Sunday, October 26, 2008

Smitten? Really?

Yesterday I took S-Boogie to a practice for the Primary program at church. Little Dude and I waited while the children practiced. One of the songs the children sang was "We Thank Thee, O God, For a Prophet," and a pair of lines in the second verse stood out to me:
The wicked who fight against Zion
Will surely be smitten at last.
I understand that this song was written in the 1860s, when the LDS church had recently been chased, by threat of extermination, out of the United States. I can see the need for a persecuted minority group to feel that God is on their side, that he will punish their enemies. A hundred and fifty years later, though, now that the church is an international organization with millions of members, even more millions of dollars, and some pretty jaw-dropping political power, I find this verse rather terrifying. Particularly considering the fact that, by many definitions, I am among "the wicked who fight against Zion" and that's my daughter up there singing that. Shouldn't you be teaching these children that, I don't know, the wicked will one day be overcome by our love for them and come to accept the truth of a God who cares as much for them as he does for us? Instead you're teaching them that God--a God who, by the way, is known more often than not to exercise his will through the hands of his followers--will smite these people, who are also his children? Do you suppose it's time to rewrite that verse? Or maybe just choose a different song?

That said, the Primary Program was today and, apart from that bit of dissonance, I enjoyed it. S-Boogie and her classmates all mumbled their parts into the microphone adorably, sweet voices sang about a faith that adds meaning to their families' lives, and an endearing lack of appropriate intonation made just about every line spoken over the pulpit amusingly unintelligible.

7 comments:

  1. I've always thought that that particular hymn is a vitriolic little song.

    Word verification: anstnzoo. Really.

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  2. Thanks for popping by, R.E.II.

    And thank you, Ugly Swan, for popping by. It's a happy day when I get a comment from the Ugly Swan.

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  3. Well, they say "smitten" and not "smite" which means you're capable of interpreting "smitten" in terms of "I'm smitten with you". i.e. those who fight against zion will develop a big crush on the church.

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  4. Ooh, I like that. I have already had crushes on several Mormons throughout my life, so it's only logical that I'll develop a big crush on the church itself sooner or later.

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  5. I see Mimsy has already expressed my line of thinking. I don't see your example of being overcome by the love of God, and the word 'smitten' in the song as necessarily opposing each other. I think God will go with whatever works. :) I don't doubt that love would be His first choice, too.

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  6. If love is the church's goal, TK, and I don't doubt that it is, I think they need to work on better ways of communicating it.

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