Sunday, December 17, 2023

Advent is Fulfilled

24 December is the last day of Advent and the day to which the Great O Antiphons have been pointing.


Each antiphon has addressed the coming Christ by a different title and begged Him to come and help His people:
    December 17: O Sapientia (O Wisdom)
    December 18: O Adonai (O Lord)
    December 19: O Radix Jesse (O Root of Jesse)
    December 20: O Clavis David (O Key of David)
    December 21: O Oriens (O Dayspring)
    December 22: O Rex Gentium (O King of the Nations)
    December 23: O Emmanuel (O With Us is God)

Those names form a reverse acrostic containing his answer, which is not unlike the answer he gives at the conclusion of Christian Scriptures.

    Sapientia
    Adonai
    Radix Jesse
    Clavis David
    Oriens
    Rex Gentium
    Emmanuel

SARCORE <——> Ero cras (I will be [with you] tomorrow.)

The Church begs Him to come; He replies that His coming is imminent. Tomorrow, 25 December, is the first day of Christmas.

“The Spirit and the Bride say, ‘come!’…. The One Who testifies says, ‘indeed, I am coming quickly.’ Even so, come, Lord Jesus.

“The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ be with you all. Amen.”

O Emmanuel

23 December is the seventh and last day of the Great O Antiphons:


O Emmanuel (chant with neumes)

O Emmanuel, Rex et legifer noster,

exspectatio Gentium, et Salvator earum:

veni ad salvandum nos, Domine, Deus noster. 


Literally:

   O Emmanuel, our King and lawgiver.

   longing of nations and their Savior,

   come to save us, Lord our God.


in the Household Book of Blessings and Prayers:

   O Emmanuel, our King and Giver of the Law:

   come to save us, Lord our God!


in “Veni Emmanuel”:

   Veni, veni Emmanuel!

   Captivum solve Israel!

   Qui gemit in exilio,

   Privatus Dei Filio.

   Gaude, gaude, Emmanuel

   nascetur pro te, Israel.


in “O Come, O Come Emmanuel”:

   O come, O come, Emmanuel,

   And ransom captive Israel,

   That mourns in lonely exile here,

   Until the Son of God appear.

   Rejoice! Rejoice! Emmanuel

   Shall come to thee, O Israel.

O Rex Gentium

 22 December is the sixth day of the Great #OAntiphons:


O Rex Gentium (chant with neumes)

O Rex Gentium, et desideratus earum,

lapisque angularis, qui facis utraque unum:

veni, et salva hominem,

quem de limo formasti. 


Literally:

   O King of the nations, and their desire,

   and cornerstone who make each [into] one,

   come, and save humanity

   whom you have fashioned from mud.


in the Household Book of Blessings and Prayers:

   O King of all nations and keystone of the Church:

   come and save man, whom you formed from the dust!


in “Veni Emmanuel”:

   Veni, Veni, Rex Gentium,

   Veni, Redemptor omnium,

   Ut salves tuos famulos

   Peccati sibi conscios.

   Gaude, gaude, Emmanuel

   nascetur pro te, Israel.


in “O Come, O Come Emmanuel”:

   O come, Desire of nations, bind

   All peoples in one heart and mind;

   Bid envy, strife and quarrels cease;

   Fill the whole world with heaven’s peace.

   Rejoice! Rejoice! Emmanuel

   Shall come to thee, O Israel.

O Oriens

 21 December is the fifth day of the Great O Antiphons:


O Oriens (chant with neumes)

O Oriens,

splendor lucis aeternae, et sol justitiae:

veni, et illumina sedentes in tenebris, et umbra mortis.


Literally:

   O Rising Sun,

   splendor of eternal light and sun of justice,

   come, and illuminate those sitting in gloom and the shadow of death.


in the Household Book of Blessings and Prayers:

   O Radiant Dawn,

   splendor of eternal light and sun of justice:

   come and shine on those who dwell in darkness and in the shadow of death!


in “Veni Emmanuel”:

   Veni, veni o oriens!

   Solare nos adveniens,

   Noctis depelle nebulas,

   Dirasque noctis tenebras.

   Gaude, gaude, Emmanuel

   nascetur pro te, Israel.


in “O Come, O Come Emmanuel”:

   O come, Thou Dayspring, from on high,

   And cheer us by Thy drawing nigh;

   Disperse the gloomy clouds of night,

   And death’s dark shadows put to flight.

   Rejoice! Rejoice! Emmanuel

   Shall come to thee, O Israel.

