Carols for the Season of Christmas (4) The Fourth Day of Christmas, 28 December

Today (in the Western Church) is designated as the Feast of the Holy Innocents. (It is celebrated tomorrow in the Eastern Church.) This festival day commemorates a tradition known as “the slaughter of the Innocents”,  reportedly ordered by King Herod. It’s a gruesome attachment to the story that is told in the Gospel of Matthew that begins, “now the birth of Jesus the Messiah took place in this way” (Matt 1:18). 

The tradition is that when Herod learnt of the birth of “the King of the Jews”, he feared that this king would pose a threat to his own rule (as a client king under the Roman Empire) over the Jewish people. Herod, it is said, ordered that all male children under two years of age should be killed, to ensure that this rival king was safely despatched (Matt 2:16). Jesus survived this because after visitors “from the east” came from the court of Herod to pay tribute to him (2:11), his parents were advised of the imminent pogrom by an angelic visitation (2:13).

“The Massacre of the Innocents,” an 1824 painting
by Léon Cogniet, held in the Musée des Beaux-Arts

The story is told only in Matthew’s Gospel. It is highly unlikely that the events reported by Matthew actually took place. First, his is the only account of such an event in any piece of literature from that time. An event with so many deaths would surely have been noted by other writers. It is true that Herod was a tyrannical ruler; but amongst the various accounts of his murderous deeds, there is nothing which correlates to the events reported in Matthew’s Gospel.

Second, the story is embedded in the opening section of the Gospel, which uses typical Jewish typology and scripture-fulfilment to present the story of Jesus as a re-enactment of the story of Moses. The author of Matthew’s Gospel, a follower of Jesus who had been raised as a faithful Jew, was especially partial in the opening chapters of his work  to quoting scripture and claiming that events that he reports “took place to fulfill what had been spoken by the Lord through the prophet” (1:22–23). 

The chief priests and scribes in the royal court, says this author, told Herod that Jesus had been born in Bethlehem, “for so it has been written by the prophet” (2:4–6); the flight into Egypt of Joseph, Mary, and their newborn child was “to fulfill what had been spoken by the Lord through the prophets (2:15); the slaughter of the children itself “fulfilled what had been spoken through the prophet Jeremiah” (2:17–18); and the return of the family some time later and their settling in Nazareth was “so that what had been spoken through the prophets might be fulfilled” (2:21–23). 

Aiding and abetting these notes of scripture fulfilment are other typical elements in the Jewish traditions of storytelling, namely, that the events as they take place are guided by the appearance of an angel in the dreams of Joseph (1:20–21; 2:13; 2:19) as well as direct guidance mediated by a dream of the visitors “from the east” (2:12) and again in a further dream of Joseph (2:22). The story that appears in Matt 1:18–2:23 would readily have been recognised by Jewish listeners as employing the typical elements and patterns of Jewish haggadic midrash.

See https://jwa.org/encyclopedia/article/midrash-and-aggadah-terminology

The book of Exodus also employed these elements and patterns. It opens in the time when “a new king arose over Egypt, who did not know Joseph” (Exod 1:8). This king, unnamed except for the designation of “Pharaoh”, feared the increasing numbers and growing power of the Israelites who been enslaved in Egypt for hundreds of years, determined that he would slow the rate of increase and lessen the power of the Israelites by decreeing, “every boy that is born to the Hebrews you shall throw into the Nile, but you shall let every girl live” (Exod 1:22). 

It is in this context that Moses is born; he is hidden “among the reeds on the bank of the river” (Exod 2:1–4), and then taken home by the daughter of Pharaoh (Exod 2:5–9), adopted by her, and raised as a member of the royal household (Exod 2:10). The origin of the child is revealed to the readers (but presumably not to the Pharaoh) by his being named Moses, because, as Pharaoh’s daughter said, “I drew him out of the water” (Exod 2:10b). 

The fact that a name conveys a deeper meaning has been found again and again in the traditional tales collated to form the narrative of Genesis: Adam reflects his creation “from the dust of the ground” (Gen 2:7), Eve’s name indicates that she is “the mother of all living” (3:20), Cain means “acquired” and is reflected in Eve’s comment that “I have produced [or acquired, qanah] a man with the help of the Lord” (4:1), and Abel is related to the Hebrew word for “emptiness” (havel). 

