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Today I traced the surprising, grace-soaked journey of “O Holy Night” and how God loves to use unexpected people to carry His beauty into the world. A French socialist poet, a Jewish composer, and an American abolitionist each helped birth and spread this carol—evidence that the gifts and callings of God can be at work even when people don’t fully understand the One they point to. The song then echoed across a wartime Christmas ceasefire in 1871, and in 1906 Luke 2 became the first Scripture ever broadcast over radio, followed by that same sacred melody played on a violin out over the sea. Our God weaves stories like this to remind us that the night of Jesus’ birth is holy—set apart, consecrated—and that He has made us a holy people who proclaim His praises.
By Highest Praise Church5
55 ratings
Today I traced the surprising, grace-soaked journey of “O Holy Night” and how God loves to use unexpected people to carry His beauty into the world. A French socialist poet, a Jewish composer, and an American abolitionist each helped birth and spread this carol—evidence that the gifts and callings of God can be at work even when people don’t fully understand the One they point to. The song then echoed across a wartime Christmas ceasefire in 1871, and in 1906 Luke 2 became the first Scripture ever broadcast over radio, followed by that same sacred melody played on a violin out over the sea. Our God weaves stories like this to remind us that the night of Jesus’ birth is holy—set apart, consecrated—and that He has made us a holy people who proclaim His praises.