Aardvark Alley
Confessional Lutheran theology, hagiography, philosophy, music, culture, sports, education,
and whatever else is on the fevered mind of Orycteropus Afer
+ David +
29 December, Old TestamentDavid, son of Jesse, went from tending his father's flocks to being the greatest of Israel's kings. He ruled from about 1010 to 970 B.C. He was chosen by the Lord and anointed by
Samuel to replace the apostate King Saul, for whom David had provided years of faithful service. The events of his life are found from
1 Samuel 16 through
1 Kings 2 and in
1 Chronicles 10 through
chapter 29. David's son Solomon succeeded him as king.
David was also gifted musically. Skilled in playing the lyre, he wrote at least seventy-three of the Psalms, including the beloved
Psalm 23 and several Messianic prophecies, including the foreshadowing of Christ's crucifixion in
Psalm 22.
David's public and private character displayed a mixture of good, for example, his defeat of the giant Goliath, (
1 Samuel 17) and evil, as in his adultery with Bathsheba, Uriah's wife, followed by his murder of Uriah, (
2 Samuel 11). David's greatness lay in his fierce loyalty to God as Israel's military and political leader. For example, under his leadership, the people of Israel were united into a single nation with Jerusalem as the capital city.
This devotion to the Lord and to the people was coupled with his willingness to acknowledge his sins and ask for God's forgiveness (
2 Samuel 12). The great penitential outpouring of
Psalm 51 came as a result of his sins against Uriah, as did the thoughts and emotions expressed in
Psalm 32.
David's standing before the Lord and his place in the Messianic line are mentioned in many places. Of all of these, Paul's words in
Acts 13:22-23 provide a fitting summary: "[The Lord] raised up David to be their king, of whom he testified and said, 'I have found in David the son of Jesse a man after my heart, who will do all my will.' Of this man's offspring God has brought to Israel a Savior, Jesus, as he promised."
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+ The Holy Innocents +
28 December, New TestamentThis day commemorates the slaughter of Bethlehem's children by
Herod the Great (
Matthew 2:16-18), as he attempted to destroy the Usurper to his throne.
Herod, his jealousy inflamed by the account given by the Wise Men (
Matthew 2:7), sent his soldiers to kill all the town's boys two years old and younger in order to protect his throne and lineage. This was one of the last major decisions made in a life filled with vainglory and increasing insanity. His plan went awry, since the Lord sent an angel to warn
Joseph, who led Jesus and
Mary to safety in Egypt, where they stayed until the tyrant's death.
The commemorations of Stephen, John, and the Innocents remind us that not all receive the Gift of Christmas with joy. However, God's plan of salvation spreads in spite of hatred. Even today, much of the world actively rejects the Gospel and persecutes those who preach and live it.
Yet through all the years, the Church has continued to proclaim Christ — Christ incarnate, Christ crucified, Christ resurrected, Christ ascended, Christ returning. The very resistance of the Devil, the hard-hearts of others, and the testimony of our own sinful natures all provide ample evidence of the world's desperate need for His forgiveness. God grant that we faithfully believe and steadfastly confess this saving message, the Good News of forgiveness of sins in Christ Jesus.
LectionPsalm 54Jeremiah 31:15-17Revelation 14:1-5Matthew 2:13-18CollectAlmighty God, the martyred innocents of Bethlehem showed forth Your praise not by speaking but by dying. Put to death in us all that is in conflict with Your will that our lives may bear witness to the faith we profess with our lips; through Lord Jesus, our Christ, who lives and reigns with You and the Holy Spirit, one God, now and forever.
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+ John, Apostle and Evangelist +
27 December, New TestamentSaint John, Apostle and Evangelist, a son of Zebedee, was one of the twelve apostles. With his brother
James and
Simon Peter, he formed an inner circle among the Twelve: Those three beheld the Great Catch of Fish (
Luke 5:10), the healing of Peter's mother-in-law (
Mark 1:29-31), the raising of Jairus' daughter(
Mark 5:37;
Luke 8:51), the Transfiguration (
Matthew 17:1;
Mark 9:2;
Luke 9:28), and Gethsemane's agony (
Matthew 26:37;
Mark 14:33).
