The Church, in the seven antiphons that are sung
before the Lord's birthday, shows the multiplicity of our ills and for each of
them begs a remedy of the physician. Before the Son of God came in the flesh,
we were ignorant or blind, liable to eternal punishment, slaves of the devil,
shackled with sinful habits, enveloped in darkness, exiles driven from our true
country. Therefore, we had need of a teacher, a redeemer, a liberator, an
emancipator, an enlightener, and a savior.
Because we were ignorant and needed to be taught
by him, we call out in the first antiphon: "O Wisdom, you came forth from
the mouth of the Most High, reaching from end to end and ordering all things
mightily and sweetly. Come, and teach us the way of prudence!" Yet it
would be of little profit if we were taught but not redeemed, so we ask to be
redeemed by him when we cry to God in the second antiphon: "O Adonai and
leader of the house of Israel, you appeared to Moses in the flames of the
burning bush, and on Sinai gave him the Law. Come, stretch out your arm and
redeem us." And what good would it do if we were instructed and redeemed,
if after redemption we were still held captive? Therefore, we pray to be set
free, when we plead in the third antiphon: ' 'O Root of Jesse, you are raised
as a banner to the peoples. Before you kings shall remain silent, with you all
nations will plead for help. Come to set us free, do not delay!" Yet of
what use would it be to captives if, being redeemed and given their freedom,
their shackles were still not stricken from them so that they could be under
their own control and go freely wherever they wished? So it would do us little
good if he redeemed and freed us but left us in chains. Therefore, in the
fourth antiphon we pray to be delivered of all the bonds of sin: "O Key of
David, you open and no one closes, you close and no one opens. Come, and from
the prison house release man enchained and sitting in the shadow of death!"
But because the eyes of those who have been in prison for a long time grow dim
and they no longer see clearly, even after we are set free from prison, we
still have to have our eyes opened to the light, so that we may see where we
ought to go. Therefore, in the fifth antiphon we pray: "0 rising Dawn,
splendor of light eternal and sun of justice! Come, and enlighten those who sit
in darkness and the shadow of death." And if we were taught, redeemed,
freed from all enemies, and enlightened, how would it benefit us unless we were
to be saved? So in the next two antiphons we beg for the gift of salvation,
saying: "O King of the Gentiles, for whom they long, O Headstone who make
the two one! Come and save man, whom you formed out of the slime of the earth.
" And likewise, "O Emmanuel, our king and our lawgiver, awaited by
the nations and their savior! Come and save us, O Lord our God!" So first
we plead for the salvation of the pagans, saying, "0 King of the
Gentiles," and then pray for the salvation of the Jews, to whom God gave
the Law.
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