Literature • 1762:
Tristram Shandy by
Laurence Sterne contains a fanciful anecdote (Vol 4. Chapter XXI) about
Francis I of France deciding to grant a favour to
Switzerland by allowing the "republick" to stand as
godparent to his next child: the names proposed by the Swiss for the child are "Shadrach, Mesech, and Abed-nego". Judith Hawley's note in the Norton Critical Edition suggests that this is because the three defied the power of a king. • 1865: In
Anthony Trollope's novel
Miss Mackenzie, the protagonist John Ball is a director of two ironically named insurance companies, the Shadrach Fire Assurance Office and the Abednego Life Office. Literary scholar
A. O. J. Cockshut called this "Another example of Trollope's fondness for jokes about names."
The Spectator in its original unsigned review of the novel in 1865 noted "how happy is Mr. Trollope's humor in inventing names!" • 1954:
Flannery O’Connor’s short story “
A Circle in the Fire” closes with an allusion that explains the story’s title: “…a few wild high shrieks of joy as if the prophets were dancing in the fiery furnace, in the circle the angel had cleared for them.” • 1963:
Martin Luther King Jr. references them in his "
Letter from Birmingham Jail". • 1915–1974:
Bertie Wooster, a central character in many novels and short stories by British comic author
P. G. Wodehouse, makes occasional reference to the three figures, having learned about them in school in the course of winning a prize for scripture knowledge. • 1961:
R. F. Delderfield wrote a novel called
Stop at a Winner about Abednego Pascoe who survives the furnace of World War II; his two older brothers were named Shadrach and Meshach. • 1976:
Robert Silverberg wrote a novel based on this story, called
Shadrach in the Furnace. • 1989: "Scintillant Orange", a story in
William Vollmann's collection
The Rainbow Stories, is an elaboration of the S, M, & A tale.
Music • 1734, revised 1774: ''Il Cantico de' tre fanciulli'',
cantata by
Johann Adolph Hasse (1699–1783) • 1885:
The Three Holy Children, oratorio by
Charles Villiers Stanford • 1930s: "
Shadrack", popular song by
Robert MacGimsey, performed by several singers including
Louis Armstrong • 1955–1956:
Gesang der Jünglinge, electronic music by
Karlheinz Stockhausen • 1966:
The Burning Fiery Furnace, a music drama by
Benjamin Britten • 1968: A song, "The Fourth Man in the Fire", by
Arthur "Guitar Boogie" Smith, recorded by
The Statler Brothers and by
Johnny Cash (1969) • 1972: ''It's Cool in the Furnace'', an album of songs written by Buryl Red and Grace Hawthorne followed by a 1973 musical still performed by churches and religious schools • 1974: "
Loose Booty", recorded by
Sly and the Family Stone • 1976: "
Abendigo", recorded by
The Abyssinians • 1979: "Survival", recorded by
Bob Marley and the Wailers, "...like Shadrach, Mishrach and Abednego, thrown in the fire but they never get burn..." • 1980: "Never Get Burn", recorded by
The Twinkle Brothers • 1989: "
Shadrach" by
Beastie Boys • 1999: "Never Bow Down", recorded by
Third Day • 2005: "Abendigo", cover by
Sinéad O'Connor of original by
The Abyssinians • 2007: "Burn Us Up", recorded by
Shane and Shane • 2010: "A Good Name" by
Shad • 2010: "Onward" by
Greydon Square • 2011:
Meshach Dreams Back by
Jane Siberry • 2012: "Into the Fire" by
Foy Vance • 2019: "Another in the Fire", recorded by
Hillsong United • 2021: "Fye Fye", recorded by
Tobe Nwigwe • 2023: "Khalas", recorded by
Swizz Beats feat.
Jay Electronica • 2024: "That's Who I Praise" by
Brandon Lake Film and television • 1995: "
Rack, Shack & Benny", an animated video in the
VeggieTales franchise. In this version, to keep it child friendly and simplify the story, the title characters – whose names are shortened versions of Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego, respectively – work in a chocolate factory, and they refuse to worship a giant chocolate bunny or sing "The Bunny Song", which declares that the chocolate bunny is more important than anything else. They are thrown into the factory's furnace but survive, similarly to how the biblical story tells the tale. This video also marks the first appearance of one of series’ main cast,
Mr. Nezzer, who appears in the video as the main antagonist. His full name, “Nebby K. Nezzer”, is a pun on the name of
Nebuchadnezzar II, and it has remained as his official name. • 1945: "
Ivan the Terrible (1945 film)", a soviet film by the director Sergei Eisenstein. On the minute 2:13:08 the Boyars, and clergy who oppose the Czar Ivan IV have staged a theatrical performance of this biblical story inside a cathedral, in order to spite the Czar by implying that he has become a tyrant, just like the biblical king Nebuchadnezzar. == See also ==