Resources by Daniel Scott

This Good Friday worship service focuses on a painting by Hans Holbein of Christ in the tomb (p. 33). This painting figures prominently in Fyodor Dostoevsky’s novel The Idiot (Penguin Classics, 2004). Selections from the novel and from Scripture are read, prayers are offered, and hymns sung. You will need to find two individuals to read a dialogue from the book. The picture should be included in the bulletin with proper attribution. A banner or projection of the painting in the worship area would be ideal. Hymn selections are taken from African American Heritage Hymnal (AAHH, GIA Publications, 2001) and The Book of Praise (BoP, The Presbyterian Church in Canada, 1997) in addition to the regular hymnals featured in RW (see contents page for explanation of abbreviations). Prelude Introduction Our worship today will be aided in part by a painting by Hans Holbein of Christ in the tomb. This painting figures prominently in Fyodor Dostoevsky’s novel The Idiot (Penguin Classics, 2004). Selections from the novel and from Scripture will be read, prayers will be offered, and hymns sung. As you prepare for worship, you are invited to examine the picture of our dead Savior. Moment of Silence Call to Worship Isaiah 53:1, 4–5 Hymn Suggestions “What Are These Wounds in Your Hands, Dear Savior” Whitney, BoP 241 “To My Precious Lord” Park, LUYH 136 “What Grace Is This” Gauger, LUYH 163 “Alas! And Did My Savior Bleed” Watts, LUYH 173 Opening Prayer Reading “The Idiot was the first of Dostoevsky’s masterpieces to be written abroad. . . . It was while on his way to Geneva that he saw Hans Holbein’s painting of Christ taken from the cross at the Basel Museum. The picture, which he describes in The Idiot, made a tremendous impression on him. ‘He stood for twenty minutes before the picture without moving,’ his wife recalls in her reminiscences. ‘On his agitated face there was the frightened expression I often noticed on it during the first moments of his epileptic fits. He had no fit at the time, but he could never forget the sensation he had experienced in the Basel Museum in 1867: the figure of Christ taken from the cross, whose body already showed signs of decomposition, haunted him like a horrible nightmare. In his notes to The Idiot and in the novel itself he returns again and again to this theme.” —Translator’s Introduction, The Idiot, p. 7. Hymn “O Sacred Head, Now Wounded” Gerhardt, LUYH 168, AAHH 250, BoP 239 Reading This reading, adapted from the novel, is a dialogue between two characters, Rogozhin and the Prince. They have this conversation while looking at the painting. Rogozhin: [Rogozhin takes the Prince’s arm gently, like a friend, and leads him past a wall on which hangs a small, framed reproduction of Hans Holbein’s “Christ in the Tomb.” The painting catches the Prince’s eye, for he halts and stares at the reproduction, transfixed with anxiety. Rogozhin lets go of his elbow and watches him.] That was my dad’s. Prince: Why, it’s a copy of a Holbein, and, though I’m not much of an expert, I think it’s an excellent copy [still staring at it]. I saw the picture abroad, and can’t forget it. But—what’s the matter? Rogozhin: Tell me, Prince, I’ve long wanted to ask you: do you believe in God? Prince: How strangely you speak and—look! Rogozhin: [Eyes wide open.] I like looking at the picture. Prince: At that picture! At that picture! Why, some people might lose their faith by looking at that picture! Rogozhin: Aye, that also may be lost. [Rogozhin eyes the Prince, a faint, sardonic smile on his lips.] Prince: Why, what are you saying? I was only joking, and you are so serious! And why did you ask me whether I believed in God? Rogozhin: Oh, for no reason. It just occurred to me. I meant to ask you before. You see, lots of people don’t believe nowadays. —adapted from The Idiot, pp. 235–236, and notes from The Idiot, Dramatized by David Fishelson (New York: Dramatists Play Service Inc., 1965, p. 61). Scripture Reading 1 Corinthians 1:18–25 Meditation “Losing Your Faith” The meditation focuses on Paul’s argument regarding the potential to lose one’s faith when considering the cross and the death of Christ. After all, a crucified Christ was a stumbling block to the Jews and foolishness to the Greeks. Prayer Hymn “When I Survey the Wondrous Cross” Watts, LUYH 175, BoP 231, GtG 223, SSS 163 Reading This reading comes from the speech of Ippolit, an eighteen-year-old stricken with consumption: “I suddenly remembered a picture I had seen at Rogozhin’s over the door of one of the gloomiest drawing-rooms of his house. He showed it to me himself in passing. I think I stood before it for five minutes. It was not very good as a work of art; but it aroused in me a strange feeling of uneasiness. The picture depicted Christ, who had just been taken from the cross. I believe that the painters are usually in the habit of depicting Christ, whether on the cross or taken from the cross, as still retaining a shade of extraordinary beauty on his face; that beauty they strive to preserve even in his