68. Veiled in darkness Judah lay
Douglas LeTell Rights, 1891—
Written in 1915, while World War I was raging in Europe and the clouds were gathering thick over the United States. The hymn is an appeal for the Spirit of Christ to bring peace and light to a troubled world. It was composed while the author, a Moravian, was a student at the Divinity School of Harvard University. It was the custom at that institution to have students of the School submit original compositions of hymns, one of which would be selected to be sung at the annual Christmas service of the school. This hymn was selected for the Christmas of 1915.
Douglas LeTell Rights, born in Winston-Salem, N. C., received his A. B. degree from the University of North Carolina and then prepared for the ministry at the Moravian Theological Seminary, Bethlehem, Pa., and at Harvard University. A member of the Moravian Church, anciently called the Unitas Fratrum, his first pastorate was at the First Moravian Church, Greensboro, N. C., 1916-18. In 1918-19, he was chaplain in the army in World War I. Since 1919, he has been pastor of Trinity Moravian Church, Winston-Salem, N. C. Rights is the author of A Voyage Down the Yadkin-Great Peedee River, 1928, and has written numerous articles on historical and archaeological subjects pertaining to his native state. His latest book is the American Indian in North Carolina.
MUSIC. EBELING. For comments on the composer of this tune, Johann Georg Ebeling, 1620-76, see [Hymn 555].