The Forgotten War on Christmas
Like all wars, the memory of this particular one has become
a little blurred. It is the winners of wars that usually get to frame how or
even if they are remembered. There is a great deal of Christmas mythology
happily embraced by believers today. I’m not talking about the common additions
to the nativity story of animals and drummer boys and Magi at the stable (they came
well after the birth). Most people who’ve read the Bible know the story has
become a little embellished over time.
No, this is our mythology about Christmas, itself. The celebration.
And the church’s determination not to celebrate it. It sounds like a kind of
alternate history, when, in fact, it is a more accurate account of what
happened. It is filled with surprises. For example, the reason for many years it
was against the law in Boston for schools to close on Christmas day, was
specifically because of the city’s strong Christian heritage.
Of course, some Christians have celebrated the Feast of the
Nativity on December 25 since at least the fourth century. But, for the
majority of the Protestants of the sixteenth, seventeenth, and even eighteenth
centuries, the clarion cry, “Let’s keep Christ at the center of Christmas,”
would be nonsense. You may as well have shouted, “Let’s keep Christ at the
center of Oktoberfest!” They steadfastly
refused to celebrate Christmas because they did not think Christ was ever in
Christmas. They believed the annual celebration of Christmas undermined the
faith of the true church.
As most people know, the annual observance of the nativity
occurring shortly after the winter solstice was not widely practiced until the
era of Constantine in the fourth century. An earlier observance associated with
the baptism of Jesus, often called Epiphany, was held on the 6th of
January. Since this was celebrating the beginning of Jesus’ ministry, most
ancient Christian traditions adopted this date to celebrate the nativity
(another kind of beginning). In the Latin west, however, a date twelve days
earlier came to be adopted. And, yes, this is the reason people sang about
the twelve days of Christmas.
Unlike the events of “Holy Week” (the last supper, trial, crucifixion
and resurrection), the birth of Jesus did not draw much attention in the first
couple of centuries. At least in part, this parallels the lack of attention it
receives in the New Testament. Two chapters in Matthew, two in Luke (with one
of those mostly about the birth of John the Baptist), and a possible
description in Revelation 12 are pretty much all there is. His lineage from
King David is brought up far more often than his virgin birth. Neither the book
of Acts nor the 21 epistles of the New Testament give the events of the
nativity any attention whatsoever. This is not to suggest the accounts of the
virgin birth were not widely known and accepted. But, the story of how he was
born in Bethlehem was not the subject of interest and religious devotion it
will become in later centuries.
What Started the War?
It is, in fact, the great Protestant insistence, sola scriptura, that led Zwingli,
Calvin, Knox, and virtually all Reformed and Anabaptist churches to
specifically reject and consistently ignore Christmas. Since the birth in
Bethlehem is not a major theme in the New Testament, it might be reasoned, neither
should it be a major theme is real back-to-the-Bible churches.
A second reason these Protestant churches opposed Christmas
was rooted in their antipathy to all things Roman Catholic. Priestly vestments
and incense, monks and nuns, artwork and organs were all purged from worship. The
use of so-called “Holy Days” (later shortened to holidays) was what Roman
Catholics did and so it would be what many Protestants would certainly not do. In
other words, they were determined to keep the Mass out of Christ-Mass.
Their final reason for specifically opposing Christmas,
however, may be the most surprising. Even if someone decided annual Holy Days
were perfectly acceptable, there was still a major objection. Christmas, at
least by the era of the Reformation, was widely associated with overeating,
overdrinking, and a great deal of decidedly unchristian behavior (sometimes
described as “over-mating”). Western Europe had brought into the practices
surrounding Christmas some pre-Christian traditions like mistletoe and Yule
logs. Most of all, though, they brought a lot of good old fashioned winter
solstice partying.
And so, other than Lutherans and the Church of England, Protestants
simply refused to engage in anything that looked like Christmas. Even in
England, one of the things Puritans wanted to purify was getting rid
of Christmas. In fact, some decidedly conservative Protestant
groups still continue the practice of making sure Christmas music,
decorations, or announcements are not a part of their worship in December. This
is not a new practice learned from the Grinch. It is the traditional practice of most Protestants simply preserved.
How We Lost
But, as I already mentioned, this was not a war these determined
Protestants were going to win. In part, it is because the rationale for not
celebrating it fails to convince. The fact that it was not celebrated in the
second century or that it is celebrated by Roman Catholics, ends up not being a
convincing reason to reject it.