moments of greatest agony. In Rogozhin’s picture there was no trace of beauty. It was a faithful representation of the dead body of a man who has undergone unbearable torments before the crucifixion, been wounded, tortured, beaten by the guards, beaten by the people, when he carried the cross and fell under its weight, and, at last, has suffered the agony of crucifixion, lasting for six hours (according to my calculation at least). It is true, it is the face of the man who has only just been taken from the cross—that is, still retaining a great deal of warmth and life; rigor mortis had not yet set in, so that there is still a look of suffering on the face of the dead man, as though he were still feeling it (that has been well caught by the artist); on the other hand, the face has not been spared in the least; it is nature itself, and, indeed, any corpse would look like that after such suffering. I know that the Christian Church laid it down in the first few centuries of its existence that Christ really did suffer and that the Passion was not symbolic. His body on the cross was therefore fully and entirely subject to the laws of nature. In the picture the face is terribly smashed with blows, swollen, covered with terrible, swollen, and bloodstained bruises, the eyes open and squinting; the large, open whites of the eyes have a sort of dead and glassy glint. But, strange to say, as one looks at the dead body of this tortured man, one cannot help asking oneself the peculiar and interesting question: if such a corpse (and it must have been just like that) was seen by all His disciples, by His future chief apostles, by the women who followed him and stood by the cross, by all who believed in Him and worshipped Him, then how could they possibly have believed as they looked at the corpse, that that martyr would rise again? Here one cannot help being struck with the idea that if death is so horrible and if the laws of nature are so powerful, then how can they be overcome? How can they be overcome when even He did not conquer them, He who overcame nature during His lifetime and whom nature obeyed, who said Talitha cumi! and the damsel arose, who cried, Lazarus come forth! and the dead man came forth? Looking at that picture, you get the impression of nature as some enormous, implacable, and dumb beast, or, to put it more correctly, much more correctly, though it may seem strange, as some huge engine of the latest design, which was senselessly seized, cut to pieces, and swallowed up—impassively and unfeelingly—a great priceless Being, a Being worth the whole of nature and all its laws, worth the entire earth, which was perhaps created solely for the coming of that Being! The picture seems to give expression to the idea of a dark, insolent, and senselessly eternal power, to which everything is subordinated, and this idea is suggested to you unconsciously. The people surrounding the dead man, none of whom is shown in the picture, must have been overwhelmed by a feeling of terrible anguish and dismay on that evening which had shattered all their hopes and almost all their beliefs at one fell blow. They must have parted in a state of the most dreadful terror, though each of them carried away within him a mighty thought which could never be wrested from him. And if, on the eve of the crucifixion, the Master could have seen what He would look like when taken from the cross, would he have mounted the cross and died as He did? This question, too, you can’t help asking yourself as you look at the picture.” —The Idiot, p. 418–419 Scripture Reading Luke 23:44–49 Meditation “Three Good Questions” The meditation focuses on these three questions: First, if death is so horrible, and if the laws of nature are so powerful, then how can they be overcome? Next, how could Jesus’ followers possibly have believed, as they looked at the corpse, that the martyr would rise again? Last, if on the eve of the crucifixion the Master could have seen what he would look like when taken from the cross, would he have mounted the cross and died as he did? Compare our answers to these questions with how the characters mentioned in the reading of Luke’s gospel reacted. The centurion praised God. All the people beat their breasts. All those who knew him, including the women, stood at a distance, watching. Prayer Hymn “Beneath the Cross of Jesus” Clephane, LUYH 167, BoP 238, GtG 216, SSS 166 Benediction Do not hurry away from the cross, Linger near       to survey,       to stand,       to ponder our Savior’s suffering and death. Consider, carefully and well,       the preciousness of his sacrifice for you,       the greatness of his mercy toward you. Then depart from Golgotha confidently, knowing that the Spirit       will keep you in your crucified Savior’s strong embrace       and prompt you to trust and obey him always. The God of peace will go with you. Amen. —Reprinted by permission from The Worship Sourcebook, Second Edition © 2013, Faith Alive Christian Resources. Postlude

