What is the "theme" behind the 12 O.T. lessons in the Easter Vigil?

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A year or so ago, I read an article (on the internet, I’m quite sure) which looked at the traditional 12 Old Testament readings from the Easter Vigil and explained the theme that they were intended to develop.
Code:
Lesson 1: Gen 1:1-31; 2:1-2
Lesson 2: Gen 5:32-8:21
Lesson 3: Gen 22:1-19
Lesson 4: Exod 14:24-31; 15:1a
Lesson 5: Isa 54:17; 55:1-11
Lesson 6: Bar 3:9-38
Lesson 7: Ezek 37:1-14
Lesson 8: Isa 4:1-6
Lesson 9: Exod 12:1-11
Lesson 10: Jon 3:1-10
Lesson 11: Deut 31:22-30
Lesson 12: Dan 3:1-24
Epistle: Col 3:1-4
Gospel: Matt 28:1-7
I seem to recall the article said there were three “groups” (1-4, 5-8, 9-12) and that each group of four readings thematically culminated in the fourth of the group.

I can’t find this article anywhere. Has anyone else read this article? Anyone have anything to enlighten me on this matter?
 
Ah ha! I found it. It was in a book, not online like I thought. It was in Fr. Kocik’s book The Reform of the Reform?; specifically, an essay (?) by Fr. John Parsons.
Having celebrated the Easter Vigil from 1993 to 1997 with the four readings retained in 1951 and reproduced in the typical edition of 1962, I increasingly felt that there was something wrong with the readings; they suffered from an undeniable air of anti-climax and incoherence. When I took the time to study the traditional series of twelve “prophecies”, each followed by a collect summing up its meaning in the mind of the Church, and to study the sung responsories mysteriously placed after the fourth, eighth and eleventh in the series, I realised that they were not twelve readings in a row, but rather three nocturns of four readings each, and that each nocturn had a theme that was summed up in the sung responsory that marked its end. The first four; the Creation, the Flood, the Sacrifice of Isaac, and the Crossing of the Red Sea, are about God’s creation of a Chosen People; the second four are about the increasing inadequacy of that people’s response to God’s Call; while the last nocturn is about God’s solution of this conundrum through the sending of the Messiah, who is foreshadowed in three readings as respectively Priest, Prophet and King.

The twelfth reading, mysteriously placed after the final sung responsory and unaccompanied by the penitential gesture of kneeling, is explained by the fact that the Vigil, properly speaking, is over; the reading looks forward to what is immediately at hand. In the crowded Baptistery on Easter night, the candidates descend up to their waists into the waters of the enormous font and walk about in them, saved and praising God for their deliverance from the worship of the idol of Caesar which the Roman imperial power had so recently demanded. The baptizandi are seen by the Church, through its choice of Old Testament reading, as foreshadowed by the three young Hebrews who walk about in the flames saved and praising God in Nebuchanezzar’s fiery furnace, likewise delivered from the worship of the idol of the Babylonian king and from the dilemma of physical or spiritual death. The fiery furnace is a kind of anti-type of the Lateran Baptistery.
 
** The baptizandi are seen by the Church, through its choice of Old Testament reading, as foreshadowed by the three young Hebrews who walk about in the flames saved and praising God in Nebuchanezzar’s fiery furnace, likewise delivered from the worship of the idol of the Babylonian king and from the dilemma of physical or spiritual death. The fiery furnace is a kind of anti-type of the Lateran Baptistery.

**

It’s not just of the Lateran Baptistery.

This lesson from Daniel with the Canticle is part of the Vesperal Liturgy of Holy Saturday in the Byzantine liturgy as well. In facdt, it’s the last lesson before the Epistle from Romans 6 (which is also read a Baptism).
 
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