Open Thread - Saturday, December 24
Glory be to God on high
And in earth peace, goodwill towards men.
(Gloria in excelsis Deo, Book of Common Prayer of 1662, based on Luke 2:14)
Luke's story of Jesus's birth, the only one to be found anywhere in the Greek bible, includes an episode where an angel appears to shepherds near Bethlehem announcing the birth of a Messiah. After the good news is delivered, a multitude of heavenly hosts appear to sing the little hymn above. These lyrics were deemed so important that they were incorporated as part of the basic Christian liturgy where they have remained for two millennia. They have been set to music by Handel, Vivaldi, Rutter and many others, and why not? In a world beset by PermaWar from the top of one hemisphere to the bottom of the other, any news of peace, even in the form of an apparently failed prophecy, sounds sweet to our ears.
The only problem is that they got the words wrong. A little like me trying to sing along with "Stairway to Heaven," the editors of that 17th century version of the Book of the Common Prayer relied on the King James Version of the Greek bible, a translation based upon Erasmus's faulty edition of the Greek text. Somewhere along the line in the by-hand copying and transmission of the text, a Greek sigma was dropped, transforming a genitive into a nominative. Both the Vaticanus and the Sinaiticus codices include that important little "s" in Luke 2:14, so the best historical bet is that it was in the "original" text. It's not that both peace and goodwill are being delivered to all humanity. Instead, peace is coming to people of good will. As the Church Lady would say, isn't that interesting?
From the other side of the world, there is another text tradition collected in the Tao Teh Ching. Peace is a pre-eminent topic in its verses just as it is in those written by Luke:
Fine weapons of war augur evil.
Even things seem to hate them.
Therefore, a man of Tao does not set his heart upon them.Chapter 31
The author(s) of the Tao Teh Ching were not expecting peace to be delivered to us from on high. Instead, we were to look within:
Attain to the utmost Emptiness.
Cling single-heartedly to interior peace.
While all things are stirring together,
I only contemplate the Return.
For flourishing as they do,
Each of them will return to its root.
To return to the root is to find peace.
To find peace is to fulfill one's destiny.
To fulfill one's destiny is to be Constant.
To know the Constant is called Insight.Chapter 16
But perhaps Luke's conception of the source of peace is not so different from the Tao Teh Ching. In the build-up to Luke 2:14, Zechariah sings a song of peace upon the birth of his son, John the Baptist:
And you, my child, will be called a prophet of the Most High;
for you will go on before the Lord to prepare the way for him,
To give his people the knowledge of salvation
through the forgiveness of their sins,
Because of the tender mercy of our God,
by which the rising sun will come to us from heaven
To shine on those living in darkness
and in the shadow of death,
To guide our feet into the path of peace.Luke 1:76-79
If our feet must be guided into the path of peace, then perhaps shalom/eirene is not something delivered from heaven or the North Pole by UPS at Christmastime. Perhaps in Luke's understanding, peace is learned and practiced and cherished within us until it begins to emanate from us to influence those around us. After all, the peace announced by that heavenly multitude turns out to come only to people of good will, people of peace.
May peace be with you in the midst of the turmoil around us.
Comments
Luke 2 in the King James Version
Before I paste, I didn't get how you think the text of Luke 2:14 should have been worded. (I did get what you think Luke 2:14 would have meant if it had been worded differently, but I didn't understand what you think the wording is supposed to be.) Either way, peace hasn't happened, not the the world and not to "men" of goodwill.
Passing thought: Of course, every human was born. Christianity is based not on the birth of Jesus, but on belief in his resurrection. Yet, Christians, or at least modern Christians, seem to have made so much more of Christmas than of Easter.
Okay, here is all of Luke, Chapter 2 in the KJV:
I of course have a Bible, given to me when I was baptized
And like most(?) of us, it's simply a reference book to check what was written in Leviticus 4:12 (random, I am not lookin').
But women were treated as chattel, years from virginity as the marker? Anna was the first nun described? a spoiled woman non-virgin, who as a widow sought safety in the cloisters, whatever the religion. I am fuzzy about the offerings pre-Christianity. Other than Islam, a competing "new" religion.
Hey! my dear friends or soon-to-be's, JtC could use the donations to keep this site functioning for those of us who can still see the life preserver or flotsam in the water.
Which, of course, is why I put quotation marks around "men."
The views of women in early Christianity (and not so early Christianity), of course, derived from the views of women in early Judaism (and not so early Judaism). http://www.huffingtonpost.com/ari-hart/should-i-thank-god-for-not-making...
However, I don't think that the impetus of early man to subjugate and denigrate women was necessarily tied to Abrahamic religions. I have a theory, but since I made it up, I keep it to myself.
My point was fuzzily made.
The key is the Greek word eudokia(s). The basic meaning is good will or pleasure. The question is whether the text is eudokia (nominative case, as in the KJV) or eudokias (genitive case, as in the oldest codices). If it's genitive, then it can be "peace among people of good will" instead of "peace (and) good will among people."
The text critical issue is well-settled, so newer translations assume the Greek text has the genitive. Some translations take a step toward interpretation and assume it's God's good will to which reference is being made. There's some basis for that since the word is often used elsewhere in the Greek bible with reference to God's will or intention. and the genitive could be objective or subjective. I just like keeping it simple and letting it refer to the good will of a portion of humanity.