The other reason it grew to be accepted involves a little
strategic disinformation. The raucous history of outrageous excesses that
marked Christmas for many centuries has been quietly covered under a blanket of
Victorian scenes of family gatherings and a short story (Charles Dickens
personally thought among his poorest works) about a miserly old money-lender. The
ghost of Christmas past is very selective about what old fashioned scenes get
on our Christmas cards. Even in the era of Victoria Regina, far more time was
invested in partying than in praying. Dickens’ story, although quaint, hardly
demonstrates intense Christian devotion in any of its characters.
The war against Christmas was also lost because the church was
unable to forever resist the persuasive power of commerce. Commercial interests,
for whom the season of giving has become an essential component in their
economic survival, reinforce the celebration of Christmas with heart-warming movies, music,
and decorations. In this, we are usually willing partners. Along with our
neighbors. And our churches. Christmas, as its importance in Japan surely
illustrates, is big business, regardless of any religious origins.
So, I’m Against Christmas?
All this sounds like I’m ready to boil someone in their own
plum pudding while I look for a stake of holly. Nothing could be further from
the truth. I love Christmas. There are wonderful truths Christians recall and
retell at this time of year. The miracle of the virgin birth, the mystery of
the incarnation, the great faith of Zechariah and Joseph and Mary are all stories
that are both true and meaningful.
I just don’t think of December 25 as our special day that
all those shoppers, unbelievers, and semi-believers have stolen. It hasn’t
really been “our” day for many centuries. Maybe it never was. I’m okay with
that. For one thing, there is tremendous value in anything that brings families
together to make memories. The whole life-cycle of families is validated in
sights and sounds that carve those sweet memories into the minds of children
who will, in just a few years, be re-enacting those same traditions to their
children. In a culture that does much to pull families apart, it would be
tragic to oppose one of the few things that still bring them together.
I don’t care that Christmas is rooted more in Constantine than Christ. I don’t care that Yule logs were once connected to Norse gods. Christmas is family and Christmas is fun. Let’s make a snowman! I just don’t think the church should be running around insisting it’s all too sacred for such frivolous nonsense.
I don’t care that Christmas is rooted more in Constantine than Christ. I don’t care that Yule logs were once connected to Norse gods. Christmas is family and Christmas is fun. Let’s make a snowman! I just don’t think the church should be running around insisting it’s all too sacred for such frivolous nonsense.
I don’t brood about how everyone needs to “put Christ back
in Christmas” to the point that I scowl at plastic Santas and refuse to sing
Jingle Bells (which has nothing to do with Christmas anyway). My awareness of
Christmas’ less than stellar history allows me to recognize the holiday has
always been a mixture of good, bad, and dumb things. I can live with that. The Lawsons put up a tree, lights, and start listening to Christmas music (the must starts in late October).
I am thankful to be a spiritual descendant of those
staunchly Christian Scots who looked Christmas squarely in the face and just said
no. But, in the end, they are over there in Scottish cemeteries and I’m sitting
in a house lit up with strings of lights listening to Bing Crosby.
A Non-commercial Christian Christmas?
Can we have both? An American Christmas and a Christian Christmas?Yes, and we don’t have to go out and invent a non-commercial decidedly Christian Christmas. It’s right there in the calendar staring at us every January 6. Yes, the old tradition of folding the nativity story into Epiphany has been the central Christian Christmas in my family for a number of years. This is especially nice if you have adult children involved in church ministry. New Christmas is crowded with church events. Old Christmas is not. It’s often impossible, for people in ministry to schedule a full family gathering on December 25. January 6 is generally unencumbered by special church events.
So, Linda and I get up on December 25, do nice
Christmas breakfast and open Christmas stockings. We do it every year. It’s
very traditional and very nice. But, on Epiphany, January 6, we (as many of our family able to be together) gather and read through passages on the
Nativity, sing some carols, exchange presents, eat a big meal, and enjoy our
last day of Christmas music until next October.
Losing a war isn't always bad. We just gave up complaining about putting
Christ back in Christmas and decided to make the best of the American traditions
that surround us. It also means that we, unlike many of you, do our Christmas
shopping when stores aren't crowded and everything is hugely discounted. But, I
won’t say anything else about that -because it’s too commercial.
So, happy Christmas to all. Blessed Epiphany to some. And to
all a good night.
1 comment:
Terrifically entertaining and educational too.
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