O Clavis David

 20 December is the fourth day of the Great  #OAntiphons:


O Clavis David (chant with neumes)

O Clavis David, et sceptrum domus Israel;

qui aperis, et nemo claudit;

claudis, et nemo aperit:

veni, et educ vinctum de domo carceris,

sedentem in tenebris, et umbra mortis. 


Literally:

   O Key of David and scepter of the house of Israel,

   you who open and no one closes

   who close and no one opens,

   come, and lead the bound one from the prison house,

   the one sitting in gloom and the shadow of death.


in the Household Book of Blessings and Prayers:

   O Key of David,

   opening the gates of God’s eternal Kingdom:

   come and free the prisoners of darkness!


in “Veni Emmanuel”:

   Veni clavis Davidica!

   Regna reclude coelica,

   Fac iter Tutum superum,

   Et claude vias Inferum.

   Gaude, gaude, Emmanuel

   nascetur pro te, Israel.


in “O Come, O Come Emmanuel”:

   O come, Thou Key of David, come

   And open wide our heav’nly home;

   Make safe the way that leads on high,

   And close the path to misery.

   Rejoice! Rejoice! Emmanuel

   Shall come to thee, O Israel.

O Radix Iesse

19 December is the third day of the Great O Antiphons:


O Radix Iesse (chant with neumes)

O Radix Jesse, qui stas in signum populorum,

super quem continebunt reges os suum,

quem Gentes deprecabuntur:

veni ad liberandum nos, jam noli tardare.


Literally:

   O Root of Jesse, who stand as the peoples’ sign,

   because of whom kings hold their tongue,

   to whom the Nations pray,

   come to set us free; do not now delay.


in the Household Book of Blessings and Prayers:

   O Root of Jesse’s stem,

   sign of God’s love for all His people:

   come to save us without delay!


in “Veni Emmanuel”:

   Veni o Jesse virgula!

   Ex hostis tuos ungula,

   De specu tuos tartari

   Educ, et antro barathri.

   Gaude, gaude, Emmanuel

   nascetur pro te, Israel.


in “O Come, O Come Emmanuel”:

   O come, Thou Rod of Jesse, free

   Thine own from Satan’s tyranny;

   From depths of hell Thy people save,

   And give them victory o’er the grave.

   Rejoice! Rejoice! Emmanuel

   Shall come to thee, O Israel. 

O Adonai

18 December is the second day of the Great O Antiphons


O Adonai (chant with neumes)

O Adonai, et Dux domus Israel,

qui Moysi in igne flammae rubi apparuisti,

et ei in Sina legem dedisti:

veni ad redimendum nos in brachio extento.


Literally:

   O Adonai, and ruler of the House of Israel,

   who appeared to Moses in the fire of the burning bush

   and gave him the law on Sinai,

   come to redeem us with outstretched arm.


in the Household Book of Blessings and Prayers:

   O Leader of the House of Israel,

   giver of the Law to Moses on Sinai:

   come to rescue us with your mighty power!


in “Veni Emmanuel”:

   Veni, veni Adonai!

   Qui populo in Sinai

   Legem dedisti vertice,

   In maiestate gloriae.

   Gaude, gaude, Emmanuel

   nascetur pro te, Israel.


in “O Come, O Come Emmanuel”:

   O come, Adonai, Lord of might,

   Who to Thy tribes, on Sinai’s height,

   In ancient times didst give the law

   In cloud and majesty and awe.

   Rejoice! Rejoice! Emmanuel

   Shall come to thee, O Israel.

O Sapientia

 17 December is the first day of the Great O Antiphons:


O Sapientia (chant with neumes)

O Sapientia, quae ex ore Altissimi prodiisti,

attingens a fine usque ad finem,

fortiter suaviterque disponens omnia:

veni ad docendum nos viam prudentiae.


Literally:

   O Wisdom, who have gone forth from the mouth of the Most High

   touching from end all the way to end

   mightily and sweetly ordering all things,

   come to teach us the way of prudence.


in the Household Book of Blessings and Prayers:

   O Wisdom of our God Most High

   guiding creation with power and love:

   come to teach us the path of knowledge!


in “Veni Emmanuel”:

   Veni, O Sapientia,

   Quae hic disponis omnia,

   Veni, viam prudentiae

   Ut doceas et gloriae.

   Gaude, gaude, Emmanuel

   nascetur pro te, Israel.


in “O Come, O Come Emmanuel”:

   O come, Thou Wisdom from on high,

   And order all things, far and nigh;

   To us the path of knowledge show,

   And cause us in her ways to go.