Thank you. I did understand your point, just not the exact
wording you thought would be more correct than Luke 2:14 as it appears in my prior post. The phrase, "Peace among people of good will" is all I was looking for.
As stated, I don't think peace exists, either among humanity in general or among people of good will. Acceptance, maybe; peace, no. In fact, I believe that the absence of peace must trouble people of good will more than it troubles others.
BTW, fwiw, I think most Americans understand "possessive" more readily than "genitive."
Re: incarnation vs. death and resurrection.
You're exactly right that death and resurrection is primary in mainstream Christian theology, but the ancient hymn in Philippians 2 emphasized incarnation as part of the process of the divine humbling, and then there's the whole "Logos becoming flesh" idea in John that recognizes the importance of incarnation. I had a professor once who liked to put things as dramatically as possible:
Viewed yet another way, it is yet another angle on the concept of the divine immanent in us.
Very fine sentiment, to be expanded upon to an entire year
It may happen that good will needs to stand guard or attack those of dissimilar view,including our Leaders. They do not exude good will at all. There is probably a Chinese statement along the lines, maybe in The Art of War. The tribes at Standing Rock are expressing their interest to hold strong to their treaty-given lands, but they express love toward their attackers. Strange how Quaker that sounds.
Practice Peace in your mind and Pass it Forward, that is my resolution for the new year.
Hey! my dear friends or soon-to-be's, JtC could use the donations to keep this site functioning for those of us who can still see the life preserver or flotsam in the water.
Beautiful resolution, beautifully stated.
I love that:
Practice peace in your mind and pass it forward.
Amen.
Hope your celebration is a joyous one.
We have two days with family and enough food to feed an army. The grandsons get all their favorite meals with enough leftover to eat them again. Merry Christmas everyone.
"Religion is what keeps the poor from murdering the rich."--Napoleon
Thanks, dkmich.
Our time is dampened by losing a four-legged family member this week in tough circumstances, but caring for Clark in his last days has pulled us together closer as a family, one of the many wonderful gifts he bestowed on us during his life.
We're more or less expecting to hear our daughter's engagement to her long-time boyfriend announced at a dinner with his family and ours later today. He's bought a ring and sweetly asked our "permission" in the past few weeks. We're just hoping that he's already cleared it with her so that she doesn't respond that she wants to think about it for awhile after he pops the quesiton in front of everybody. LOL. That could put a damper on things from the boyfriend's perspective and make it a touch uncomfortable.
Here in the buckle of the bible belt...
I find it interesting that they never seem to get to the new testament and the prince of peace - they're stuck with the old testament god of wrath.
It is the difference between "an eye for an eye" and "turn the other cheek".
I liked the Ghandi quote from neoconed's comment in Rusty's essay's “I like your Christ, I do not like your Christians. Your Christians are so unlike your Christ.”
I hope you all have a great day whatever your spiritual path!
“Until justice rolls down like water and righteousness like a mighty stream.”
The Hebrew bible gets a bad rap.
First of all, what's to be expected from an Iron Age collection of writings? The Code of Hammurabi seems even more brutal and uncivilized to us. The talion principle, eye for an eye, also in CH, is actually an attempt to limit violence. In those times, if you came and fought with my brother and killed him, I might gather up my clan and go to your home and kill you and the rest of your family. Hammurabi includes the bizarre "case" of an builder whose structure falls down and kills the homeowner's daughter. The case's outcome is that the homeowner can then kill the builder's daughter. The Hebrew bible expressly rejects that kind of justice in several places.
Also, there are a lot of beautiful, poetic descriptions of a loving, merciful God in the Hebrew bible along with more powerful statements about social justice than any found in the Greek bible, including the quote from Amos that you use in your sig line.
As a whole, it's people struggling to understand themselves and their world. They are always a reflection of their time and place. Sometimes, they head off on the wrong track. At other times, there's a grain of truth or a beautiful image that is still striking today. Read as an ongoing project to understand life, death, love, hate, I think it can inspire more respect and empathy than disdain.
Hey GS
I'm not dissing anyone's beliefs. No doubt as a piece of literature the bible can be beautiful.
My comment is about my part of the world where people holler Christian, but are racist, intolerant, and narrow minded. So like Ghandi, I have no problem with Christ, I just find the followers blind to the path of peace and love. A common prayer down here - Dear Jesus, please protect us from your followers.
Just a reminder, I live between Dayton, TN site of the Scopes Trial, and Anniston, AL site of the freedom riders bus burning...both activities of the south's self proclaimed Christians.
“Until justice rolls down like water and righteousness like a mighty stream.”
I'll just say Hi, thanks for the OT, and happy holidays to all.
That, in its essence, is fascism--ownership of government by an individual, by a group, or by any other controlling private power. -- Franklin D. Roosevelt --
Happy Holidays and Peace to all
Scottish Blessing
If there is righteousness in the heart,
There will be beauty in the character.
If there is beauty in the character,
There will be harmony in the home.
If there is harmony in the home,
There will be order in the nation.
If there is order in the nation,
There will be peace in the world.
So let it be