On Pascha is an annotated liturgical message on Pacha by Melito of Sardis. In addition to the main message, in both Greek and English, the book also contains a short scholarly introduction to Melito and the historical background of the message and some assorted fragments of Melito's letters.
The introduction sets the stage well for reading the book and fills in some helpful background knowledge, especially about the Quartodeciman controversy. The Quartodeciman controversy is about what day to celebrate Easter. Do we celebrate it on the 14th on the month regardless of day of the week, or must it always fall on a Sunday? This controversy is in the background of Melito's message given in the book.
The introduction also gives us some helpful background knowledge about Melito, e.g., he came from a Jewish background, he was a bishop, he was considered a prophet by many, and he was celibate. We are also given an overview of Melito's theology, much of which seems to come from this message. Of particular note is Melito's method of exegesis. He uses historical typology, a method where the past events were rooted in history instead of merely being used to tie into whatever observation was needed. This method is used throughout On Pascha to great effect, and the introduction is helpful in alerting us to his method of exegesis, especially to Protestant readers who may be unfamiliar with typology.
In On Pascha, Melito divides his message into four parts, each of which is clearly marked and separated by a doxology. He starts with a propositio where he gives an introduction to what the speech will cover. For Melito, this is the slaughter of sheep and the life of the Lord. In the second part, narratio, Melito tells us the story of the passover in graphic detail. The slaughter of the firstborns is told in a way to capture the horror of what has been done to the Egyptians. It includes such moving passages as:
A lowing was heard in the plains of the land, the moaning of beasts over their sucklings, the cow with sucking calf and the horse with foal, and the rest of the beasts bearing young and carrying milk, and their moaning over their first-born was bitter and piteous.
At the human loss there was howling and grief over the dead first-born, and all Egypt was stinking with unburied bodies.
It was a terrible spectacle to watch, the mothers of the Egyptians with hair undone, and fathers with minds undone, wailing terribly in the Egyptian tongue: "By evil chance we are bereaved in a moment of our first-born issue." They were beating their breasts, they were tapping time with their hands for the dance of the dead.
On Pascha 27-29
After the story of the passover is told, Melito then gives us a digression and explains his method of typology. For Melito, nothing is spoken of without an analogy or sketch. He compares stories in the Old Testament to preliminary sketches of what will be. We only get to see the full picture in Christ, but the Old Testament is filled with these sketches, or types. He gives several examples of this. The most central is the lamb being a type which is later fulfilled by Christ. He also gives Abel who was slain like Christ, Isaac who is likewise tied up, Joseph who is traded, Moses who is exposed, David who is hunted down, and the prophets who suffer. All of these are types which have their ultimate fulfillment in Christ. In his fragments 9-11, he also further expounds how Isaac prefigures Christ. Isaac was bound like Christ, but Isaac also carried his own wood to be slaughtered.
After finishing up his digression, Melito moves on to the probatio where the argument is proved. Here he tells the story of man from Adam up till Christ, showing the necessity of Christ and how Christ was foretold in the Old Testament.
Melito finishes up with a lengthy oration where he places the blame on Israel and counters with the triumph of Christ. Even though Israel has rejected Christ, he still has conquered. This is best perhaps best shown in two paragraphs
96 He who hung the earth is hanging. He who fixed the heavens in place has been fixed in place. He who laid the foundations of the universe has been laid on a tree. The master has been profaned. God has been murdered. The King of Israel has been destroyed by an Israelite right hand.
104 He it is who made the heavens and the earth, and formed humanity in the beginning, who was proclaimed through the prophets, who took flesh from a virgin, who was hung on a tree, who was buried in earth, who was raised from the dead, and ascended to the heights of heaven, who sits at the right hand of the Father, who has the power to save all things, through whom the Father acted from the beginning and for ever.
Analysis
Reading the church fathers has always been both incredibly fruitful and incredibly challenging. They have tremendous scriptural insight and knowledge, and they can see clearly the call for both justice and truth. Reading Basil the Great early in my Christian life has helped me stay rooted in both truth and justice because he, nor any of the church fathers found a dichotomy between exhorting to good works and truth in doctrine.
Reading the fathers can also be incredibly challenging as well. I am beginning to understand them better, but also to understand how different pre-modern ways of reading scripture and the world are than the one I inhabit. This makes understanding and truly reading the church fathers more needed than ever, but also harder than ever before.
Reading Melito of Sardis fits into this framework, though his writing is clearer than others (Gregory the Great and Gregory of Nyssa for example), and he gives an outline of his method which is helpful historically, but also for my own understanding of scripture. I had connected Christ as the true sacrifice in Gen 22, but Melito was able to make other connections that I had missed. I continue to believe that we need to rediscover typology to understand the scriptures well, and the church fathers contain depths we need to plump if we are to do this well.
While the typology of Melito was helpful and highlight, reading his criticisms of the Jews was unpleasant. Reading this on the other side of the holocaust and historic antisemitism makes me more aware of anti Jewish readings of scripture. To be sure, the bible does talk a great deal about Israel rejecting Christ, and Peter blames the Jewish leaders for killing God in Acts, but he also assigns blame to the Romans, and later in Acts we don't even see Jews in other cities blamed for the death of Christ. While this book is helpful and informative, I don't think the anti-Jewish stance is the correct one, something the introduction acknowledges as well.
Overall, this is a short book which provides a good look at a forgotten and neglected church father. The church fathers lived in a time and place which was alien to us. We need to listen again to the ways they saw scripture, and this book is a good way to listen to them.