Abram’s name is changed to Abraham, which means “leader [ab] of multitudes [raham]”, to signal the covenantal promise of the Lord God that “I will make you exceedingly fruitful; and I will make nations of you, and kings shall come from you … for an everlasting covenant, to be God to you and to your offspring after you” (17:4–6).  The name of the aged, barren Sarai is changed to Sarah, meaning “she laughed” (17:15),  to signal her incredulous response to the news that she will bear a child (18:9–15). The name of Ishmael literally means “God listens” (16:11) and that of Jacob means “he who supplants” (25:24–26); after his all-night struggle with a man at the ford of Jabbok (32:22–24), his name was changed to Israel, meaning “the one who strives with God” (32:28). Names are deeply significant!

So Moses means “drawn from water”, and Jospeh is given the message that his son is to be given the name that signifies his role, Jesus: “for he will save his people from their sins” (Matt 1:21). And the ancient tale of the slaughter of infants at the time of the birth of Moses is replicated at many points in Matthew’s account of the slaughter of infants at the time of the birth of Jesus (Matt 2:1–18). This later account simply fits the pattern of the earlier account, as this chart shows:

The parallels are very clear!

And just as the literary structure of each story runs in the same pattern, so also the “historical” similarities are clear. Just as there is no historical evidence beyond Exodus to corroborate that the story of the pogrom at the time of Moses took place, neither is there evidence beyond the Gospel of Matthew to corroborate the account found there. Both patterns of events were stories, tales told, not history recorded.

But these non-historical stories are important for theological reasons. The Moses story is part of the whole Exodus complex that provides the fundamental explanation for the identity of Israel. The Jesus story as Matthew presents it is part of the foundational myth of the Christian faith. The writer of Matthew’s Gospel wants to make strong correlations between Jesus and Moses, as the two key figures in their respective stories—and religious systems. This starts in the mythological account found in the opening chapters, and continues throughout the following chapters of the Gospel.

As myth, the tradition found in Matt 1—2 points to important truths. The Slaughter of the Innocents grounds the story of Jesus in the historical, political, and cultural life of the day. It provides a dreadful realism to a story which, all too often in the developing Christian Tradition, has become etherealised, spiritualised, and romanticised.

So we remember this story as an important pointer to the counter-cultural, alternative-narrative impact of the person of Jesus. It is not history, but it offers a powerful myth.

A traditional hymn which remembers this tradition is the Coventry Carol. This dates from the 16th century, when it was performed in Coventry, England, as a part of a mystery play entitled The Pageant of the Shearman and Tailors.

The single surviving text of this pageant (including the words of this carol) was published by one Robert Croo, who dated his manuscript 14 March 1534. The carol is in the form of a lullaby, sung as a poignant remembrance by the mother of a child who is doomed to die in the pogrom.

Lully, lullay, thou little tiny child,

Bye bye, lully, lullay.

Lully, lullay, thou little tiny child,

Bye bye, lully, lullay.

O sisters too, how may we do

For to preserve this day

This poor youngling for whom we sing,

“Bye bye, lully, lullay”?

Herod the king, in his raging,

Charged he hath this day

His men of might in his own sight

All young children to slay.

That woe is me, poor child, for thee

And ever mourn and may

For thy parting neither say nor sing,

“Bye bye, lully, lullay.”

Carols for the Season of Christmas (3) The Third Day of Christmas, 27 December

For today, the Third Day of Christmas, following the church calendar, I offer a Christmas carol which originates in the 4th century. It was written by the Roman poet, Aurelius Prudentius Clemens. Prudentius was a Spanish layman, a lawyer who twice served as a provincial governor. He was also a government official in the court of the Roman Empire, and is remembered as one of the greatest Latin Christian poets. 

For the last period of his life (at least a decade, perhaps closer to two), Prudentius lived as an ascetic, fasting during daylight hours and eating only vegetarian meals. It was apparently during this period that he wrote many books and poems. Among these works was the Psychomachia, an allegorical treatment of “the conflict of the soul” (as illustrated).

Prudentius composed Corde natus ex Parentis, which was subsequently translated into English as “Of the Father’s love begotten”. The translator was John Mason Neale, whom we met yesterday. This hymn stands at the head of the section in Together in Song where we find the Christmas carols/hymns, so it is recognised as an ancient Christmas carol. 

Prudentius, situated strongly within the developing patristic theology, gives expression to the “highest” view of Jesus, as Alpha and fons (source, or origin) and Omega and clausula (ending, or culmination) of the whole creation, existing “evermore and evermore”. 