   Rejoice! Rejoice! Emmanuel

   Shall come to thee, O Israel.

Friday, January 13, 2023

Lost my Cherry to Reagan

This one was originally written in the first days of November, 1996, and posted to the OOG list. It has since been posted various places on the internet over the years (a Xoom page, a Facebook note, &c), but those places have all disappeared. So now it is being posted here. I still agree with most of this.


Lost My Cherry to Reagan


“Because the Church is pledged to the Kingdom proclaimed by Jesus, it must maintain a critical distance from all kingdoms of the world, whether actual or proposed.  Christians betray their Lord if, in theory or in practice, they equate the Kingdom of God with any political, social, or economic order of this passing time.  At best, such orders permit the proclamation of the Gospel of the Kingdom and approximate, in small part, the freedom, peace, and justice for which we hope.  At worst, such orders attempt to suppress the good news of the Kingdom and oppress human beings who are the object of divine love and promise.”  --“Christianity and Democracy,” Institute on Religion and Democracy, 1981

    

    This quote comes near the beginning of its document.  There are things in the article with which I do not agree, and some clarifications that need to be made, for instance the distinction between Communism and Totalitarianism (neither of which I can embrace in this fallen world).  But when the article first came out, a few months after I graduated from a large high school in an extremely conservative Texas suburb, I would have agreed with far less of it.  In those days I could not have understood how any Christian could not be a Republican, let alone how a Christian could choose to be a Democrat.  Now I wonder, along with the article (reprinted in the October issue of First Things), how a Christian can claim, on exclusively religious grounds, to belong to any party.


    In my high school days I was an unapologetically hard-right fundamentalist.  By my sophomore year, I had already received special permission to take some evening continuing education courses at Dallas Theological Seminary, an institution whose theology struck me, at the time, as leaning a bit to the liberal side.  I had purged my music collection of anything not specifically written to glorify God.  I had even taken the extra step of cleansing my collection of Christian rock on the bases that 1) many of my coreligionists who believed that rock and roll could not in any way glorify God were caused grief by my enjoyment of such pagan rhythms and 2) according to Romans 14  and 1 Corinthians 8 (the “meat offered to idols” passages) I was required, as the stronger brother, to give up what causes my weaker brothers to sin.  I was a bona fide, washed-in-the-blood, Bible-thumping, fightin’ fundy.  So it was only natural that, as I morally approached my majority at the close of the seventies, I actively campaigned for the stand-tough, on-God’s-side candidate of Fallwell’s choice, Ronald Wilson Reagan (despite the ominous fact that his three names have six letters each).  In fact, I campaigned so diligently that, at barely more than eighteen years of age, I was asked to be my precinct’s Republican Party chairman.


    Time passed.  On the music front, I heard Jimmy Swaggart (whose own music had been condemned as honky-tonk-Satanic by an earlier generation of conservative brethren) condemn the evils of Christian rock and the opulent life-styles of its performers.  He mentioned one of the hardest-rocking groups of those days, Resurrection Band, by name.  I happened to know that these people live in one of the few successful communes of the Jesus Movement, a commune that still works and ministers in the toughest part of Chicago; a commune where the members live in poverty by choice, using their limited resources to help those living in even greater poverty, both physical and spiritual; a commune from whose clearly-reasoned and well-documented periodical, Cornerstone, I had, as a young man, first heard of Roe-v-Wade and apartheid.  I also happened to know, thanks to photo essay in Life magazine, that Swaggart himself lived in a mansion of baronial proportions, and none of the rooms were being used to house the poor.  (Of course, we would all later learn that Swaggart had a problem keeping, in the words of the Church Lady, Little Jimmy in his pulpit.)  My music selection began to grow again.


    On the political front, changes also began to happen.  I worked as an independent contractor through much of the Reagan administration.  I was a small businessman, one of those described by the Gipper as “the backbone of America”; it felt to me like America was trying to break its own back.  But we prayed, read our Bibles, and ate our government surplus cheese and butter with humble thanks.  Then came Iran-Contra.

    Now, for those of you who have forgotten, let me remind you of a little crisis that helped propel Reagan forward in the 1980 polls: the Iran hostage crisis.  A small Texan with large ears and an even larger business had mounted a daring commando raid and gotten his own people out.  President Carter crashed helicopters in a failed attempt called “the Debacle in the Desert.”  Bumper stickers asked “Ross Perot, where are you when we need you?” and another macho hombre, who had greeted a younger America from Death Valley every week and had forced some sort of conservative order on the Babylon of California, shot forward in the polls; Reagan would know how to deal with those God-less ragheads.  People talked openly and longingly of turning vast stretches of desert into nuclear pools of glass; the slaughter of anonymous thousands was a source of grim humor.

