If you, like good  king Wenceslaus in the song,  look out on the Feast   of Stephen --  that's 26 December, but we'll  get back to that -- you   might think  Christmas is over. Already on the  evening news on  Christmas  day the  local stations are posting Christmas  tree pick up  sites and  times. Some  hang around for a week to give a  festive  atmosphere to New  Year's Eve  and Day, then come down. On 2  January,  Valentine's Day candy  is in the  stores.
That fits with  the  world's Christmas season.  The church  has a little different  season  going on. December is largely  taken up  with Advent. The idea is   preparation there too, but not as in  buying  presents and food. It's   about a preparation of repentance for   celebrating the coming in the   flesh of God as Jesus who will die to save   us from our sins, for the   coming of faith in him into our hearts, and   for the coming of Jesus   again in glory to judge the living and the dead   on the Last Day.
For   which reason the colour of Advent is  purple,  the colour of royalty   and also of repentance. Not his  coming in  history or our hearts or his return is prepared for by  buying stuff.
Christmas Is Not Just One Day!
The     church's celebration of Christmas does not begin with December and   end   on Christmas with New Year's tacked on. It begins on Christmas and     continues for several days! Our Christmas manger scenes often have   the   "humble" shepherds and the "important" visitors -- called Magi,   Wise   Men, or Kings most often -- all there. But as the story reads,  the  Three   Kings were not there at Christmas! They arrived twelve days   later, 6   January, which we celebrate as Epiphany. These twelve days   from   Christmas through Epiphany are the Twelve Days of Christmas.
Now     how did that happen? No-body knows. The thing is, Epiphany is a much     older feast than Christmas, yet is now largely forgotten by most,  lost    in the shuffle by many, and celebrated by a few. Now how did  THAT    happen?
The Original Christmas.
Well,     to me it looks like this. By the late fourth century after Christ, 6     January as the Epiphany existed. The earliest known reference dates   from   361, and in those days the references indicate not just the   appearance   of the Three Kings -- epiphany is an English form of a   Greek word   meaning "appearance" or "manifestation" -- but rather the   appearance or   manifestation, the epiphany, of God, including his   birth!
It's   not that there wasn't Christmas, it's that this is   "Christmas" as well as a   celebration all the other events of the  young  Jesus up to and including   his Baptism and his first public  miracle at  the wedding in Cana. A very   big day!
Developments In The Western Church.
In     the Western Church, these events began to be spun off from Epiphany.    By  the sixth century 25 December had become the celebration of his    birth.  His baptism began to be celebrated after Epiphany, so Epiphany    itself in  the West fairly early on narrowed its focus to the arrival  of   the Three  Kings (Magi, etc.), who, not being Jews but Gentiles,  give   it the  significance of the appearance or manifestation of the  Messiah   to the  Gentiles.
I'm of English descent, but I was  adopted by   people of  Irish descent, and my Dad, as I was growing up in the pre-Vatican II RCC,   always referred  to Epiphany as "Little Christmas",  an Irish custom from   when 6 January  in the pre-Gregorian calendar was  also Christmas. In   later life I was to  find out this is one echo of  all the stuff   mentioned above. Growing up,  decorations were always  left up through   Epiphany, and there was one  more "Christmas" gift. I  did the same in my   house now. And I'll post  about Los Tres Reyes  (Spanish for The Three   Kings) on 6 January, having  been culturally  adopted by the Puerto Rican   contingent at university.
Developments In The Eastern Church.
This     did not happen in the Eastern Church, where it retained its original     character much longer, with many places much later adopting 25   December   as the feast of his birth but keeping the celebration of his   baptism on   Epiphany, and in a few places yet keeping the Nativity on   this day.  And  there's the added complication that 6 January in the   older (Julian,  as  in Julius Caesar) calendar still used liturgically   by the Eastern  Church  is 19 January in the Gregorian (as in Pope   Gregory) calendar  used in  the West and now pretty much world wide as a   convention.
In  the  Eastern Church the day is more commonly   called the Theophany --  divine  appearance or divine manifestation --   and is considered the  third most  important feast in the church's   observance, Easter (Pascha)  being first  and Pentecost second. There   ain't no Twelve Days of  Christmas for our  brethren in the Eastern   Church, it's a Western thing,  but on the other  hand Theophany is more   in line with the original of  what we in the West  call Epiphany, if we   remember it to call it  anything at all.
And Then Came Vatican II, Oy.
And     to complicate it further, after a millennium and one half of usage,     Rome, ever at the ready to tinker with the very tradition it says it     conserves, decided at its last council, Vatican II in the 1960s, to  make    it a moveable feast, not on 6 January but on the Sunday after  the   first  Saturday in January. So, if you listen to Rome (and if you  listen   to  Rome, quit!) there ain't no Twelve Days of Christmas in the  West   now  either! Nice going, guys.
For us confessional  Lutherans --   those  who seek to hold to the catholic, as distinct from  the Catholic,   faith  and church -- while our latest service book,  Lutheran Service   Book, is  infected with the latest Roman virus  (please support research   that a  cure may be found in our time!) it  appears that Epiphany has   survived as  6 January.