He expressed willingness to undergo martyrdom (
Matthew 20:22;
Mark 10:39) — as did the other apostles (
Matthew 26:35;
Mark 14:31). However, ancient testimony says that even though he was imprisoned and exiled, he was eventually released and died a natural death in Ephesus.
According to
Mark 3:17, Jesus gave James and John "the name Boanerges, that is, Sons of Thunder." He is credited with the writing three epistles and one Gospel. He is also the probable author of Revelation, although this identification is less certain.
His symbol in ecclesiastical art is usually the eagle. This and the images used for the other evangelists come from the visions of the four living creatures around God's throne in heaven. See the
biography of Saint Matthew for the specifics of each.
LectionPsalm 11Revelation 1:1-61 John 1:1-2:2John 21:20-25CollectMerciful Lord, cast the bright beams of Your light upon Your Church that we, being instructed in the doctrine of Your blessed apostle and evangelist John, may come to the light of everlasting life; for You live and reign with the Father and the Holy Spirit, one God, now and forever.
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+ Stephen, Protomartyr +
26 December, New TestamentThe days following Christmas are sometimes called the "Witness Days." The Greek word for "witness" is "martyr," and these days remind us that this sinful world hates the Gospel message of forgiveness in Christ Jesus.
Saint Stephen's Day remembers the first recorded martyr of the Church. Stephen knew the gift of Christmas: His Lord came in human flesh to bring forgiveness and as Jesus forgave His killers, so Stephen forgave those whose stones smashed away his life. The account of his calling, witness, and death is in
Acts 6:1-8:2. Notice how closely the martyr's responses echo those of His Savior as each approached death.
In art, Stephen is often represented by the stones which took his life and by the palm branch, an ancient symbol of triumph and, especially in Christianity, of martyrdom. Both stones and branch are prominent in this
Carlo Crivelli painting from the
Demidoff Altarpiece.
Stephen's feast day supposedly occasioned of a great act of charity by the later martyred
Wenceslaus, Kníže of Bohemia. Wenceslaus (or Václav) is remembered in the carol
Good King Wenceslaus.
LectionPsalm 119:137-1442 Chronicles 24:17-22Acts 6:8-7:2a, 51-60Matthew 23:34-39CollectHeavenly Father, in the midst of our sufferings for Christ grant us grace to follow the example of the first martyr, Stephen, that we may also look to the One who suffered and was crucified on our behalf and pray for those who do us wrong; through our Jesus Christ, our Lord, who lives and reigns with You and the Holy Spirit, one God, now and forever.
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Václav
Merry Christmas to You!
The Word became flesh and dwelt among us ... full of grace and truth. John 1:14 ESVWhy lies He in such mean estate,
Where ox and ass are feeding?
Good Christians, fear, for sinners here
The silent Word is pleading.
Nails, spear shall pierce Him through,
The cross be borne for me, for you.
Hail, hail the Word made flesh,
The Babe, the Son of Mary.
What Child Is This, Stanza 2Technorati Tags:
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Many Ways ...
This collection of Christmas writings also involves my special holiday bestowal of the
Aardies upon some very worthy posters. Anyone so desiring may copy either the
large or the
small (shown here)
Golden Aardvark, a token of having received the
Aardvark Aaward for Raillery, Doctrine, or Intellect in Exposition. So ...
