I love team work. Musicians know how important and exciting it can be to work together. So do those who play team sports. Business people feel the power of leaning in to each other's strengths rather than simply going solo. Church-goers experience the connection of singing hymns together. Readers in Christian Science churches have found that sharing their individual inspiration at rehearsal lifts the tone of the Sunday service.
A recent editorial in The Christian Science Monitor quotes musicologist Daniel Chua: "Music is a call toward relationship, toward a new understanding of what it means to be in the world and to be with one another" (Liberation through music - in prison, CSM June 30, 2025 p. 29). The editorial also speaks of "the discipline and shared decision-making that a group performance demands".
Discipline and shared decision-making. Isn't that grand? There are many examples of working together in the Bible. Think Nehemiah building the wall, Joshua and his soldiers encompassing the city together. But I didn't realise that our friend Haggai had a team thing going on too. His short book covers a period of just 3 months. (We read about the "second year of Darius" and the 1st and 24th days of the sixth month, the 21st day of the seventh month and the 24th day of the ninth month.) During that time there were three characters working together, encouraging the rebuild of the temple:
- Zerubbabel, the governor of Judah
- Joshua, the priest
- Haggai, the prophet (followed later by Zechariah)
The tendency of the people was towards secularism. Sound familiar? Zerubbabel, Joshua and Haggai were countering that tendency.
Together they virtually asked: Why not now?
What a team!
Julie Swannell
Readers might like "Rising and Building" from The Christian Science Journal June 1932 by Glenn Adams Byers. Christian Science Reading Rooms will help you source this article.