So the hymn resonates well with the developing credal tradition of the Nicea—Chalcedon-Constantinople stream. And so begins the long trek towards the transcendental, romantically-unrealistic, Christ of Christmas.

  1. Corde natus ex parentis ante mundi exordium

A et O cognominatus, ipse fons et clausula

Omnium quae sunt, fuerunt, quaeque post futura sunt.

2. Ipse iussit et creata, dixit ipse et facta sunt,

Terra, caelum, fossa ponti, trina rerum machina,

Quaeque in his vigent sub alto solis et lunae globo.

3. Corporis formam caduci, membra morti obnoxia

Induit, ne gens periret primoplasti ex germine,

Merserat quem lex profundo noxialis tartaro.

4. O beatus ortus ille, virgo cum puerpera

Edidit nostram salutem, feta Sancto Spiritu,

Et puer redemptor orbis os sacratum protulit.

5. Psallat altitudo caeli, psallite omnes angeli,

Quidquid est virtutis usquam psallat in laudem Dei,

Nulla linguarum silescat, vox et omnis consonet.

6. Ecce, quem vates vetustis concinebant saeculis,

Quem prophetarum fideles paginae spoponderant,

Emicat promissus olim; cuncta conlaudent eum.

7. Macte iudex mortuorum, macte rex viventium,

Dexter in Parentis arce qui cluis virtutibus,

Omnium venturus inde iustus ultor criminum.

8. Te senes et te iuventus, parvulorum te chorus,

Turba matrum, virginumque, simplices puellulae,

Voce concordes pudicis perstrepant concentibus.

9. Tibi, Christe, sit cum Patre hagioque Pneumate

Hymnus, decus, laus perennis, gratiarum actio,

Honor, virtus, victoria, regnum aeternaliter.

The English translation:

(1) Of the Father’s love begotten

Ere the worlds began to be,

He is Alpha and Omega,

He the Source, the Ending He,

Of the things that are, that have been,

And that future years shall see

Evermore and evermore.

(2) Oh, that birth forever blessed

When the Virgin, full of grace,

By the Holy Ghost conceiving,

Bare the Savior of our race,

And the Babe, the world’s Redeemer,

First revealed His sacred face

Evermore and evermore.

(3) O ye heights of heaven, adore Him;

Angel hosts, His praises sing;

Powers, dominions, bow before Him

And extol our God and King.

Let no tongue on earth be silent,

Every voice in concert ring

Evermore and evermore.

(4) This is He whom Heaven-taught singers

Sang of old with one accord;

Whom the Scriptures of the prophets

Promised in their faithful word.

Now He shines, the Long-expected;

Let creation praise its Lord

Evermore and evermore.

(5) Christ, to Thee, with God the Father,

And, O Holy Ghost, to Thee

Hymn and chant and high thanksgiving

And unending praises be,

Honor, glory, and dominion,

And eternal victory

Evermore and evermore.

http://etymologyofhymns.blogspot.com.au/2012/12/of-fathers-love-begotten.html

Carols for the Season of Christmas (1) The First Day of Christmas, 25 December

Today, Christmas Day, is the first day in the season of Christmas. The First Day of Christmas, according to a well-known Christmas song, is to be celebrated with the gift of a partridge in a pear tree, is it not? Subsequent days, we learn from that song, should be celebrated with the gifts of assorted birds, five golden rings, and an assortment of drummers, leaping lords, milkmaids, and more!

For each of The Twelve Days in the ecclesial Season of Christmas, however, I will be thinking about various carols. We most likely have had our fill,of all the traditional carols and songs associated with Christmas in the lead-up to the actual day of Christmas; so I will be offering thoughts on carols, mostly lesser-known or unknown in the modern period, that are appropriate for the Season.

For today, I offer the words of a hymn (a very early Christmas carol) composed in Latin and attributed to the fourth century doctor of the church, Hilary, the Bishop of Poitiers. Hilary was sometimes referred to as the “Hammer of the Arians” (Malleus Arianorum) because of his active role in opposing Arian theology in Gaul, and also as the “Athanasius of the West”.

