Carols for the Season of Christmas (11) The Eleventh Day of Christmas, 4 January

We are drawing to the end of The Twelve Days of Christmas, and closer to the celebration of Epiphany, which takes place on 6 January. Traditionally, this special day commemorates the visit to Mary, Joseph, and Jesus, of “the three wise men” (or as one carol has it, the “three Kings” who came “a-sailing by”). But we are not quite there yet; it is only the eleventh of the twelve days. And so this is your cue, James Coombs: pipe away!!

I’ve already explored the part of the biblical story dealing with “the slaughter of the innocents” ordered by King Herod in posts earlier in this series. Today our attention turns to these characters who came “from the east”, following a star all the way to Bethlehem. To take our attention away from the cacophony of piping pipers, leaping lords, milking maids and mooing cows, along with a growing large assortment of birds, each contributing their own distinctive sounds into the musical melee, I offer two fairly contemporary pieces for Epiphany: first, a sonnet, and then, a carol.

The carol uses the story of the journey of the wise ones that is celebrated at Epiphany as the basis for considering our own journey of discipleship, following Jesus.  It is another gem from the pen of Shirley Erena Murray and, as always, her words suggest ways that we can connect into the story in our own time, two millennia later.

Wise men came journeying

Wise men came journeying, once, long ago,

       camel hooves swirling the sand dune and snow,

       gold in the saddlebag, myrrh in the jar,

incense to honor the Child of the star.

Wise are the travelers led to move on

       following signs where the Christ light has shone,

       facing the deserts and crossing the lines,

heeding no limits that culture defines.

Wise are each one of us looking for change,

       stargazer people, respecting the strange,

       inner and outer worlds open to light,

centered on seeing the real and the right.

Wise ones keep journeying all through their days

       bringing their gifts to the source of their praise,

       risking the Promise with all they hold dear,

seeking God’s peace at the door of the year.

http://www.hopepublishing.com/html/main.isx?sitesec=40.2.1.0&hymnID=2956

And here is a poem in classic sonnet form, by Arthur Shippee, a friend and fellow-student I met while studying in the USA four decades ago. He writes sonnets for various times of the ecclesial year; this one is for the current time.

A Scribe at Herod’s Court, the Magi Having Left

 The King rages — they’re gone off home, he’s heard.

That star puzzled, till foreign sages came

With reading they called fair — to us a word

Ill-starred and dark, obscure, a threatening claim.

 

So, worried Herod sought out guidance from

Us priests and scribes and shaped an answer shrewd:

“To Bethlehem!  And send for me to come.”

His plan awry, he’s in a violent mood.

 

Herod!  God bears with kings, as prophets knew.

Whate’er God’s plan, we do our work, keep whole

The Law, and offer sacrifices true,

Atoning for our sins of flesh and soul.

 

Yet, I’m perturbed, far more than I can say.

Shall all night’s lamps be doused at dawn of day?

Arthur Shippee, 2019, rev. 2021, 2023, 2024

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Author: John T Squires

My name is John Squires. I live in the Hunter Valley in rural New South Wales, on land which has been cared for since time immemorial by the Gringai people (one of the First Nations of the island continent now known as Australia). I have been an active participant in the Uniting Church in Australia (UCA) since it was formed in 1977, and was ordained as a Minister of the Word in this church in 1980. I have had the privilege to serve in rural, regional, and urban congregations and as a Presbytery Resource Minister and Intentional Interim Minister. For two decades I taught Biblical Studies at United Theological College at North Parramatta in Sydney, and more recently I was Director of Education and Formation and Principal of the Perth Theological Hall. I've studied the scriptures in depth; I hold a number of degrees, including a PhD in early Christian literature. I am committed to providing the best opportunities for education within the church, so that people can hold to “an informed faith”, which is how the UCA Basis of Union describes it. This blog is one contribution to that ongoing task.