Every day, from
December 25 to January 6, has traditionally been a part of the Yuletide
celebration. Dedicated to mercy and compassion--in light of the incarnation of
Heaven’s own mercy and compassion--each of those twelve days between Christmas
and Epiphany was to be noted by selfless giving and tender charity. In many
cultures, gift giving is not concentrated on a single day, but rather, as in
the famous folk song, spread out through the entire season.
In that delightful
old folk song, The Twelve Days of
Christmas, each of the gifts represent some aspect of the blessing of
Christ’s appearing. They portray the abundant life, the riches of the Christian
inheritance, and the ultimate promise of heaven. They also depict the essential
covenantal nature of life lived in Christian community and accountability--but
perhaps not as specifically as you may have been led to believe. Though
theories vary on the origin of the song (it first appears sometime during the
advent of Protestantism in Tudor England) it is likely an urban legend that it
was intended to be a secret catechism song during those difficult times of
persecution.
That rather fanciful
interpretation of the song has attached very specific and very dubious meanings
to the symbols: the partridge in a pear tree, for instance, is taken to be
Christ, Himself. It is supposed that in the song, He is symbolically presented
as a mother partridge feigning injury to decoy predators from her helpless
nestlings--an expression of Christ's sadness over the fate of Jerusalem:
"Jerusalem! Jerusalem! How often would I have sheltered thee under my
wings, as a hen does her chicks, but thou wouldst not have it so." The two
turtledoves are taken to represent the Old and New Testaments. The three French
Hens supposedly symbolize faith, hope, and love. The four calling birds are
said to portray either the four Gospels or the four evangelists. The five
golden rings are supposed to be the first five books of the Old Testament the
"Pentateuch." The six geese a-laying are said to be the six days of
creation while the seven swans a-swimming are taken to be the seven gifts of
the Holy Spirit. The eight maids a-milking are supposed to be the eight
beatitudes while the nine ladies dancing supposedly represent the nine Fruits
of the Holy Spirit. The ten lords a-leaping are naturally taken to mean the Ten
Commandments. The eleven pipers piping are supposed to be the eleven faithful
apostles and the twelve drummers drumming are either the tribes of Israel, the
elders of Revelation, or the points of doctrine in the Apostle's Creed.
Most of these
well-intended interpretations are likely just wishful thinking. For one thing,
all of the first seven gifts actually refer to birds of varying types. The
fourth day's gift, for instance, is four "colly birds," not four
"calling birds" (the word "colly" literally means
"black as coal," and thus "colly birds" would be
blackbirds). The "five golden rings" on the fifth day refers not to
five pieces of jewelry, but to five ring-necked birds (such as pheasants).
But, even though
symbolic maximalism likely goes too far, it is equally excessive to assume that
the song is "strictly secular," as one debunking web site dubbed it.
Indeed, secularism in sixteenth century England was about as credible then as
an Elvis sighting is today. The answer to overly-anxious allegorical apocryphalism
is not the equal and opposite error of overly-anxious rational reductionism.
Symbols don't have to mean everything in order to mean something--nor do they
have to mean nothing.
Very likely, this
delightful folk song was just intended to generally and joyously portray
throughout the Yuletide season the abundant Christian life, the riches of the
Church's covenantal inheritance, and the Gospel's ultimate promise of heaven.
Sing, therefore, with new gusto and zeal. For, "every good and perfect
gift comes from above." Even partridges, pear trees, and leaping lords!
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