the
synagogue of long-faced hypocrites to hear the minister who preaches
with a nasal twang, with misery in his face, whilst he tells you that
God has good will towards men; I know you won't believe what he says,
for he does not preach with joy in his countenance; he is telling you
good news with a grunt, and you are not likely to receive it. But go
straightway to the plain where Bethlehem shepherds sat by night, and
when you hear the angels singing out the gospel, by the grace of God
upon you, you cannot help believing that they manifestly feel the
preciousness of telling. Blessed Christmas, that brings such creatures
as angels to confirm our faith in God's good will to men!
III. I
must now bring before you the third point. There are some PROPHETIC
UTTERANCES contained in these words. The angels sang "Glory to God in
the highest, on earth peace, good will toward men." But I look around,
and what see I in the wide, wide world? I do not see God honored. I see
the heathen bowing down before their idols; I mark the Romanist casting
himself before the rotten rags of his relics, and the ugly figures of
his images. I look about me, and I see tyranny lording it over the
bodies and souls of men; I see God forgotten; I see a worldly race
pursuing mammon; I see a bloody race pursuing Moloch; I see ambition
riding like Nimrod over the land, God forgotten, his name dishonored.
And was this all the angels sang about? Is this all that made them sing
"Glory to God in the highest?" Ah! no. There are brighter days
approaching. They sang, "Peace on earth." But I hear still the clarion
of war; and the cannon's horrid roar: not yet have they turned the sword
into a ploughshare, and the spear into a pruning-hook! War still
reigns. Is this all that the angels sang about? And whilst I see wars to
the ends of the earth, am I to believe that this was all the angels
expected? Ah! no, brethren; the angels' song is big with prophecy; it
travaileth in birth with glories. A few more years, and he that lives
them out shall see why angels sang; a few more years, and he that will
come shall come, and will not tarry. Christ the Lord will come again,
and when he cometh he shall cast the idols from their thrones; he shall
dash down every fashion of heresy and every shape of idolatry; he shall
reign from pole to pole with illimitable sway; he shall reign, when like
a scroll, yon blue heavens have passed away. No strife shall vex
Messiah's reign, no blood shall then be shed; they'll hang the useless
helmet high, and study war no more. The hour is approaching when the
temple of Janus shall be shut for ever, and when cruel Mars shall be
hooted from the earth. The day is coming when the lion shall eat straw
like the ox, when the leopard shall lie down with the kid; when the
weaned child shall put his hand upon the cockatrice den and play with
the asp. The hour approacheth; the first streaks of the sunlight have
made glad the age in which we live. Lo, he comes, with trumpets and with
clouds of glory; he shall come for whom we look with joyous
expectation, whose coming shall be glory to his redeemed, and confusion
to his enemies. Ah! brethren, when the angels sang this there was an
echo through the long aisles of a glorious future. That echo was—
"Hallelujah! Christ the Lord
God Omnipotent shall reign."
Ay, and doubtless the angels heard by faith the fulness of the song,
"Hark! the song of jubilee
Loud as mighty thunders' roar,
Or the fulness of the sea,
When it breaks upon the shore."
"Christ the Lord Omnipotent reigneth."
IV. Now,
I have one more lesson for you, and I have done. That lesson is
PRECEPTIVE. I wish everybody that keeps Christmas this year, would keep
it as the angels kept it. There are many persons who, when they talk
about keeping Christmas, mean by that the cutting of the bands of their
religion for one day in the year, as if Christ were the Lord of misrule,
as if the birth of Christ should be celebrated like the orgies of
Bacchus. There are some very religious people, that on Christmas would
never forget to go to church in the morning; they believe Christmas to
be nearly as holy as Sunday, for they reverence the tradition of the
elders. Yet their way of spending the rest of the day is very
remarkable; for if they see their way straight up stairs to their bed at
night, it must be by accident. They would not consider they had kept
Christmas in a proper manner, if they did not verge on gluttony and
drunkenness. They are many who think Christmas cannot possibly be kept,
except there be a great shout of merriment and mirth in the house, and
added to that the boisterousness of sin. Now, my brethren, although we,
as successors of the Puritans, will not keep the day in any religious
sense whatever, attaching nothing more to it than to any other day:
believing that every day may be a Christmas for ought we know, and
wishing to make every day Christmas, if we can, yet we must try to set
an example to others how to behave on that day; and especially since the
angels gave glory to God: let us do the same.
Once
more the angels said, "Peace to men:" let us labor if we can to make
peace next Christmas day. Now, old gentleman, you won't take your son
in: he has offended you. Fetch him at Christmas. "Peace on earth;" you
know: that is a Christmas Carol. Make peace in your family.
Now,
brother, you have made a vow that you will never speak to your brother
again. Go after him and say, "Oh, my dear fellow, let not this day's sun
go down upon our wrath." Fetch him in, and give him your hand. Now, Mr.
Tradesman, you have an opponent in trade, and you have said some very
hard words about him lately. If you do not make the matter up today, or
tomorrow, or as soon as you can, yet do it on that day. That is the way
to keep Christmas, peace on earth and glory to God. And oh, if thou hast
anything on thy conscience, anything that prevents thy having peace of
mind, keep thy Christmas in thy chamber, praying to God to give thee
peace; for it is peace on earth, mind, peace in thyself, peace with
thyself, peace with thy fellow men, peace with thy God. And do not think
thou hast well celebrated that day till thou canst say, "O God,
'With the world, myself, and thee
I ere I sleep at peace will be. "
And when the Lord Jesus has become your peace, remember, there is another thing, good will
towards men. Do not try to keep Christmas without keeping good will
towards men. You are a gentleman, and have servants. Well, try and set
their chimneys on fire with a large piece of good, substantial beef for
them. If you are men of wealth, you have poor in your neighborhood. Find
something wherewith to clothe the naked, and feed the hungry, and make
glad the mourner. Remember, it is good will towards men. Try, if you
can, to show them good will at this special season; and if you will do
that, the poor will say with me, that indeed they wish there were six
Christmases in the year.
Let each
one of us go from this place determined, that if we are angry all the
year round, this next week shall be an exception; that if we have
snarled at everybody last year, this Christmas time we will strive to be
kindly affectionate to others; and if we have lived all this year at
enmity with God, I pray that by his Spirit he may this week give us
peace with him; and then, indeed, my brother, it will be the merriest
Christmas we ever had in all our lives. You are going home to your
father and mother, young men; many of you are going from your shops to
your homes. You remember what I preached on last Christmas time. Go home
to thy friends, and tell them what the Lord hath done for thy soul, and
that will make a blessed round of stories at the Christmas fire. If you
will each of you tell your parents how the Lord met with you in the
house of prayer; how, when you left home, you were a gay, wild blade,
but have now come back to love your mother's God, and read your father's
Bible. Oh, what a happy Christmas that will make! What more shall I
say? May God give you peace with yourselves; may he give you good will
towards all your friends, your enemies, and your neighbors; and may he
give you grace to give glory to God in the highest. I will say no more,
except at the close of this sermon to wish every one of you, when the
day shall come, the happiest Christmas you ever had in your lives.
"Now with angels round the throne,
Cherubim and seraphim,
And the church, which still is one,
Let us swell the solemn hymn;
Glory to the great I AM!
Glory to the Victim Lamb.
Blessing, honour, glory, might,
And dominion infinite,
To the Father of our Lord,
To the Spirit and the Word;
As it was all worlds before,
Is, and shall be evermore."
No comments:
Post a Comment