Worship Arts Notes

The hymn, “Come, Thou Long-Expected Jesus” by Charles Wesley, looks forward to Jesus’ Second Coming and is one of our Advent Hymns.  It begins, “Come, thou long expected Jesus, born to set thy people free.”  Wesley looked forward to the time when Jesus would come again to set us free from fear and sin. 

Wesley knew what it meant for people not to be free.  When he was about thirty years old, he traveled to America on a mission, where he saw slavery in its rawest form.  He recorded in his journal that he had seen parents give their child a slave to torment.  Wesley was so shaken by the evil of slavery that he nearly had a nervous breakdown.  It wasn’t long before he returned to England. 

Some would criticize Wesley for not remaining in America to join the fight against slavery, but Wesley’s weapons were his sermons and his hymns.  For the next several decades, his sermons and hymns lent their power to the efforts to make people free — free from slavery — free from fear — free from sin. 

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