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Taylor’s maternal great-grandfather was baptized as a boy at St. Mary the Virgin, Leighton Bromswold Church; as a young man he was sent off to war from there. While tracing her family’s roots in the town of Huntingdon, England, we visited the church, which has parts dating back to 1250. Over time, the church fell into disrepair, our guide told us. But the great metaphysical poet and priest George Herbert (1593–1633) oversaw the building’s reconstruction and expansion. At Herbert’s insistence, the church was to have not one, but two pulpits. Why? While Puritans elevated the preaching of God’s Word (as those in the Reformed tradition often do), Herbert believed that prayers should have the same importance. So in 1626, the two pulpits were constructed according to Herbert’s instruction: “They should neither have a precedency or priority of the other; but that prayer and preaching, being equally useful, might agree like brethren, and have an equal honour and estimation” (Izaak Walton, Life of Mr. George Herbert, ebook reprint, London: Tho. Newcomb, 1675, p. 353). Those in the Reformed tradition might refer to The Reformed Pastor, the autobiography of 17th-century pastor Richard Baxter. Herbert wrote an earlier, comparable work: The Country Parson: His Character, and Rule of Holy Life. In it, he talks about the importance of publicly leading prayer and the necessity of the pray-er having a profound respect for the God to whom one is speaking: “The Country Parson . . . being affected himself, he may affect also his people, knowing that no Sermon moves them so much to a reverence, which they forget again, when they come to pray, as a devout behavior in the very act of praying” (Ch. VI). Ironically, Herbert’s poems are often set to music and sung in the church, but they’re less often used as prayers. Below are some possible prayers to use in worship, drawn from George Herbert: The Complete English Works (London: Everyman’s Library, 1995). (Editors’ note: While the language of the prayers is updated for contemporary usage, certain archaic words are retained to preserve the style and form of the prayers.) Prayers of Adoration Antiphon (2) To capture Herbert’s antiphonal intent, the leader could read the part marked Chor., with one side of the church reading as Men and the other side as Angels. Chor. Praise be the God of love,           Men. Here below,          Angels. And here above: Chor. Who has dealt his mercies so,          Angels. To his friend,          Men. And to his foe, Chor. That both grace and glory tend          Angels. Us of old,          Men. And us in the end. Chor. The great shepherd of the fold          Angels. Us did make,          Men. and for us was sold. . . . Chor. . . . Lord, thy praises should be more.          Men. We have none,          Angels. And we no store. Chor. Praise be to God alone,           Who has made of two folds one. —adapted from “Antiphon (II)” (p. 90) Providence The ABAB rhyme scheme lends itself well to being read by a younger member of the congregation. . . . You are in small things great, not small in any: Thy even praise can neither rise, nor fall. You are in all things one, in each thing many: For you are infinite in one and all. . . . —adapted excerpt from “Providence” (p. 114) Paradise Print this poem in the bulletin or project it to allow people to see the visual wordplay. I bless you, Lord, because I GROW Among your trees, which in a ROW To you both fruit and order OW. What open force, or hidden CHARM Can bruise my fruit, or bring me HARM, While the enclosure is your ARM? Enclose me full for fear I START. But to me rather sharp and TART, Then let me want your hand and ART. When you do greater judgements SPARE, And with your knife but prune and PARE, Ev’n fruitful trees more fruitful ARE. Such sharpness shows the sweetest FREND: Such cuttings rather heal than REND: And such beginnings touch their END. —adapted from “Paradise” (p. 129) Prayers of Confession Sin Lord, with what care have you girded us round!       Parents first season us; then schoolmasters      Deliver us to laws; they send us bound To rules of reason, holy messengers, Pulpits and Sundays, sorrow dogging sin,      Afflictions sorted, anguish of all sizes,      Fine nets and stratagems to catch us in, Bibles laid open, millions of surprises, Blessings beforehand, ties of gratefulness,      The sound of glory ringing in our ears.      Without, our shame; within, our consciences; Angels and grace, eternal hopes and fears.      