I love the idea of Arthur as the "living arrow" in the sisters' quiver.
Probably unrelated, but I picked up The Once and Future King this morning and turned to this exchange between Lancelot and Arthur:
"We don't see many arrows thrilling in people's hearts nowadays," remarked Lancelot one afternoon at the archery butts.I also like the arrow verses at the end of Kahlil Gibran's "Your Children":
"Thrilling!" exclaimed Arthur. "What a splendid word to describe an arrow vibrating, just after it has hit!" Lancelot said: "I heard it in a ballad." They went away and sat in an arbour, from which they could watch the young people practising their shots.
"It is true," said the King gloomily. "We don't get much of the old fighting in these decadent days."
You are the bows from which your childrenI think what you wrote could be a key to the puzzle: "To [the Savage Sisters], this is to have triumphed over society’s corruption of the child. To them, this is to have slaughtered society at its own game."
as living arrows are sent forth.
The archer sees the mark upon the path of the infinite,
and He bends you with His might
that His arrows may go swift and far.
Let your bending in the archer's hand be for gladness;
For even as He loves the arrow that flies,
so He loves also the bow that is stable.
ECT, originally intended to make Arthur more shallow and thus more profitable, ended up turning him back into a child. This is God's unlikely triumph and perhaps a model for how a decadent society will not just incrementally improve (i.e. "the pendulum swinging back") but be utterly transformed by grace. And the reason why this victory is so unexpected and definitive is that it utilizes on the enemy's own arsenal. Just as he gloats over Christ crucified, the king of this world doesn't realize that--in crushing humanity's soul--he unwittingly catapulted it into definitive glory.
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