Friday, December 21, 2007

Kings for a day

It is, as all those 80s pop stars remind us, Christmas-time, and so the Baptists of the Tabernacle on Auckland's Queen Street have done what they always do at this time of year: they have brought out their alarmingly life-size Christmas Crib. It gives me the shudders everytime I see it. Nativity scenes, traditionally, are on a miniaturised scale and so they should be. But the Baptists proclaim that a child is born with huge and scary figures.

Among the Corinthian columns Mary, Joseph, Baby Jesus and two kings of orient are. The whereabouts of the third king are unknown. They are an odd looking bunch. Mary must be the oldest virgin in town, while Joseph seems quite shocked at the prospect of surrogate fatherhood, as well he might. The two kings appear to be advancing on the less than happy family as zombies do on teenagers. There are no certain shepherds, no sheep and no asses; which is fortunate, because there would be no room at the Tabernacle otherwise.

But what of that third king? Perhaps he was taken in the night by drunken revellers. That may be the reason why the holy mannequins are returned to the recesses of the Tabernacle every evening and regrouped the next day. Or perhaps the king's disappearance is a sign of something more sinister.

Perhaps the royal absence is "part of a larger war that the secular Left is waging on all things Christian," In the USofA, manger attacks are breaking out all over. In one such incident, a public school coach and some of his students "damaged a number of Christmas displays, let the air out of inflatable figures and rearranged plastic reindeer into X-rated sexual positions." Flumadiddle is monitoring the lordnappings and, at the last count, reports thirty-two baby Jesuses taken.

Whether this disturbing trend has come to New Zealand remains unreported. Family First really ought to be monitoring this sort of thing.

Elsewhere, Going Jesus has assembled a Cavalcade of Bad Nativities.

7 comments:

Anonymous said...

Two Kings instead of 3 - well even the Baptists occasionally fall on hard times.

No asses - lots of metaphorical ones involved in this actitivy.

Certain shepherds - no, uncertain sheep in that place I would think.

Reindeer reproducing - that sounds more like the fun Xmases we should be expecting.

Anonymous said...

.

Anonymous said...

Damn you blogger links and your non-acceptance of URLs that conclude with forward slashes.

Once more, with feeling: the LOL cats restore the nativity scene.

Anonymous said...

But what of that third king?

All this was a long time ago, I remember,
And I would do it again, but set down
This set down
This: were we led all that way for
Birth or Death? There was a Birth, certainly,
We had evidence and no doubt. I had seen birth and death,
But had thought they were different; this Birth was
Hard and bitter agony for us, like Death, our death.
We returned to our places, these Kingdoms,
But no longer at ease here, in the old dispensation,
With an alien people clutching their gods.
I should be glad of another death.

Anonymous said...

I'm sure my mog believes in the Giant Cat*, it's the christian mythology that I have trouble with...

Craig

*Why else is the cosmos ailuromorphic?

Anonymous said...

Danyl: that is one of my favourite bits of Eliot. Have you heard Benjamin Britten's setting for [male] alto, tenor and bass (if I remember it right)? That was the first form in which I came across it.

Anonymous said...

I can has lolcat overloads? OMG LOL!!?!eleven