As the Dew From Heaven Distilling – Sunday, July 17, 2022

Today, we begin our 94th year of continuous weekly broadcasting with an observation about the way each of those weekly broadcasts ends. For nearly all its history, Music & the Spoken Word has concluded with a signature theme, performed by the organist. The tune was written by Joseph J. Daynes, a tabernacle organist who began playing for the Choir when he was just 16 years old and accompanied the Choir for 33 years in the late 1800s.  

If you’ve listened to the broadcast before, you will recognize his reverent and exalting melody, titled “As the Dew from Heaven Distilling.” Less well-known, however, are the lyrics that go with it.  

Today, we begin our 94th year of continuous weekly broadcasting with an observation about the way each of those weekly broadcasts ends. For nearly all its history, Music & the Spoken Word has concluded with a signature theme, performed by the organist. The tune was written by Joseph J. Daynes, a tabernacle organist who began playing for the Choir when he was just 16 years old and accompanied the Choir for 33 years in the late 1800s.

If you’ve listened to the broadcast before, you will recognize his reverent and exalting melody, titled “As the Dew from Heaven Distilling.” Less well-known, however, are the lyrics that go with it.

They were written by Thomas Kelly, a 19th-century Irish preacher. But Kelly’s hymn text actually has much more ancient roots, reaching back to the biblical “song of Moses”:

“Give ear, O ye heavens, and I will speak; and hear, O earth, the words of my mouth. My doctrine shall drop as the rain, my speech shall distil as the dew” (Deuteronomy 32:1–2).

Historical records are not clear on why “As the Dew from Heaven Distilling” was chosen as the closing refrain for Music & the Spoken Word. Even so, the symbolism does feel appropriate. Dew from heaven can revive, nourish, and uplift. And yet, unlike the occasional heavy rainstorm, dew distills gently, peacefully, and consistently—morning after morning, year after year. This is our hope: to share with all the world God’s love, His hope, and His nourishing truth “as the dew from heaven distilling.”

So today, when the organist plays the closing theme, in addition to enjoying the beautiful music, you might also think about dew from heaven, its gentle influence on your soul, and these words written by Thomas Kelly so long ago:

As the dew from heav’n distilling
Gently on the grass descends
And revives it, thus fulfilling
What thy providence intends,

Let thy doctrine, Lord, so gracious,
Thus descending from above,
Blest by thee, prove efficacious
To fulfill thy work of love.[1]

[1] Hymns, no. 149.
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July 17, 2022
Broadcast Number 4,844

The Tabernacle Choir
Orchestra at Temple Square
Guest Performer – Shea Owens

Conductor
Mack Wilberg

Organist
Brian Mathias

Host
Lloyd Newell

Light Dawns on a Weary World
Mack Wilberg

I Feel My Savior’s Love
K. Newell Dayley; arr. Sam Cardon

Jesus Loves Me
William B. Bradbury; arr. Brian Mathias

There But for You Go I, from Brigadoon
Frederick Loewe; arr. Arthur Harris

As the Dew from Heaven Distilling
Joseph J. Daynes

As the Dew from Heaven Distilling
Joseph J. Daynes