Yet all these fences and their whole array      One cunning bosom-sin blows quite away. —adapted from “Sin (I)” (pp. 43–44) Herbert Poems Set to Music “Come, My Way, My Truth, My Life” BoP 565, HB 258, VU 628, WR 403 “King of Glory, King of Peace” BoP 659, HB 195 “Let All the World in Every Corner Sing” BoP 271, HB 2, PH 468, WR 49 “Teach Me, My God and King” HB 261 “The God of Love My Shepherd Is” PfAS 23J (Note: For more hymn texts written by Herbert, see hymnary.org/person/Herbert_G) Sources BoP: The Book of Praise (Toronto: The Presbyterian Church in Canada, 1997). HB: The Hymn Book of the Anglican Church of Canada and the United Church of Canada (Toronto: The Anglican Church of Canada and the United Church of Canada, 1971). PfAS: Psalms for All Seasons (Grand Rapids, MI: Calvin Institute for Christian Worship, Faith Alive Christian Resources, and Brazos Press, 2012). PH: The Presbyterian Hymnal (Louisville, KY: Westminster John Knox Press, 1990). VU: Voices United (Etobicoke, ON: The United Church Publishing House, 1996). WR: Worship & Rejoice (Carol Stream, IL: Hope Publishing, 2003). Repentance Lord, I confess my sin is great; Great is my sin. Oh! gently treat With your quick flower, your momentary bloom;                  Whose life still pressing                  Is one undressing, A steady aiming at a tomb. . . . —adapted excerpt from “Repentance” (p. 46) Sin’s Round Sorry I am, my God, sorry I am, That my offenses repeat in a ring. My thoughts are working like a busy flame, Until their dragon they hatch and bring: And when they once have perfected their drafts, My words take fire from my inflamed thoughts. . . . —adapted from “Sin’s Round” (p. 118) Prayer Before the Sermon O Almighty and ever-living Lord God! Majesty, and Power, and Brightness, and Glory! . . . Awake all my powers to glorify thee! And now, O Lord! . . . bless thy word wherever spoken this day throughout the universal Church. O make it a word of power and peace, to convert those who are not yet thine, and to confirm those that are; particularly, bless it in this thy own kingdom. . . . Bless this portion here assembled together, with thy unworthy servant speaking unto them: Lord Jesu! Teach me that I may teach them. Sanctify and enable all my powers, that in their full strength they may deliver thy message reverently, readily, faithfully, and fruitfully. O make thy word a swift word, passing from the ear to the heart, from the heart to the life and conversation: that as the rain returns not empty, so neither may thy word, but accomplish that for which it is given. . . . O Lord forgive! O Lord, hearken, and do so for thy blessed Son’s sake, in whose sweet and pleasing words we say, Our Father . . . —adapted selections from “The Author’s Prayer Before Sermon” (pp. 255–256) Prayer After the Sermon Blessed be God, the Father of all mercy, who continues to pour his benefits upon us. You have elected us, you have called us, you have justified, sanctified, and glorified us. You were born for us, and you lived and died for us. You have given us the blessings of this life and of a better. O Lord, your blessings hang in clusters, they come trooping upon us! They break forth like mighty waters on every side. And now, Lord, you have fed us with the bread of life; so man did eat angels’ food. O Lord, bless it: O Lord, make it health and strength unto us, still striving and prospering so long within us until our obedience reaches the measure of your love, who has done for us as much as may be. Grant this, dear Father, for your Son’s sake, our only Savior, to whom with you and the Holy Ghost, three Persons, but one most glorious, incomprehensible God, be ascribed all honor, and glory, and praise forever. —adapted from “A Prayer After Sermon” Prayers of the People Our life is hid with Christ in God Print this poem in the bulletin or project it to allow people to see the visual wordplay. My words and thoughts do both express this notion, That Life has, like the sun, a double motion. The first Is straight, and our diurnal friend, The other Hid, and does obliquely bend. One life is wrapped In flesh, and tends to earth. The other winds towards Him, whose happy birth Taught me to live here so, That still one eye Should aim and shoot at that which Is on high:       Quitting which daily labor all My pleasure,             To gain at harvest an eternal Treasure. —adapted from “Our life is hid with Christ in God,” based on Colossians 3:3 (p. 82) Prayer (II)       Of what an easy quick access, My blessed Lord, art thou! how suddenly       May our requests thine ear invade! To show that state dislikes not easiness. If I but lift mine eyes, my suit is made: Thou canst no more not hear, than thou canst die. —“Prayer (II)” (p. 100) Offering Prayers The Dedication Lord, my first fruits present themselves to thee; Yet not mine neither: for from thee they came, And must return. Accept of them and me, And make us strive, who shall sing best thy name.       Turn their eyes hither, who shall make a gain:       Theirs, who shall hurt themselves or me, refrain. —“The Dedication” (p. 5) An Offering Come, bring your gift. If blessings were as slow As our returns, what would become of fools? What have you there? a heart? but is it pure? Search well and see; for hearts have many holes. Yet one pure heart is nothing to bestow: In Christ two natures met to be your cure. —adapted from “An Offering” (p. 143) Benediction Blessed be my God and dear Master, the spring and fountain of all goodness. —“Letter to Mr. Nicholas Ferrar Regarding Support for Leighton” (p. 299)

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