Old and New Testament prophecy of Jesus’s coming and eventually coming again to setup his eternal kingdom (government) on earth and in heaven. The quoted line is the beginning of the prophetic scripture found in the book of Isaiah 9:6. Handel was clearly a believer in Jesus and crying with joy in anticipation of his second coming to rid the fallen world of corruption and sin.
… "And the government shall be upon his shoulders"
As I was getting up this morning, the local classical station was playing Handel's Messiah and that familiar phrase above is oft repeated, as I am sure you are well aware. It has always struck me as quite strange. I am hoping some of our musicological members can help me understand the meaning and intent of Handel giving that phrase such a prominent place in the work. Certainly, it seems to run counter to Christ's own teaching that we should "render under Caesar, the things that are Caesar's, and to God, the things that are God's".
I am aware that our modern American notion of separation of church and state was not the case in the Europe of Handel's time. Also that the medieval church had maneuvered itself into the rather convenient arrangement with earthly Kings that their right to rule proceeded from God. Which was known as the divine right of kings. This fortuitous arrangement put the church officials in the position of validating earthly power as the manifestation of God's will. But all of that still doesn't quite square with the mantra, "and the government shall be upon his shoulders".
From everything I have ever learned Christ did not give a fig for earthly power. Is this as big a contradiction as it appears? Is Handel's Messiah a propaganda piece?
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I’m 100% in agreement with @noromance, but I have to say it has been wonderful reading most of the adult comments without all the childish BS. As you were. |
@mahler123 Only when they've been paid handsomely!
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Apologies for this late contribution. I am just catching up on reading the NYT Book Review list of the Best Books of 2024. Among them is this: "Every Valley": The Desperate Lives and Troubled Times That Made Handel's "Messiah" by Charles King. Echoing other accounts, the story of how the" Messiah" came to be is by itself quite incredible. This is a brief review of what appears to be an entertaining and highly worthwhile book providing a more detailed look at that great tale. |
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