The carol Jesus refulsit omnium (“Jesus illuminates all”) is dated to 368.  The words in Latin are:

Jesus refulsit omnium
Pius redemptor gentium
Totum genus fidelium
Laudes celebret dramatum

Quem stella natum fulgida
Monstrat micans per authera
Magosque duxit praevia
Ipsius ad cunabula

Illi cadentes parvulum
Pannis adorant obsitum
Verum fatentur ut Deum
Munus ferendo mysticum.

The English Translation below is by Kevin Hawthorne, PhD

Jesus, devoted redeemer of all nations, has shone forth. / Let the whole family of the faithful celebrate the stories. / The shining star, gleaming in the heavens, / makes him known at his birth and, going before, has led the Magi to his cradle. / Falling down, they adore the tiny baby hidden in rags, / as they bear witness to the true God by bringing a mystical gift.

See http://archive.wf-f.org/Hymns-carols.html

Standing4Lyne in 2025

Elizabeth and I have had an interesting sequence of experiences over the past six months. It all began some months after we had moved to Dungog, late last year, and settled in to the community here. In about May we were invited to attend a gathering of people who had interest in exploring what it might look like to start a “Voices for Lyne” group locally. This would be a group of people from the community in and around Dungog who would be happy to support an Independent candidate in the upcoming federal election.

Lyne is the federal electorate that we live in. It stretches from the northern suburbs of Maitland on the banks of the Hunter River, to the southern suburbs of Port Macquarie near the Hastings River. It includes significant urban areas on the coast—Taree, Forster, and Tuncurry—as well as a string of smaller coastal towns and villages. There are also some key rural hubs inland—Wauchope, Gloucester, and Dungog—as well many other smaller towns and villages in the hinterlands, and widely dispersed farmland areas through many river valleys. It is a diverse region with wonderful scenery along the coastline as well in the mountain areas inland. It has many natural features that attract visitors throughout the year.

Since it was established in 1949, the seat of Lyne has had only six members: five Nationals and one Independent. It was long regarded as a National Party stronghold. The one Independent member was Rob Oakeshott, whom we got to know and respect while we lived in Wauchope from 2011 onwards. Rob was an excellent local member, highly attuned to representing the needs and concerns of his electorate, and right over a wide range of policy areas. By contrast, the various National Party members elected by Lyne over the decades have—quite predictably—been more concerned to vote according to the party line, and so the electorate has suffered a degree of neglect as they have each prosecuted the ideological wars of the Coalition.

We were two of a dozen people at that meeting in May, to talk about forming a “Voices for Lyne”. A month after that, an organisation called Independent Lyne was formed, and Elizabeth and I both committed to working with other folks on an organising committee. The committee has met every two or three weeks since early June. (Guess who is the secretary, diligently taking minutes of each of those meetings …)

We have established a website, invited people to complete an online survey about their hopes and needs, appointed a number of Local Leaders (Elizabeth took on that role for Dungog), held kitchen table conversations, had stalls at local markets, and generally “talked up” the benefits of having a federal representative who is Independent and not bound to party policy—someone willing to consider each issue on its merits, consult with the people whom they represent, and commit to integrity and transparency in their decision-making.

See https://www.independentlyne.org

We called for expressions of interest from local people; a small committee did the hard work of sifting and sorting those applications, then the Organising Committee was expanded with other interested community members to form a Community Panel to listen to those shortlisted. Emerging from this, we identified the best person to be our candidate, to stand as a community-backed Independent in the seat of Lyne at the 2025 federal election. And so Independent Lyne has given birth to Standing4Lyne.

At the same time, the incumbent local member announced his retirement, after 11 predictable years in the position, and the National Party announced their new candidate. It was no surprise that the new candidate was his chief policy advisor—a clear case of keeping the party machine hegemony rolling over. Just a week after this announcement, Independent Lyne announced support for our community-backed Independent candidate.

Our candidate who is Standing4Lyne is Jeremy Miller, who is well-known in the Greater Taree area as an energetic small business owner, and throughout the Mid Coast Council area as the Deputy Mayor of Council. “I’ve always looked for practical ways to make things better—whether that’s running local events, managing the Manning Entertainment Centre, or serving on Council”, Jeremy said. “I’m married to a local teacher, we’ve raised three kids here, and there’s nowhere else we’d rather be”.

You can read more at https://www.jeremy4lyne.com.au

Standing4Lyne is part of the Community Independents Project (CIP) that has grown exponentially across the country in the last few years. This project supports groups like Standing4Lyne that are putting forward community-backed Independents as candidates in the next election. Standing4Lyne people have participated in the training and resourcing that CIP provides. It has given us a base for working towards the election.

