Since We're in a Political Season
Candidate and Senate
As I look out of my office window, I see sky and the
tops of trees. That’s because a foot of
snow sits on the outside sill of my window, blocking most of my view. The world is blanketed in snow, giving off an
incandescent glow; in other words, the world is white-robed. In Latin that would be candidatus, white-robed.
Roman men who were seeking office had to wear white
robes, candidates, to indicate to the people who saw them in the street
that they were running for office. This
was before newspapers and TV, after all, and the people needed some way to
identify them. Of course, the symbolism
of the white robe might be considered a bit ironic–at least if Roman
politicians, like some of ours, were not
exactly snow-white in character or behavior.
A related word, candid,
has an equally ironic connotation when applied to certain political
candidates. Candid means “white,” but also “open and frank.” Yet one thing almost all candidates excel at
is the art of obfuscation, of muddying an issue, so that their answers are not
open and frank, but guarded and ambiguous.
How strange that those people we call candidates are often the very
least candid of people.
A third word from this same root is one I used a
moment ago to describe the glowing snow–incandescent, meaning “white and
shining”–the word Thomas Edison used to describe the first electric light bulbs
he developed. Most of us know that the
prefix in can mean “not” (as in insensitive), but often it is an
intensifier, and it means something like “very,” which is the case with the in
of incandescent. It suggests
a very white and shining light.
While we’re on the subject of candidates, we might
as well take a look at the word senate. Senate and senator come from the Latin word senex, meaning old. The Roman senate was the council of
elders. I suppose that the average age
of the senators in the United
States senate is significantly higher than
the average age of the members of the House of Representatives, so perhaps it
is, to some degree, at least, true to the original meaning of the word.
I’m not sure we can say that about the word congress,
however. Congress comes from the Latin congressus,
meaning a walking or coming together. As
I have observed the congress recently, I have observed much more division and
partisanship than I have a walking and coming together.
Candidates, senators, congress people–all are frail
human beings prone to sin. None can
dress in white-robed splendor. For that
we will have to wait for the New Heaven and New Earth. In the book of
Revelation the Apostle John gives us a vision of the angels and the elders and
the throngs of the redeemed all robed in white.
What an incandescent sight that will be:
“The city will not need the sun or the moon to shine on it, for the
glory of God gives it light, and the Lamb is its lamp.”
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