What a wonderful promise Mary Baker Eddy has given us to begin the Preface of her book Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures: “To those leaning on the sustaining infinite, to-day is big with blessings” (vii: 1-2).
Hymn 342 in the Christian Science Hymnal sprang into thought here, particularly the lines in the first verse: "All our blessings show/The amplitude of God’s dear love."
Here is the whole poem written by Laura Lee
Randall, with music by Felix Mendelssohn-Bartholdy, arranged by R.J. Hopkins:
This
is the day the Lord hath made;
Be
glad, give thanks, rejoice;
Stand
in His presence, unafraid,
In
praise lift up your voice.
All
perfect gifts are from above,
And
all our blessings show
The
amplitude of God’s dear love
Which
every heart may know.
The Lord will hear before we call,
And
every need supply;
Good
things are freely given to all
Who
on His word rely.
We
come today to being Him praise
Not
for such gifts alone,
But
for the higher, deeper ways
In
which His love is shown.
For
sin destroyed, for sorrow healed,
For
health and peace restored;
For
Life and Love by Truth revealed,
We
thank and bless the Lord.
This
is the day the Lord hath made,
In
praise lift up your voice.
In
shining robes of joy arrayed,
Be
glad, give thanks, rejoice.
© Words copyright 1932, The Christian Science Board of Directors
Laura Lee Randall was a Christian Scientist; Felix Mendelssohn is, of course, a NAME.
JSH-Online
only quotes the hymn, so it must not have been printed separately as a poem in the
Christian Science periodicals. The Bible concordance doesn’t give me any clues.
Perhaps it was written for the 1932 Hymnal. Anyway, it is a much-loved hymn
which expands so beautifully on that opening sentence in Preface.
If I am awake in the pre-dawn hours of a day, I can
sometimes see the Evening Star reflected in a window. On occasion, the moon can
keep it company. It is very beautiful. I think of myself as a wakeful shepherd,
similar to the one Mrs Eddy speaks of next: “The wakeful shepherd beholds the
first faint morning beams, ere cometh the full radiance of a risen day” (ibid
vii: 2-4). How glorious a vision to that shepherd. And I can share it.
A first-time reader of Science and Health with
Key to the Scriptures, unless they had some Bible, perhaps would not have
understood that this paragraph refers to the coming of the baby Jesus.
There is no mention of God or the Christ. [My Sunday School teaching left me
with a love of the songs I sang there; songs like Jesus Bids us Shine and
What a Friend We Have in Jesus, but one might say, No Metaphysics.]
The pale star “shone to the prophet-shepherds” (lines 4-5);
the Wisemen beheld and followed the daystar (lines 10-12). I notice that
“wakeful shepherd” suggests the present tense, so it can be the present student
of the Scriptures and Science and Health who glimpses the glory of
Christ.
"Daystar" as a thing of the Bible does not rate well on
Google. I find this about Revelation 22:16 satisfies as a reference-point for
Mrs. Eddy’s use of it:
The Book of Revelation also uses the imagery of the “morning star” in reference to Jesus Christ. Revelation 22:16 states: “I, Jesus, have sent My angel to give you this testimony for the churches. I am the Root and Offspring of David, the bright Morning Star.” Here, Christ identifies Himself as the “bright Morning Star,” emphasizing His divine authority, eternal nature, and the hope He brings to the world. Bible Hub.
Joyce Voysey