    Later I would learn that America had decided to sell weapons to these same desert dwellers; in the name of fighting the evils of drugs and God-less commies, America had given into the hands of our sworn enemies more tools of death.  And what had we done with the proceeds?  Provided the tools of death to other thugs who claimed to share some of our beliefs.  I stopped remembering that euphemisms like “collateral damage” meant families huddled around graves of the innocent.  I heard stories of American-bankrolled despots whose underlings were good at removing fingernails and rejoiced that the righteous war was being fought.  Villages were strafed nearly daily--men, women and children dying at the wrong end of efficient death from the air, the might of American technology turned against the supposed hiding places of evil men.  It was like handing military equipment to the Crips and saying, “Now you boys be sure you get them drugs off our streets.”  We armed thugs to fight thugs, and the innocent died.  For these and other crimes, more than 100 highly placed Reagan-Bush administrators would be investigated, some charged, fewer jailed.  This from the candidate of the Moral Majority, my candidate, the man who was militantly Pro-Life.

    

    Now here I am at the end of the nineties.  Another election.  The Character Issue is hot, but focuses on the people around the president, not as much on the president himself; I suppose that the direct charges of adultery ring a bit hollow when cast by a Republican leadership who are on their second or third wives.  But when I look at the charges against the thirty-odd members of the Clinton administration, I see mainly good old American greed.  The sort of capitalistic infractions that are, ironically, usually the trademark of Republican businessmen.  And then I have to remind myself of the bloody victories of the Reagan-Bush administrations.

    Character Issue indeed.  And how is it that you can tell when a politician is lying?  All have sinned; all are corrupt.  I can not, like the good people mentioned in this morning’s paper, vote on character alone.  Our nation’s kindly uncle Reagan, a man whose words were turned into a tract for witnessing to the unsaved, supported policies of mechanized death.

    But if the results of Reaganite infractions were more directly deadly, the results of capitalistic greed are still to be abhorred.  I lived through the Texas S&L bust.  I know that the first things to go when times are tight are exactly the sorts of things James calls “true religion,” the sorts of things that Matthew’s Kingdom Discourse says will separate the sheep from the goats.  Prisons get worse; schools “make do”; people without incomes (in whose houses and apartments I’ve spent many years) have to get by on less and less; children without fathers, orphans, eat less and wear thinner hand-me-downs; as Bono put it, “the rich stay wealthy, and the sick stay poor.”  These things, the results of the sins of the Clintonians, are what I normally associate with Republican policies, policies that define themselves in opposition to “tax-and-spend liberals.”  And now they are the result of the sins of tax-and-spend liberals.

    On the other hand, the party of compassion has their own sort of evil.  For me it is epitomized in Clinton’s veto of the partial birth abortion ban.  Medical literature agrees that, whatever the fetus is, it feels pain.  And here is a form of torture so vile that banning it passes both houses with relatively little fight, and Clinton vetoes the bill.

    So my choice seems to be this: vote for the party that will kill the unborn in various nasty, if relatively swift, ways.  Or vote for the party that will slowly crush and kill the spirits of the sick, the imprisoned, the widows and orphans.  It is an intolerable decision.  And despite the diverse claims of some members of the Moral Majority and the Catholic Workers, God is on neither side.  To quote DA, “Everyone seems to think You’re on their side, but I don’t think You’re that small.”  At best, one side or the other may occasionally slip up and make a policy decision that is on God’s side.


    And yet on Tuesday I must balance evil against evil and cast several important ballots.  Where is Jacob’s angel, from whom I might wrest a bit of the divine?  Where is the God of Solomon, who might ask me what boon I would request of Him?  How can that same old sinner who looks out of the mirror at me every morning be trusted to choose well without divine intervention?

    “I don’t know how to make any choices any more; I mean, who do I vote for?  I get the feeling that as soon as something appears in the paper it ceases to be true.  I want to meet the man who can crack this world of injustice like a safe.  Someone with the courage to allow room for good things to run wild.”    --T Bone Burnett, “The Wild Truth”

    

    Kyrie, eleison

    Libera nos a malo

    etiam veni cito, Domine Iesu

    

pax vobiscum,

MMe