So What's This Feast of Stephen Thing?
"Good     King Wenceslaus looked out, on the Feast of Stephen". Getting back  to    that, you think Epiphany got lost in the shuffle, what about this   Feast   of Stephen? It's 26 December, the day after Christmas. Why?   Well, the   Stephen remembered on this day is the first recorded martyr   for the   Christian faith, in the Book of the Acts of the Apostles.  It is the custom in the church to commemorate someone not on  the  day of his   earthly birth but the day of his birth to eternal life  --  generally   called death in the world -- but in a case like Stephen the date is not known.  When that happens a date will be chosen for some other reason associated with the person.  For Stephen, the first person known to  have  been born to   eternal life by martyrdom for his faith is  celebrated  right after the   earthly birth of him who came to make  eternal life  available to us.
So Who's This Wenceslaus, Why Is He Good and Why Is He Looking Out?
Wow,     has this guy got a story. Right here, call it ironic, coincidence,  or    one of those divine consistencies that look like loose ends until  you    know what they are, but he ended up being a martyr for the  Christian    faith just like the first one, Stephen, on whose feast he  looked out.
Here's    a short version of the rest. Wenceslaus,  also Wenceslas, is English   for  his name Vaclav. He was functionally  king of Bohemia, which is now   part  of the Czech Republic. But, as he  was backed by the German Holy   Roman  Empire, his title was not  actually king but duke, which is just   below a  king.  Duke comes from the Latin dux, which means leader, and was the title first of military officers without a particular rank and then the title of those who ran a province just under the head of state.
"King" actually Duke Wenceslaus had this position first via the Duke of Saxony and King of   the  Germans Henry the  Fowler/Heinrich der Vogler. But then via his son   Otto  I, who was  crowned Holy Roman Emperor on 2 February 962 by Pope,   aka  bishop of  Rome, John XII -- who, btw, then turned on Otto.  So Otto went  back  to  Rome and had a layman elected pope instead as Leo VII --  Otto  being   used to naming bishops and abbots.  Then, when John  staged a  comeback   but died and left Benedict V on the papal throne,  Otto went  back to   Rome yet again to get rid of Benedict and make them  promise to  quit   electing popes without the Emperor's (his) OK! There's  some   hermeneutic  of continuity for ya, to paraphrase another Pope  Benedict,   XVI; apostolic succession in action. Otto was  the first clear Holy Roman Emperor since  Charlemagne   (Carolus Magnus,  Charles the Great, Karl der Grosse), who was  crowned by the  bishop of Rome Leo III on Christmas in  800 the   first Imperator  Augustus in the West since the Fall of  Rome on 4   September 476 .
Wenceslaus   being  backed by such a power did not sit well  with some Bohemians,   including  in his own family, all of them caught  between changing   religions along  with their entire social order.  Which is why he's  called  "good" --  he  stayed with the Christian faith of his  grandmother  who  raised him, St  Ludmilla, who was herself converted by  Saints  Cyril and  Methodius no  less, the "Apostles to the Slavs". His  brother  Boleslaus  (Boleslav)  though stayed with the native Bohemian  religion  of their  mother  Drahomira, who had Ludmilla killed. Boleslav  didn't  like the  Germans or  their state-run Christian church. The  martyrdom  happened  when Boleslav  arranged to have Vaclav killed, then  took the  throne.  But, he ended up  having to work with the Germans  anyway and  then his  son, also named  Boleslav, became Christian and  took over  from him and  established the  bishop's seat in Prague!
The   irony, coincidence,  or divine  consistency continues to our time. This   man Vaclav who in  his own time  was killed for selling out to the   Germans and their power  and new  religion is now the patron saint of   the Czech Republic, which  in 2000  established his feast day of 28   September as Czech Statehood  Day, a  national holiday.
Yeah,   that's a short version. Oh, and  what was  he doing looking out on the   Feast of Stephen? Checking things  out after  he woke up.  But the rest   of the story isn't told in the "Twelve Days of Christmas" song.  That  was first published in England in 1780.  Despite recent speculation,  there is no evidence the gifts were code words for Catholic catechesis  under persecution.  Lyrical peculiarities come from its being an  adaptation of a French song. It was introduced in the US in 1910, as  part of the Christmas programme at Downer in Milwaukee, now part of  Lawrence University.
The rest of the story is told in the carol  by  John Mason  Neale, same guy who  wrote O Come, O Come Emmanuel based  on  the O  Antiphons posted about  earlier. Small world, huh? Or  another of  those  consistencies. Ain't it  great when loose ends become   consistencies!
Anyway,  good duke  Vaclav spotted a guy  scrounging  for food and asked his page  where the  guy lived. He then  set out with  his page to bring the man and  his  family some aid. The page  started  faltering due to the cold and snow, but   when he followed in  Vaclav's  footsteps found the ground warm to his   feet. Now how's that  for being,  uh, ablaze!
We Still Got 'em, The Twelve Days of Christmas!!
Guess what, you can still follow in the good king's footsteps. Neale's carol concludes:
Therefore, Christian men, be sure, wealth or rank possessing,
Ye who now will bless the poor, shall yourselves find blessing.