The Community Independent candidates that are emerging are committed to genuinely representing their community, reflecting the values and views of their electorates. They each have developed a ‘compact’ with their community that guides their actions and they seek to empower their communities through collaborating and partnering with them. This movement is at the vanguard of real political change in Australia. See more at https://www.communityindependentsproject.org

I can affirm from my personal knowledge of Jeremy that he is personable, intelligent, enthusiastic, and committed. He has travelled to many places across the electorate in recent years, met with many people, and listened to their concerns. In my experience he is always respectful in his interactions with others. He would bring the same freshness to politics that we have seen in a number of the Independents now in the Federal Parliament.

Jeremy stresses he’s not “joining the Teals” if he’s elected. He is and will remain a genuine community-backed Independent, taking the issues that most concern Lyne voters, guided by their suggestions, ensuring that he is always transparent to voters in his thinking and how he plans to implement them. He plans to work as a truly Independent regional member like Helen Haines in Indi. 

Jeremy knows that for a truly Independent member of Parliament, “every vote is a conscience vote, so I will consult with community about issues before the parliament and be accountable to the electorate for my decisions”.

“My record will be transparent to everyone”, he assures; “I will be visible across the communities of Lyne throughout the three years, I will always be open to chatting with people and listening carefully, and I hope to be a strong and positive ambassador for Lyne”.

He maintains that he will “work constructively with whoever’s in government to get things done for our region, while maintaining my independence to fight for our community’s interests. After 30 years of bringing people together locally to get results, that’s exactly what I’ll do in Canberra.”

So this past weekend we gathered in Forster with a group of a dozen people from across the electorate to focus on what we need to do to plan the campaign. It was an energising and inspiring day—although to be honest, what lies ahead looks utterly daunting! The day finished with photos by the river, as we showed our enthusiastic support for Jeremy. In January, we begin the campaign proper. It looks like it will be a fascinating experience! 

 

Good news to the oppressed, liberty to the captives: a message of hope (Isaiah 61; Narrative Lectionary for Advent 3C)

For this coming Sunday, the Narrative Lectionary is offering a very familiar passage from Third Isaiah, that part of the long book of Isaiah that is usually dated to a time when the exiles were returning from Babylon and re-establishing life in Jerusalem and the surrounding area. The passage (Isa 61:1–11) is best known within Christianity as providing the key elements for the manifesto that Jesus—at least in Luke’s Gospel—sets out to follow. 

Luke reports that Jesus quotes the opening verse of this oracle when he attends the synagogue in his hometown of Nazareth and was invited to read from the scroll of Isaiah (Luke 4:16–20). Most famously, Luke places the opening verse of the prophet on the lips of Jesus, and the first line of verse 2—but then stops short of quoting what follows, regarding “the day of vengeance of our God” and the mourning that will be associated with the mixed emotions of returning to a devastated city and engaging in the rebuilding programme: “they shall build up the ancient ruins, they shall raise up the former devastations; they shall repair the ruined cities, the devastations of many generations” (Isa 61:4).

The passage offered by the lectionary needs to be seen, primarily, within the context in which it was first spoken. The third section of the book of Isaiah (chapters 56–66) has begun with a familiar prophetic announcement: “maintain justice, and do what is right, for soon my salvation will come, and my deliverance be revealed” (Isa 56:1). As the people of Judah were returning to their land, to the city of Jerusalem (from the 520s BCE), the book sets out what this justice will look like through a series of powerful oracles.

The prophet sounds a vivid counter-cultural note in the midst of the events of his time. He begins with the promise to foreigners and eunuchs that “I will give, in my house and within my walls, a monument and a name better than sons and daughters; I will give them an everlasting name that shall not be cut off” (Isa 56:5). This is a striking contrast to the narrative provided in the books of Ezra and Nehemiah, which tell of the return to the city, the rebuilding of the walls, the renewal of the covenant and the public reading of the Law, the rededication of the Temple—and actions designed to remove foreigners (especially women) from within Israel (see Ezra 10; Neh 13). 

Ezra and Nehemiah exhibited a zealous fervour to restore the Law to its central place in the life of Israel. Ezra, learning that “the holy seed has mixed itself with the peoples of the lands” (Ezra 9:2), worked with “the elders and judges of every town” to determine who had married foreign women; the men identified “pledged themselves to send away their wives, and their guilt offering was a ram of the flock for their guilt” (Ezra 10:19). (So much for the importance of families!)

