But what these stores don't realize is that offending people isn't their biggest problem. The bigger problem is that they would be undercutting the whole basis for their biggest moneymaker of the year. Because if what we're celebrating isn't Christmas, if it's not about the birth of our Savior, but instead just a generic Holiday...then what is it that we're all doing again?
The problem, of course, is that fewer people actually believe the Christmas story. Stores don't want to lose the business, so they try to replace Christmas with something else. But it seems very strange that we all go so far out of our way, spend so much money, use so much time to celebrate...ummm, we're not quite sure. Yes, to be sure, there is a 'real meaning of [secular] Christmas' - there is some reason that we're being greeted in this Season. We've all gotten choked up when the Grinch famously realizes:
Maybe Christmas, he thought, doesn't come from a store.What that 'little bit more' is exactly, Dr Seuss never tells us. But we all know what it is. It's...something moving, something emotional, some vague sense that there is something more than all of the consumerism.
Maybe Christmas, perhaps, means a little bit more!
Now, of course, the Holiday still is about the consumerism. The Holiday without tons of presents, well, that's the main thing we do on the Holiday! If we don't do that, then what would we do? The stores won't let us forget that one. But even in the midst of it all, there's something more, something deeper. We can't name it, but we do know that it's definitely related to our childhood and includes the Charlie Brown Christmas special.
So if the Holiday isn't a holiday for anything, then what are we celebrating? And why are we doing it in December? Why are we all building up to a celebration on December 25th? And - most relevant to the stores - why are we spending all this money?
Some people have tried to explicitly make the Holiday about something. Here's what they've come up with:
- In some places, it's the 'Winter Holiday'. So we're celebrating the winter. Very inspiring.
- Maybe it's more specific, maybe it's the Winter Solstice. You know, the days are the shortest they'll be all year, they're going to start getting longer. Cool, huh. But Winter Solstice is sometime between December 21st-23rd (and that's only in the Northern Hemisphere). And I'm not sure that it warrants the month long preparation.
- So maybe we're celebrating family or close relationships; maybe it's that special time of year when we set aside time for those relationships we care about most.
First off, we all know that it's kind of a joke at this time of year that many people are culturally forced to spend time with people that they wouldn't otherwise spend time with because they can't stand them (I love my family, by the way). News agencies actually run stories with tips on how to survive your family during the Holidays.
But let's assume that you have great family relationships. So why in December? And, as one person I know has pointed out to me, why are we all doing it at the same time throughout the country? It's a lot of work to coordinate schedules and then to actually travel to see family at the exact same time that everyone else in the country is traveling to see family. If the Holiday is just a time for families to get together, that can be done at anytime of the year. One part of our extended family already decided to do that a few years ago; we met in late summer instead.
Apart from Big Business wanting to continue to cash in, the Jesus Seminar wanting to have a reason to publish something, and adults trying to relive or capture some sort of nostalgia about a childhood they never had, the Holiday no longer makes any sense for a secular culture. What we do, when we do it - when it's not actually about Jesus - is now at best hollow, and at worst down right absurd. Yes, the Holiday, and all of the traditions surrounding them will probably stick around for a while - pick a flower and it doesn't wilt right away - but, without any substance or reason for its existence, it won't last.
And I couldn't be happier! Christians should be celebrating! The death of the Holiday means that we will finally be able to go back to celebrating the Solemn High Feast of Christ's Mass without it being hi-jacked by big business looking to profit on our religion. Good riddance!
Many Christians out there think that they are doing a service to the High Holy Day by trying to force stores to use their religion to advertise their products. I, for one, am glad that the sacrilege is ending. But regarding those fighting for stores to keep Christmas in their advertising, it seem they think 'Christmas' in secular culture maintains an opening for evangelism. This is a noble goal, of course, but it's misguided because the secular celebration of Christmas obscures any real chance for Christmas to mean anything religious to non-Christians (heck, it's hard enough for Christians). I say let the Holiday assume everything materialistic, sentimental, and hollow of the cultural celebrations of that time of year, and then let it die.
Then instead of being obscured by giant snowflakes, invented childhood sentimentality, and a made up story about a magical elf (a story that for some time now I've thought is, frankly, quite stupid), Christmas will have some space to be itself; it will be free to actually be about the true story of when the ineffable, immutable, omnipotent, omniscient, omnipresent Creator and Sustainer of the universe was born to us as a frail little baby on a rescue mission to save us all from the grip of Satan, sin, and death. Now there's some true meaning for ya. There's something that can actually inspire awe and solemn contemplation, something that can actually feed the hunger for meaning that we all have.
Wouldn't that be a really awesome thing to celebrate?


...or as our pastor says, a fat pagan elf.
ReplyDeletelol yes, very funny
DeleteYou seriously hit the nail on the head with this post. Making Christmas into the generic "winter holiday" is a travesty and I literally snorted with laughter when you suggested that perhaps we're "celebrating the winter...very inspiring".
ReplyDeleteThanks! Glad you were able to appreciate it
DeleteI heard the church just made Saint Nicholas the patron saint of department stores.
ReplyDeletejust kidding!!
Christmas is a religious holiday. The kids in school don't even say Christmas anymore....I suppose it is up to the parents and not the schools or the stores, to teach our children the meaning of Christmas.
i am your newest follower..pls follow back if you can.
and Merry Christmas!
I think Christians should team up with Jews a bit more closely during this time of year. That time is known as Advent- and part of it is also known as Hannukah. First and foremost, we like Jews, and in America of all countries, Christians should make a modest effort to help them feel satisfied with how their holidays are celebrated. Second, we are celebrating the birth of the Savior of the Universe. They are celebrating oil that burned slowly. And sustaining a meaningful connection to millennia of tradition, but let's be honest, the two holidays are not in a direct competition. Third, if Christians and Jews cooperate on this, the month of December gets a boost in the religious emphasis department. We can help each other out- and by working together, eliminate an opportunity for anti-religion zealots to play one side against the other. But the main point is that Jews are legitimately dissatisfied with how Hannukah plays out in this country, Christians should care enough to do more, and it won't really hurt us to do so- it will probably help us both.
ReplyDelete