One of my favorite memories as a boy was singing with our church family on Christmas Eve. As the service would near its conclusion, the deacons would distribute candles around the congregation while the lights grew dark. As we sang our final hymn of the evening, the room would flood with candlelight as voices announced the message of Christmas,“Joy to the World, the Lord is come, let earth receive her king.” I felt a foot taller while singing with full voice among my friends and neighbors thinking about the truth and mystery of the incarnation.
The song that I sang as a boy has now been sung for over three hundred years
as a beloved Christmas carol. “Joy to the World” was written by Isaac Watts (1674- 1748), who is heralded as the ‘father of English hymnody’. While the hymn is often featured during the Christmas season, it was originally written to be sung year round as a metrical version of Psalm 98:4. “Make a joyful noise to the Lord, all the earth.” From the first time this hymn was published in 1709, to the pews of our churches today, its powerful call to “repeat the sounding joy” continues. The joyful theme we hear in this hymn is a two-fold: it is a joy that looks back on the incarnation and one that also looks forward to the second coming of Christ.
Joy Looking Back
Isaac Watts understood all of Scripture as pointing to Jesus Christ, (Luke 24:44) so when it comes to his version of Psalm 98, he wants to ‘make David sing like a Christian’ by showing how Christ is the fulfillment of the passage. One of themes we see in verses one and two explore nuances of the story of the birth of Christ. In the line ‘let every heart prepare him room’, we hear an echo of the innkeeper who had no room for the mother of Christ while labor was nearing. (Luke 2:7) We rightly sing this lyric to our own hearts and sing it to others as an invitation to prepare room in each of us for the good news of the Savior’s birth.
The second verse is replete with the reminder that the praise of God is commanded to be in our hearts and on our lips. We are to employ our songs of the Savior and his rule and reign. The Gospel of Luke records four specific songs that each provide a unique contribution to the songs of the savior’s birth. Mary magnifies and rejoices in the mercy of God (Luke 1:46-55), Zechariah sings a song of prophecy that Jesus would fulfill God’s promise (Luke 1:68- 79). The angels “sing” the pronouncement of the coming of Christ (Luke 2:14), and Simeon sings a prayer confessing he can depart in peace now that his eyes have seen the coming of the Christ (Luke 2:29-32). Each of these accounts show the resounding joy of singing the gospel of Christ.
Joy Looking Forward
The third verse of this text is often passed over because of its imagery of the curse, but without the presence of the curse (Gen. 3:16-19), the promise of deliverance loses its power. (Gen. 3:15) These lines rightly point us to the day that will come when God’s blessing (Gen. 3:17) flows as far as the curse is found. We rejoice looking back on the faithfulness of God, and we also rejoice looking forward to what God has promised in the future. We sing between what is and what will be; the already and the not yet of our faith.
With this glorious vision in sight, we see all of the earth is called to come and make a joyful noise of praise to God. While the sting of sin is great, there is a hope that is greater: Jesus Christ who rules the world with truth and grace. It is this grace that causes hearts dead in sin to come alive in Christ. (Eph. 2:8- 9) The final two lines of our hymn do not tie up our story neatly with the end of a story, but with a call to continue marveling in the glories of his righteousness, and wonders of his love.
Let’s be a people who love and sing and wonder with this kind of unshakable joy! (Phil. 4:4) We rejoice in Christ by always looking back and remembering his great faithfulness and love. We rejoice by looking forward to his coming again where on the shores of forever there is an even greater joy to come.