 Nehemiah considered that this project to “cleanse [the people] from everything foreign” (Neh 13:30) was in adherence to the command that “no Ammonite or Moabite should ever enter the assembly of God, because they did not meet the Israelites with bread and water, but hired Balaam against them to curse them” (Neh 13:1–2; see Num 22—24). The restoration of Israel as a holy nation meant that foreigners would be barred from the nation.

The oracle at the start of the third section of Isaiah stands in direct opposition to this point of view; “the foreigners who join themselves to the Lord … and hold fast my covenant—these I will bring to my holy mountain, and make them joyful in my house of prayer; their burnt offerings and their sacrifices will be accepted on my altar; for my house shall be called a house of prayer for all peoples” (Isa 56:6–7). 

Jesus, of course, quoted this last phrase in the action he undertook in the outer court of the Temple (Mark 11:17). Later, the welcome offered to the Ethiopian court official by Philip, who talked with him about scripture and baptised him, a eunuch (Acts 8:26–38), is consistent with the prophetic words, “to the eunuchs who keep my sabbaths, who choose the things that please me and hold fast my covenant, I will give them an everlasting name that shall not be cut off” (Isa 56:4–5). (From the earliest days, the church practised an inclusive welcoming of diversity that was consistent with this prophetic declaration.)

Other words in this last section of Isaiah also resonate strongly with texts in the New Testament. The ingathering of the outcasts (56:8) and the flocking of all the nations to Zion (60:1–18) together are reflected in the prediction of Jesus that “this good news of the kingdom will be proclaimed throughout the world, as a testimony to all the nations; and then the end will come” (Matt 24:14). 

The statement that those coming from Sheba “shall bring gold and frankincense, and shall proclaim the praise of the Lord” (60:6) most likely informed the story that Matthew created, concerning the wise ones from the east who came to see the infant Jesus and “offered him gifts of gold, frankincense, and myrrh” (Matt 2:11).

Further oracles set out exactly what the justice that God desires (56:1; 61:8) looks like. The extensive worship of idols (57:1–13) will bring God’s wrath on the people; “there is no peace, says my God, for the wicked” (57:13). Rather, “the high and lofty one who inhabits eternity, whose name is Holy” chooses “to revive the spirit of the humble and to revive the heart of the contrite” (57:15). 

Because God indicates that “I will not continually accuse, nor will I always be angry” (57:16), the prophet conveys what the Lord sees as the fast that is required; not a fast when “you serve your own interest on your fast day, and oppress all your workers” (58:3), but rather, a fast “to loose the bonds of injustice, to undo the thongs of the yoke, to let the oppressed go free, and to break every yoke … to share your bread with the hungry, and bring the homeless poor into your house; when you see the naked, to cover them, and not to hide yourself from your own kin” (58:6–7). These words resonate with the actions of “the righteous” in the well-known parable of Jesus, as they gave food, water, a welcome, clothing, and care to those sick or imprisoned (Matt 25:31–46).

The prophet laments that “there is no justice … justice is far from us … we wait for justice, but there is none … justice is turned back … the Lord saw it, and it displeased him” (59:8–15); he declares that, as a consequence, God “put on righteousness like a breastplate, and a helmet of salvation on his head; he put on garments of vengeance for clothing, and wrapped himself in fury as in a mantle” (59:17)—a description that underlines the later exhortations to the followers of Jesus to “put on the whole armour of God, so that you may be able to stand against the wiles of the devil” (Eph 6:10–17).

Because the Lord “loves justice” (61:8), the prophet has been anointed “to bring good news to the oppressed, to bind up the brokenhearted, to proclaim liberty to the captives, and release to the prisoners; to proclaim the year of the Lord’s favour, and the day of vengeance of our God” (61:1–2)—words which are appropriated by Jesus when he visits his hometown and reads from the scroll of Isaiah (Luke 4:18–19); “today this scripture has been fulfilled in your hearing”, Jesus declares (Luke 4:21).

Adhering to this way of justice, practising the fast that the Lord desires, means that he will give Israel a new name: “you shall no more be termed Forsaken, and your land shall no more be termed Desolate; but you shall be called My Delight Is in Her, and your land Married; for the Lord delights in you, and your land shall be married” (Isa 62:4). We have already seen the symbolic significance of names in considering the prophet Hosea and in Isaiah 8.

