Dec 18, 2013

The story behind "O Come All Ye Faithful"


This carol is generally attributed to John Wade, a British exile living in France after fleeing the Jacobean rebellion. He earned a living by teaching music and copying plain chant and hymn manuscripts for private use. Around 1741 Wade put the Latin text of "Adeste Fideles" to music and later included it in his 1751 publication of Cantus Diversi. There are conflicting theories that Wade wrote the original text of "Adeste Fideles" himself or took the words from an anonymous Latin Hymn, written by monks, possibly as early as the 13th century. The original 4 verses of the hymn were later extended to a total of 8, (the eighth verse is rarely sung), 3 of them probably by Abbe Etienne Jean Francois Borderies. It is thought that Abbe Borderies heard the hymn sung while exiled in England during the French Revolution and wrote the 3 additional stanzas after he returned to France in 1794. In 1853 the familiar English translation first appeared, attributed to the Reverend Frederick Oakeley.
 


Oakeley was ordained into the Church of England in 1828, switching to Roman Catholicism in 1845. He was appointed canon at Westminster Cathedral in 1852 and for many years he worked among the poor of Westminster. Small of stature, lame and short-sighted he did not look like a charismatic person, but his writings, charm and personality meant he exercised a wide influence. He is best remembered for his translation of "Adeste Fideles."
 


"O Come All Ye Faithful" is reputed to be the favorite Christmas carol of President Dwight D. Eisenhower and in its original form of "Adeste Fideles," President Thomas Jefferson.


The chant "Why Are We Waiting," which is generally sung by a frustrated gathering of people waiting for somebody to turn up is sung to the tune of "O Come All Ye Faithful."
 


According to Professor Bennett Zon, the head of the department of music at Durham University in England, John Wade's text of "Adeste Fideles" has "clear references" to Bonnie Prince Charlie. The 18th century prince was the grandson of England's last Catholic monarch, James II and in 1745 he led a rebellion intent on restoring the Catholic House of Stuart to the English throne. Professor Zon claimed in a BBC television program The Truth About Carols that there is far more to this carol than meets the eye. He argued: "Fideles is Faithful Catholic Jacobites. Bethlehem is a common Jacobite cipher for England, and Regem Angelorum is a well-known pun on Angelorum, angels, and Anglorum, English. The meaning of the Christmas carol is clear: 'Come and Behold Him, Born the King of Angels' really means, 'Come and Behold Him, Born the King of the English' - Bonnie Prince Charlie!"