Merry Christmas from — and Golden Aardvarks to — a Whole Bunch of Confessional Lutherans:⇒ A Truly Meaningful Christmas ⇒ Ask the Pastor⇒ Blessed Christmas from the Mad Theologian and her Prediger ⇒ Bad Carol⇒ Merry Christmas ⇒ Bailing Water⇒ Sermons: Eve of Nativity and
Nativity ⇒ Mason Beecroft⇒ Farewell Advent and
Christmas Thoughts ⇒ A Beggar at the Table⇒ Merry Christmas ⇒ Black Cloister⇒ Have Yourself a Syncretistic Little Christmas ⇒ The Blair Church Project⇒ Sermons: St. Matthew 1:22-23,
St. Luke 2:1-20, and
St. John 1:1-14 ⇒ Bloghardt's Reflector⇒ Merry Christmas, Coptic Style ⇒ Blonde Moment⇒ How Do Atheists Celebrate Christmas and
Tale of Two Christmases ⇒ The Burr in the Burg⇒ Christmas in DC ⇒ Chaplain Dave's Newsletter⇒ Merry Christmas!,
The Sweetest Part of Christmas, and
Children and Icon-like Nativity Scenes ⇒ The Children of God⇒ Merry Christmas! ⇒ Cleaving the Darkness⇒ The Carols of Christmas! ⇒ Cleveland Confessional Lutheranism⇒ Christmas Town in a Time Machine ⇒ Concordia Seminary Institute of Lay Vocation: Uwe Siemon-Netto⇒ God's Weeping, Humanity's Joy and
And Is It True? ⇒ Confessing Evangelical⇒ Sermons: Advent 4 and
Christmas ⇒ Confessional Gadfly⇒ Cranach's Greatest Christmas Hits:
In Defense of the Commercialization of Christmas,
The Santa Claus Slap,
Why Christmas Is on December 25, and
Evidence December 25 Is the Right Day ⇒ Cranach⇒ A Blessed Christmas to All and
Christmas Day ⇒ Cruce Tectum⇒ The Word Became Flesh ⇒ Rev. Cwirla's Blogosphere⇒ The Joys of Familial Christmas Service,
Christmas Eve Sermon,
Christmas Pressure and Fictional Audiences ⇒ CyberStones⇒ A Christmas Carol ⇒ Daylight: Rick Ritchie⇒ Advent & Christ-Mass 2007 ⇒ de ecclesia et liturgia⇒ Christmas Ralph ⇒ Des Moines 360⇒ A Less Merry Christmas,
Sermon for Christmas Day, and
My Christmas Decorations ⇒ Drowning Myself Whenever I Can⇒ Christmas Pictures ⇒ Erin-Go-Blog⇒ Recreating a Christmas Culture,
The Word Tabernacled Among Us,
O Beautiful Paradox!,
Sermon for Christmas Day,
Sentimentality v. Contemplation ⇒ Esgetology⇒ From the Angel on Our Tree ⇒ Extra Nos⇒ Sermons: Christmas Eve with Lessons and Carols,
Christmas Eve at Midnight Mass, and
Nativity of Our Lord ⇒ Father Hollywood⇒ The Wonder of It All ⇒ Fishpond⇒ Music for the Holidays and
Christmas Eve Snaps ⇒ A Fort Made of Books⇒ Are Christians Taking the Christ Out of Christmas? ⇒ Garden of Gethsemane⇒ Daddy's Gonna Kill Ralphie ⇒ Geek Spaces⇒ I Am So Glad When Christmas Comes ⇒ German-American Lutherans⇒ The Grammarian, XIII and
The Grammarian, XIV ⇒ Gottesblog⇒ Christmas: On Taking Human Form ⇒ Heart, Mind, Soul, and Strength⇒ Christmas Eve and
Christmas Mishaps ⇒ Homestead Lutheran Academy⇒ Christmas Is About Getting Stuff ⇒ House, M.Div.⇒ The Month Before Christmas ⇒ I Could be Wrong ... but I Doubt It⇒ I Think This Is Neat ⇒ I Shouldn't be Doin' This⇒ Christmas Sermon ⇒ Ichabod⇒ I Like It's a Wonderful Life ⇒ incarnatus est⇒ Happy Boxing Day ⇒ Indiana Jane's Journal⇒ A Christmas Eve Poem and
A Christmas Goose ⇒ Jottings and Such⇒ Merry Christmas! It's Not Just another Holiday ⇒ Journalistic Jargon⇒ The Great Christmas Truce of 2007 ⇒ Katie's Beer⇒ The Shepherds See It for Themselves ⇒ Kelly's Blog⇒ Almost Ready ⇒ Kirken's Place⇒ The Reality of Christmas ⇒ Laughing Martin⇒ Merry Christmas Eve ⇒ Life with the Suttons⇒ Tiny Tim Was Right ⇒ LongEyeMoose⇒ Merry Christmas from the Henhouse ⇒ Lutheran Hen⇒ Sermons: The Story of the Ages,
Fear Not, and
Into Flesh Is Made the Word ⇒ The Lutheran Logomaniac⇒ The Christmas Donkey and
Christmas ⇒ Lutheran Lucciola⇒ Merry Christmas Everybody ⇒ Lutheran Lucy⇒ De mysteriis incarnationis ⇒ Lvtheranvs Latine Profitens⇒ Christmas Parable ⇒ Memorial Lutheran Church: Pastor Murray⇒ Sermons: Christmas Is Love and