By contrast, vengeance will be the experience of Edom; using the image of trampling down the grapes in the wine press, the prophet reports the intention of God: “I trampled down peoples in my anger, I crushed them in my wrath, and I poured out their lifeblood on the earth” (63:1–6). So vigorously does God undertake this task, that he is attired in “garments stained crimson” because “their juice spattered on my garments and stained all my robes” (63:1–3). Once again, the prophet speaks in graphic terms.

Confronted with this display of wrath and vengeance, the prophet adopts an attitude of penitence, yearning for God to “look down from heaven and see, from your holy and glorious habitation” (63:15). His plea for the Lord to “tear open the heavens and come down, so that the mountains would quake at your presence—to make your name known to your adversaries, so that the nations might tremble at your presence!” (64:1–2) must surely have been in the mind of the evangelists as the reported the baptism of Jesus, when he “saw the heavens torn apart and the Spirit descending like a dove on him” (Mark 1:10).

The book ends with a sequence in which the prophet reports the words of the Lord which indicate that Israel will be restored (65:1–16), followed by the statement that the Lord is “about to create new heavens and a new earth” (65:17–25; 66:22–23).

This vision is taken up and expanded in the closing chapters of the final book of the New Testament (Rev 21:1–22:7). The closing vision of Trito-Isaiah incorporates a number of references to earlier prophetic words: building houses and planting vineyards (65:21) recalls the words of Jeremiah (Jer 29:5–7); the image of wolves lying with lambs and lions “eating straw like the ox” recalls the vision of Isaiah (Isa 11:6–7). 

The promise that “they shall not hurt or destroy all on my holy mountain” (65:25) recalls that same vision of Isaiah (Isa 11:9), whilst the next promise about not labouring in vain nor bearing children for calamity (65:23) reverses the curse of Gen 3:16–19. The story of creation from the beginning of Genesis is evoked when the Lord asserts that “heaven is my throne and the earth is my footstool … all these things my hand has made” (66:1–2); these are the words which Stephen will quote back to the council in Jerusalem (Acts 7:48–50) and will lead to his death at their hands.

Even to the very end of this book, the judgement of the Lord is evident; the prophet declares that “the Lord will come in fire, and his chariots like the whirlwind, to pay back his anger in fury, and his rebuke in flames of fire; for by fire will the Lord execute judgment, and by his sword, on all flesh; and those slain by the Lord shall be many” (66:15–16). 

Nevertheless, the glory of the Lord shall be declared “among the nations” (66:19) and “they shall bring all your kindred from all the nations as an offering to the Lord” (66:20). The universalising inclusivism that was sounded at the start of this prophet’s work is maintained through into this closing oracle. In “the new heavens and the new earth which I will make … all flesh shall come to worship before me, says the Lord” (66:22–23). The vision lives strong!

“Psalms from my seventies … and other stuff”

Retired Uniting Church minister Janet Dawson, friend and colleague, has just had a book of poems published by Coventry Press: Psalms from my seventies … and other stuff.

It’s a book filled with honesty. Janet lives as she writes; in this book, she exemplifies a deep spirituality grounded in the ordinariness of life.

There are prayers about the closed blinds … sharing communion with a lizard … shedding tears in the fragility of life … reflecting on how hard it is to let go, especially to let a go a life partner who is changing before her eyes. There is no pretence, no puffed-up terminology, no pious hope in these prayers; they are everyday, grounded in the ordinary—and thus, so profound.

Janet especially grapples with her uncomfortableness—her sense of alienation—in the regular weekly routines of worship. Can there be a theology that offers something better than unthinking platitudes and unacceptable dogmas? So Janet seeks to offer precisely this in her prayers.

She celebrates the music that has been “a joy and treasure all my life”, remembers “those who can’t rejoice”, questions “what did Jesus think he was doing?”, imagines people as “beautiful round objects with so many exciting possibilities”. One prayer offers images of God as “Quantum God, Eternal Becoming, Infinite Possibility, Ultimate Consciousness”, another rejoices as she leaves behind “the boat” of the church and immerses herself in “the Ocean” of the divine.

And to close: a short, punchy drama about God in the ordinariness of life. I recommend this book as a fine resource!

https://coventrypress.com.au/Bookstore/Psalms%20from%20my%20Seventies