So let's get on with the Twelve Days of Christmas like, give him his due, Good King Wenceslaus!
NOW     is when all the fun and festivities are supposed to happen! LEAVE    those  decorations up, right on up through Twelfth Night! That's the    night of  5-6 January, in case you weren't counting, and yes, it's that    from which  the title of Shakespeare's great play is taken. So far,    Twelfth Night  has not been retitled First Sunday After The First    Saturday In January  Eve, though who knows, sillier revisionism happens    all the time. Maybe  even GIVE A GIFT to someone special for Epiphany,    which in some places  is the gift giving day, not Christmas, just as   God  gave himself to us  and the Three Kings brought gifts to him. BAKE  A   CAKE; that's how Kings  Cake started and still is done in some  places.   HAVE FRIENDS OVER -- you  get the idea! 
And like good king  Wenceslaus,   DO SOMETHING TO HELP  SOMEONE IN NEED! If you don't know  someone in need, ask your pastor, he will.  You don't have to live in a country that has Boxing Day to box up something helpful and give it to someone in need.  This custom began because boxes for collection of stuff for the poor were collected in mediaeval times at churches for distribution on the feast of Stephen, inspired by good Duke Vaclav's act of charity.
Ye who now will bless the  poor,   shall yourselves find  blessing.
The appearance or manifestation of God is just too big to contain in one day!!
And     therefore the church doesn't, but extends the celebration of God's     coming among us over twelve days, so don't let the world, or, sadly,     some entities called church, take a bit of it away from you!
Textual Note:  I am most honoured that The Lutheran Witness   asked if they could print  this post as an article in the December  2010  issue.  That article is not  the same as this post, but was based  on the 2009 blog version of this post by their excellent editorial   staff.  The print version was approved by  me, and you can read it   online.  Generally I revise  the annual posts in my Blogoral Calendar   somewhat from year to year, so this year's post is not the exact text of the printed  version either.
VDMA
Verbum domini manet in aeternum. The word of the Lord endures forever.
1 Peter 1:24-25, quoting Isaiah 40:6,8. Motto of the Lutheran Reformation.
Fayth onely justifieth before God. Robert Barnes, DD The Supplication, fourth essay. London: Daye, 1572.
Lord if Thou straightly mark our iniquity, who is able to abide Thy judgement? Wherefore I trust in no work that I ever did, but only in the death of Jesus Christ. I do not doubt, but through Him to inherit the kingdom of heaven. Robert Barnes, DD, before he was burnt alive for "heresy", 30 July 1540.
What is Luther? The doctrine is not mine, nor have I been crucified for anyone. Martin Luther, Dr. theol. (1522)
1 Peter 1:24-25, quoting Isaiah 40:6,8. Motto of the Lutheran Reformation.
Fayth onely justifieth before God. Robert Barnes, DD The Supplication, fourth essay. London: Daye, 1572.
Lord if Thou straightly mark our iniquity, who is able to abide Thy judgement? Wherefore I trust in no work that I ever did, but only in the death of Jesus Christ. I do not doubt, but through Him to inherit the kingdom of heaven. Robert Barnes, DD, before he was burnt alive for "heresy", 30 July 1540.
What is Luther? The doctrine is not mine, nor have I been crucified for anyone. Martin Luther, Dr. theol. (1522)
For the basics of our faith right here online, or for offline short daily prayer or devotion or study, scroll down to "A Beggar's Daily Portion" on the sidebar.
26 December 2013
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
 
 
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 

2 comments:
Satan has deceived the whole world into worshipping the god of hate, murder and revenge until the woman of Rev 12:5-6 delivers the true Gospel from the wilderness. Prove All things. A gift is now delivered and proven to the whole world as a witness Matt 24:14 http://thegoodtale.wordpress.com
The woman of Rev 12 is not a church, nor Mary, nor Israel. I am the prophet like unto Moses Num 12:3 raised up of my brethren Acts 3:21-22 proving the power of God in the spirit of Elijah Matt 17:3, Luke 1:17 to restore Matt 17:11 the true word John 1:1 to prepare a people by turning their hearts to all the children of God. God our Father will not put any child of his into a hell fire no matter what their sins, no matter if they repent in this life or not. It never entered the heart or mind of God to ever do such a thing Jer7:31, Jer 19:5. The proof is in the hearing. Resist your carnal mind of hate, murder and revenge Rom 8:7.
Those that refuse to hear all the word delivered to the world is rejecting his word not mine.
*Acts 3:23 And it shall come to pass, that every soul, which will not hear that prophet, shall be destroyed from among the people.
Link update for this:
extual Note: I am most honoured that The Lutheran Witness asked if they could print this post as an article in the December 2010 issue. That article is not the same as this post, but was based on the 2009 blog version of this post by their excellent editorial staff. The print version was approved by me, and you can read it online. Generally I revise the annual posts in my Blogoral Calendar somewhat from year to year, so this year's post is not the exact text of the printed version either.
http://blogs.lcms.org/2010/the-12-days-of-christmas-unwrapping-the-gifts-12-2010
Post a Comment