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Colour
Supplement
Articles
by Christians around the world
Sunday
December 17 2006
Night music
by Herbert
O'Driscoll

Zephaniah
3:14-20; Isaiah 12:2-6; Philippians 4:4-7; Luke
3:7-18
As
World War II was ending, my uncle was about to
be discharged from the Royal Navy. He decided to
enjoy an evening out, and bought a ticket to see
a play in London. It was opening night of a new
show. He told me that he was not quite sure what
the show was about, but had heard that it was a
musical—an American musical. He also said that
he didn't really care what he was going to see.
All he wanted was to celebrate the fact that he
had lived through a war and would be going home
soon.
The first thing he noticed when he entered the
theatre foyer was the brilliance of the lights.
For six years he—and members of his
generation—had had to get used to muted
lighting, and sometimes to no lighting. Now, at
least in this warm, welcoming and crowded space,
the world was suddenly bright again. Another
thing he noticed was how alive and excited
everyone was, and to his surprise he realized
that their festive mood was affecting him, and
that he felt the same way.
But nothing prepared him for what happened when
the curtain went up. The stage blazed with the
light of a sunlit world stretching into infinite
distances. The dancers and actors positively
leaped onto the stage. The music was
electrifying. The words, especially the very
first words of the show, transformed every
listener.
O what a beautiful morning!
O what a wonderful day!
I've got a wonderful feeling
Everything's going my way.
And
now we know what my long-ago uncle and those
other people were experiencing. Oklahoma
burst into the dark world of Europe like a
sudden blaze of sunshine, space, energy, hope
and possibility. It came from a land not
exhausted by war, a land still strong, with
almost infinite resources. It sang a song of the
future.
Uncannily the song of Zephaniah echoes that
theatre moment, exhorting us to "Rejoice! Exult!
Sing aloud! Shout! The Lord has turned away your
enemies . . . I will bring you home . . . says
the Lord."
The note of wild and joyous exuberance is echoed
twice more in these readings. They are so
clearly songs of joy that it is difficult to
read them in the measured way we usually do in
worship. Listen to Isaiah: "Surely God is my
salvation! My strength! My might! My salvation!
Sing aloud! Sing for joy!"
Before we drop in exhaustion from belting out
these songs—for that is what they demand we
do—let's hear the usually serious and intense
Paul as he writes to the community in Philippi.
Something is very different here, very different
from the usual Paul. He's ending the happiest
letter he ever wrote, at least of the letters we
know. He is obviously experiencing great
pleasure in greeting remembered friends. We can
hear him bubbling over as he sends greetings to
"Clement and the rest of my co-workers," calling
them nothing less than "my joy and crown." But
Paul is only getting started. Now he really gets
turned on!
Rejoice in the Lord always
And again I say rejoice!
The Lord is near . . .
The
ecstatic song continues, as if Paul cannot or
does not want to stop.
Why are you and I offered this wonderful
performance on this Advent Sunday? Because
although it may be winter in the realm of
nature, it is the threshold of springtime in the
realm of the spirit and of our Christian hearts.
We are not far from the fields and caves of
Bethlehem. But before we come to them we need to
know that every one of the above songs was sung
almost in spite of the times. Like those
wonderful opening lines of Oklahoma,
these songs came from a generation that had
known shadow and suffering. For Zephaniah, a
country was emerging from a grim regime. For
Isaiah, probably a war had just ended. Paul
writes from a prison cell. Knowing these things,
it is salutary to look once again at the
extraordinary joy that bubbles forth from these
three great spirits.
We will be singing the songs of this coming
season, singing them in a time and in a world
that the next generations may refer to as
"shadowed and threatening." "They were at war!"
they will say with wonderment. "They were
concerned about their economy! They expected to
be attacked at any time and in unpredictable
ways! They were worried that their environment
was collapsing! And in spite of all this they
sang joyous songs about a child and about
shepherds and angels and some people called Wise
Ones, not to mention utterly impractical things
like frankincense and myrrh! They must have been
mad!"
They may talk about us in that far-off future,
when our singing is remembered as long ago. But
if they judge us to be mad they will be wrong—or
perhaps they will be both right and wrong. They
will be right because, if we are wise, we will
risk some madness of joy in this troubled time.
We will risk this for the same reason that
Zephaniah, Isaiah and Paul were willing to risk
a wild and joyous song when they could so easily
have sung sadly in the shadows that surrounded
their small islands of fragile personal joy. But
the reason that it is not madness for us to risk
singing our songs is that we believe what they
believed—we are a people of God, a people of a
God who can be trusted.
So—"Sing . . . shout . . . rejoice . . . exult!"
Herbert O'Driscoll is
an Anglican priest who lives in Victoria,
British Columbia.
Copyright
2003 CHRISTIAN CENTURY. Reproduced by permission from
the November 29 2003 issue of the CHRISTIAN CENTURY.
Subscriptions: from $49/year from P.O. Box 378, Mt.
Morris, IL 61054. 1-800-208-4097. Visit the
Christian Century website.
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