Christmas Speaks ⇒ The Minnesota Lutheran⇒ Christmas Past ⇒ Mossback Meadow⇒ Glory to God in the Highest, and on Earth, Peace; Good Will Among Men! ⇒ Mother Hubbard's Cupboard⇒ It's Beginning to Look a Lot Like Christmas ⇒ Muddy Boots⇒ Born of the Virgin Mary and
A Christ-Mass After All ⇒ Necessary Roughness⇒ Christmas Stockings ⇒ NightlyKnitter's LotzaStitches⇒ Songs and Poetry: Her Kommer Dine Arme Smaa,
Yuletide in a Younger World,
et al. ⇒ Norman's Demesne⇒ Recognizing Him ⇒ North Prairie Pastor⇒ A Christ Mass Hymn (includes links to sermons)
⇒ Not Alone⇒ Reflections on a Christmas Eve Sermon ⇒ On the Wittenberg Trail⇒ Holy Christmas Day ⇒ One Lutheran ... Ablog!™⇒ Sermon on Luke 2:1-14 ⇒ Outer Rim Territories⇒ December 25 ⇒ Pagans and Lutherans⇒ Merry Christmas / Feliz Navidad / Froeliche Weinachten and
'Twas the Night Before Christmas ... Shhh! ⇒ Past Elder⇒ Jesse Tree December 24 ⇒ Pistol Packin' Presbytera⇒ Today ⇒ Preachrblog⇒ My Favorite Xmas Narrative and
Frohe Weinachten! ⇒ Putting Out the Fire⇒ All Wrapped Up ⇒ Quicunque Vult⇒ Early Christmas Gifts ⇒ Rapp Files⇒ Luther: Christ's Holy Birth Is Our Birth and
Two Sermons: Where Is Bethlehem? and
God Locates Himself ⇒ RAsburry's Res (Stick around for a look at the 6 part series
The Doctrine of Bethlehem)
⇒ Cool Christmas Present ⇒ Revvin' Rev⇒ Did You Listen? and
John 1:1-14 ⇒ A Round Unvarnish'd Tale⇒ A Happy Christmas ⇒ St. Antony's Cave⇒ Christmas Meditations from the Fathers and
A Blessed Feast of the Nativity to You ⇒ St. James the Hoosier⇒ Merry Sacrilege and
Hodie Christus Natus Est ⇒ Die Schreiben von Schreiber⇒ All I Want for Christmas ⇒ Simul Justis et Pecatur⇒ Laryngitis,
A Birthday Story,
Carols and Hymns, and
Fluxx ⇒ Susan's Pendulum⇒ Christmas ⇒ TheoCon⇒ Kinda Happy, Kinda Sad ⇒ Thinking-Out-Loud⇒ Merry Christmas! ⇒ This Side of the Pulpit⇒ Sermons: Are You Just Along for the Ride? and
God Born of Woman; Man Born of God ⇒ Three Taverns⇒ Sermon: Christmas Is Simple ⇒ Rev. Tucher⇒ Christmas Eve and a New Friend ⇒ Uneasy Priest⇒ Binding the Strong Man ⇒ Upstate Lutheran⇒ How Silently, How Silently, the Wondrous Gift Is Giv'n ⇒ watersblogged!⇒ Sermons: Christmas Eve, Luke 2:19 and
Christmas Day, Luke 2:1-20 ⇒ Watt's What⇒ Feast of the Nativity,
Luke's Christmas and John's Christmas, and
Christmas Moments ⇒ Weedon's Blog⇒ O Tannenbaum,
Merry Christmas!, and
On the First Day of Christmas ⇒ Wendy & Her Lost Boys⇒ The Manger ⇒ The Wittenberg Catholic⇒ Christmas and New Year ⇒ The Wolf Pack⇒ 20071225 Christ's Mass Day ⇒ WorldviewMeanwhile, These People Were Also Writing or Compiling Reflections and Celebrations about Jesus' Birth:⇒ Matthew 1:18-25 ⇒ Agnus Day⇒ My Christmas Post ⇒ The Beast's Lair⇒ How Atheists Celebrate Christmas and
Taking Christ Out of Christmas ⇒ Dinesh D'Souza⇒ Annunciation ⇒ The Dawn Patrol⇒ A Christmas Parable in the Heartland,
Think Ye Green (and Christ Is Born),
For the Life of the World, and
Baby Jesus, with a GPS Device ⇒ Get Religion⇒ Three Christmas Stories for the Second Half of Life ⇒ Internet Monk⇒ Merry Christmas from the Jolly's ⇒ JollyBlogger⇒ Merry Christmass ⇒ One Apostolic and Catholic Church⇒ A Wonderful Christmas Story: The Short Version ⇒ Pro-Life Blogs⇒ Christmas Eve and
Wishing You Joy at Christmas ⇒ Wittingshire⇒ The Newsletter vs. the Card,
Here We Come a Caroling,
Christmas Poetry, and
Today's Comic ⇒ World on the WebOf Course, Christians Around the Globe, in These and Other Languages, Have a Similar Message of Joy:Technorati Tags:
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Many Times ...
