Sleep, my baby, sleep
Beneath the stars of night;
Slumber sweet and slumber deep,
dream ‘neath their beauteous light.
Beneath the stars of night;
Slumber sweet and slumber deep,
dream ‘neath their beauteous light.
Refrain:
Are ye born to be a
pauper;
Are ye born to be a king?
Ye’re born to teach us, proper,
How to love and give and sing.
Are ye born to be a king?
Ye’re born to teach us, proper,
How to love and give and sing.
Shepherds, they rejoice;
the beasts in their stalls
—even angels send a voice
throughout the heavenly halls!
the beasts in their stalls
—even angels send a voice
throughout the heavenly halls!
Refrain
Joseph stands by me
—now, we dare not sleep;
Having been blest to raise thee,
the Lord’s own son shall we keep.
—now, we dare not sleep;
Having been blest to raise thee,
the Lord’s own son shall we keep.
Refrain
Innocent from sin,
and, too, all other harms,
all we, who watch over him,
long to hold him in our arms.
and, too, all other harms,
all we, who watch over him,
long to hold him in our arms.
Refrain
Sleep, my baby, sleep
Beneath the stars of night;
Slumber sweet and slumber deep,
sheltered by their glowing light.
Beneath the stars of night;
Slumber sweet and slumber deep,
sheltered by their glowing light.
Refrain
© by Elisabeth T. Eliassen,
October 5, 2016; Set to music by
Angela Kraft Cross for the
San Francisco Renaissance Voices,
Katherine McKee, Director
October 5, 2016; Set to music by
Angela Kraft Cross for the
San Francisco Renaissance Voices,
Katherine McKee, Director
I woke up from a dream with the refrain in my head, and that
is how this carol text came about.
I have been an ardent student of biblical and other sacred texts for over
thirty years and a musician for much of my life. While I cannot say that I am a
scholar in these matters, I know that a few things that most people who
practice Christianity don’t know or realize.
First of all, Christmas is an entirely manufactured holiday.
Jesus had a birthday, of course, but it was most likely in the springtime of
the year. Somewhere around the year 200 C.E., Clement of Alexandria is likely
the first person to have recorded his guesses about the birth date of Jesus—none
of which occur anywhere near the winter solstice. The commemorative mass could
have been placed in the winter for several reasons; one of many theories is that
overlaying a preexisting pagan holiday with the birth of Jesus might have been done as an means to make pagans be less suspicious of Christianity, or even entice them to join the faith. It isn’t until the 4th
century C.E. that the birth of Jesus can be found listed in a Roman almanac—the date
affixed at during this time is either December 25th in the Roman Church or January
6th (Epiphany Day) in the Eastern Church.
Secondly, carols are not hymns. There is a great deal more
complexity to the explanation than what I have time to write about here, but,
essentially, hymns are derived from chants of the psalms and other portions of
scripture, and an occasional “inspired” text, first by the church Fathers, later by others, also known as a “spiritual song.”
Carols are festive, religiously themed songs that can be sung in or out of
church. The word “carol” is derived from the French carole, the word for a circle dance that was accompanied reed
pipes and other instruments, but also by singing. While hymns are more
liturgical in nature and always appropriate for the praise of God in church, carols are the festive music of the people during any
holiday season celebration, be it Advent, Christmas, Easter, or some other festive season, not necessarily to be done in church.
Thirdly, only two of the canonical gospels (those that “made
the cut” into the sanctioned liturgical library we call “the Bible”) record
anything like the familiar Christmas story, and these two very different
(sometimes contradictory) accounts are conflated into one single story. The
earliest gospel, the Gospel of Mark, doesn’t record anything about the birth of
Jesus. The latest of the four gospels, the Gospel of John, reflects abstractly
and poetically on the presence of the Messiah as the Word before all worlds. The
middle two gospels, Matthew and Luke, are where we get our bits of the birth
story, and then our minds take all the bits and put them together into The Traditional
Holiday Pageant Play.
So, for me, if we really need to have a credible “reason for the season,” it has to be all
about the child. This story is not at all about
the radical rabbi who was crucified. This is about the mother whose child came
a bit early to seem legitimate; about the family who couldn’t find shelter when
the mother went into labor; really, most of all, about the baby who appeared in the midst of chaos.
There is chaos, as well as hope and expectation, surrounding the birth of each
child. Who knows if this child will
survive to adulthood, or what sort of future lies ahead. Will this child attain
royalty, or will this child live a life of poverty? Only time will tell the tale. This
is the story of unknown potential, like the fallow winter awaiting springtime
growth.
(If I was either a seer or a theologian, I’d to say that this
child will grow to be both a king and a pauper. But I'm not, and this is talking out of season.)
The best of parents will tell you that bringing children
into the world and nurturing them is one of the toughest and extended lessons of
humility and grace that a person can undergo. “Choice” is not a word that pops
up frequently in the parental vocabulary—often, you do what you must, with what you have
to hand. Sometimes the lessons that get delivered are sketchy or cranky.
No matter what religion or holiday you celebrate, inherent in all should be a simple truth: All babies are proof of the Divine Miracle of Life. All babies
are born innocent; it is up to parents and community to teach and encourage, to facilitate the very best for every growing child. This is a lesson all cultures must recognize and act upon. I mention it because so many children worldwide are in grave need, right now.
But at this moment, in this story, Mary’s attention, and the attention of
all who happen to be there, is on the sleeping child, illuminated by the glow of starlight.
This is meant to be a quiet celebration. It's not about angels or saviors or martyrs or gifts. It's not about loud singing and dancing or lavish meals. This story is all about a baby.
Let the baby sleep.
Let the baby sleep.
There’s time enough for all the rest.
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