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A quiet town, a long-echoed promise, and a melody that almost missed its moment—this five-minute journey explores how O Little Town of Bethlehem came to life and why it still carries weight today. We share the scene that shaped Philip Brooks’s words: a Christmas Eve ride to Bethlehem, a five-hour service in the Church of the Nativity, and the sound of hymns rolling like tides through the night. Then we follow the poem into music, as organist Lewis Redner wrestled with writer’s block until a sudden midnight melody unlocked a carol sung first by a small choir of teachers and children.
Along the way, we open the rarely printed stanza that places joy beside sorrow and invites charity and faith to hold the door wide. That small addition reframes the carol, moving it beyond nostalgia into a lived invitation to hope. We also trace the thread back to Micah 5:2, the ancient prophecy that points to Bethlehem and anchors the story of Jesus in a specific place and promise. Whether you come with faith or curiosity, the arc is compelling: a small village chosen for a large purpose, a song shaped by memory, and a message that meets real need.
Here is the youtube link for today
https://youtu.be/EHKORmpW4Cg?si=i2dfIXcMWXnCSbOw
We would love to hear your comments. Send us a Text Message
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By DannyMac5
66 ratings
A quiet town, a long-echoed promise, and a melody that almost missed its moment—this five-minute journey explores how O Little Town of Bethlehem came to life and why it still carries weight today. We share the scene that shaped Philip Brooks’s words: a Christmas Eve ride to Bethlehem, a five-hour service in the Church of the Nativity, and the sound of hymns rolling like tides through the night. Then we follow the poem into music, as organist Lewis Redner wrestled with writer’s block until a sudden midnight melody unlocked a carol sung first by a small choir of teachers and children.
Along the way, we open the rarely printed stanza that places joy beside sorrow and invites charity and faith to hold the door wide. That small addition reframes the carol, moving it beyond nostalgia into a lived invitation to hope. We also trace the thread back to Micah 5:2, the ancient prophecy that points to Bethlehem and anchors the story of Jesus in a specific place and promise. Whether you come with faith or curiosity, the arc is compelling: a small village chosen for a large purpose, a song shaped by memory, and a message that meets real need.
Here is the youtube link for today
https://youtu.be/EHKORmpW4Cg?si=i2dfIXcMWXnCSbOw
We would love to hear your comments. Send us a Text Message
Support the show

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