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Although It's Been Said ...
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Merry Christmas
O Emmanuel
O God with UsWe now arrive at the seventh and final
O Antiphon, including related Scriptures, Latin text and English translation, a Latin hymn stanza, and the English versification from the hymn known as
O Come, O Come, Emmanuel.
℣
O Emmanuel, Rex et legisfer noster, expectatio gentium, et Salvator erum:℟
veni ad salvandum nos, Domine Deus noster.℣ O Emmanuel, our King and our Lord, the Anointed for the nations and their | Savior:*
℟
Come and save us, O | Lord our God."Therefore the Lord himself will give you a sign. Behold, the virgin shall conceive and bear a son, and shall call his name Immanuel. (
Isaiah 7:14)" See also
Isaiah 8:6-8;
Matthew 1:23;
Haggai 2:7 (KJV).
Veni Veni, Emmanuel Captivum solve Israel,
Qui gemit in exsilio, Privatus Dei Filio.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!
Read the final daily meditations from the O Antiphons by
Pastor Cwirla and
Pastor Weedon.
Previous posts in the series:†
Come, Lord Jesus: The O Antiphons†
O Sapientia — O Wisdom†
O Adonai — O Lord and Ruler†
O Radix Jesse — O Root of Jesse†
O Clavis David — O Key of David†
O Oriens — O Dayspring†
O Rex Gentium — O King of the NationsEro Cras!Unless otherwise noted, Scriptures are quoted from the ESV®
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O Rex Gentium
O King of the Nations (King of the Gentiles)This brings us to the sixth
O Antiphon. Again, Latin text and English translation, a Latin hymn stanza, and the English versification from the hymn known as
O Come, O Come, Emmanuel are included.
℣
O Rex gentium, et desideratus earum, lapisque angularis, qui facis utraque unem:℟
veni, et salva hominem, quem de limo formasti.℣ O King of the Nations, the Ruler they long for, the Cornerstone uniting all | people:*
℟
Come and save us all, whom You formed | out of clay."For to us a child is born, to us a son is given; and the government shall be upon his shoulder, and his name shall be called Wonderful Counselor, Mighty God, Everlasting Father, Prince of Peace. (
Isaiah 9:5)" Also, "He shall judge between the nations, and shall decide disputes for many peoples; and they shall beat their swords into plowshares, and their spears into pruning hooks; nation shall not lift up sword against nation, neither shall they learn war anymore. (
Isaiah 2:4)." See also
Revelation 15:3;
Psalm 118:22;
Isaiah 28:16;
Matthew 21:42;
Mark 12:10;
Luke 20:17;
Acts 4:11;
Ephesians 2:19-21;
1 Peter 2:6.
Veni, Veni, Rex Gentium, Veni, Redemptor omnium,
Ut salvas tuos famulos Peccati sibi conscios.Oh, come, Desire of nations, bind In one the hearts of all mankind;
Bid Thou our sad divisions cease, And be Thyself our King of Peace.
Rejoice! Rejoice! Emmanuel Shall come to thee, O Israel!
Read today's comments on
O Rex Gentium from Pastors
Bill Cwirla and
William Weedon.
Scripture quoted from the ESV®
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