Friday, December 19, 2014

A Christmas Carol with Guest Deb Garland

Oh, what joy it is to sing Christmas carols to celebrate the birth of our Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ. Do you have a favorite song? A favorite musical arrangement of a holiday carol? Perhaps you have a favorite memory of singing carols in the past? And if you’re like me, you wish to discover the origin of one of these traditional Christmas carols.

Silent Night was written by Josef Mohr and set to music by Franz Gruber in 1818. The traditional story speaks about actors arriving at the Church of St. Nicolas in Oberndorf, Austria, on December 23rd to re-enact a musical drama of Christ’s birth. But mice had damaged the organ’s bellows, rendering it inoperable—silent.

Bill Egan, Christmas Historian, tells the true story. On December 24th, Father Josef Mohr asked the church organist, Franz Gruber, to compose a melody and guitar accompaniment for a six-stanza poem he’d written two years earlier. The two men sang, the choir repeating the last two lines of each verse, while the priest played the carol on his guitar at Christmas Mass.
Silent night! Holy night!
All is calm, all is bright,
‘Round yon virgin mother and Child!
Holy Infant, so tender and mild,
Sleep in heavenly peace,
Sleep in heavenly peace.
But the story doesn’t end there. Karl Mauracher, a well-known organ builder, often fixed the organ and heard Franz Gruber play Silent Night. He shared the composition in his hometown of Kapfing where two families of singers, the Rainers and the Strassers, included it in their Christmas programs. In 1838, the Rainers sang Silent Night in German in the United States, but the carol wasn’t translated into English until 1863 by John Freeman Young.

Today, Silent Night is a favorite Christmas carol sung around the world.

Do you have a favorite Christmas carol?


Deb Garland writes Christian historical romance novels set in the Pacific Northwest, British Columbia and Alaska. She is an ACFW First Impressions and My Book Therapy Frasier Finalist. She enjoys sailing, horseback riding, sipping tea with her husband and friends, and stamping greeting cards. You can connect with Deb at her website: www.debgarland.com, or on Facebook, Twitter and Pinterest.

14 comments:

  1. I love all of the traditional Christmas Carols. OH, HOLY NIGHT is a great favourite.

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  2. I have so many favorite Christmas carols! It's hard to pick one. "Come all ye faithful" is one that can touch me deeply. It's an invitation to come see The King! Love that!
    Thank you for the post. It was so interesting. Merry Christmas!

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    1. I'm glad it blessed you! So many wonderful Christmas carols, it is hard to pick a favorite one.

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  3. I like the traditional carols, sung in the traditional melodies instead of "personalized" by many contemporary singers. One I don't hear often is "Do You Hear What I Hear?"

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    1. Do You Hear What I Hear? was one of my favorite carols growing up too!

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  4. I love all the ones mentioned and more. And I love to hear the stories behind them.

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    1. Me too, Pat! We're blessed to have so many carols to sing every Christmas with our families and friends.

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  5. Great post, Deb. Thanks so much for being our guest today! Merry Christmas!

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    1. And Merry Christmas to you, Crystal, and everyone at Stitches Thru Time. Thank you for inviting me!

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  6. Great blog today! My favorite is Mary Did You Know?
    dkstevensne AT outlook DOt COm

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  7. Deanna, isn't it a beautiful song? One Christmas, our church sang it twice because my husband and another woman who were singing their own special songs didn't realize they'd both picked Mary Did You Know! When my husband's turn came, he invited her to sing it a second time with him. Both renditions were a blessing.

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