S
speters33w
Guest
My wife, Laura wrote this and shared it with me. I find it very profound, and unfortunately it is probably true.
I wonder if the movement to put Christ back into Christmas has done more damage than good to Christ and to Christmas. To begin with, if we’re honest with ourselves, we might have to admit that very often it isn’t really a movement to put Christ back into Christmas. He’s never left. It often seems as if it is more a movement to claim ownership of a holiday where non-Christians were happily singing the birth of Christ as part of a holiday of general goodwill without worrying about the implications of the wording in the songs too much. I first began to realize this ownership aspect when I converted to Catholicism and started to rather snarkily put forward the idea that we shouldn’t stop at putting Christ back in Christmas, we should also make an effort to put Mass back into the holiday as well. My attitude, I’m sorry to say, wasn’t very Christian or Catholic when I said it, although I didn’t really think about that too much at the time, realization came on gradually. At the beginning, before my eyes were opened to my hypocrisy, my attack strategy was to, using the very name of the holiday, explain to my Protestant friends that they weren’t really celebrating it right unless they went to Mass on Christmas day. Not that I wanted all my Protestant friends to convert. Even then, I wasn’t that self-righteous for my faith. Rather, I wanted to show them that the holiday was rightfully Catholic.
That was a horrible thing to do. I’m sorry I did it. My only defense is that, like those who crucified our Lord, I didn’t know what I did.
And, I don’t think most other Christians realize the horrible thing we’ve done as we’ve stood on our soap boxes in the middle of a beautiful Celebration of Charles Dickens type Christmas and explained to everybody else that they were doing it wrong and unless they were religiously celebrating, it wasn’t Christmas.
That is a lie.
A person doesn’t have to be a member of the immediate family to enjoy a birthday party. The next door neighbors can have a slice of cake and sing happy birthday with the family and nobody minds at all.
Christ came to the whole world: Catholics, Protestants, Wise Men, Shepherds and all. I can’t imagine that he’d want us to throw a members only, exclusivist birthday party for him- and the fact that we, who should know him so well, seem to claim that he would- gives the world a very mistaken opinion about him. We ought to be ashamed of ourselves. Or, at least, I am ashamed of myself, and I intend to behave better in the future.
I wonder if the movement to put Christ back into Christmas has done more damage than good to Christ and to Christmas. To begin with, if we’re honest with ourselves, we might have to admit that very often it isn’t really a movement to put Christ back into Christmas. He’s never left. It often seems as if it is more a movement to claim ownership of a holiday where non-Christians were happily singing the birth of Christ as part of a holiday of general goodwill without worrying about the implications of the wording in the songs too much. I first began to realize this ownership aspect when I converted to Catholicism and started to rather snarkily put forward the idea that we shouldn’t stop at putting Christ back in Christmas, we should also make an effort to put Mass back into the holiday as well. My attitude, I’m sorry to say, wasn’t very Christian or Catholic when I said it, although I didn’t really think about that too much at the time, realization came on gradually. At the beginning, before my eyes were opened to my hypocrisy, my attack strategy was to, using the very name of the holiday, explain to my Protestant friends that they weren’t really celebrating it right unless they went to Mass on Christmas day. Not that I wanted all my Protestant friends to convert. Even then, I wasn’t that self-righteous for my faith. Rather, I wanted to show them that the holiday was rightfully Catholic.
That was a horrible thing to do. I’m sorry I did it. My only defense is that, like those who crucified our Lord, I didn’t know what I did.
And, I don’t think most other Christians realize the horrible thing we’ve done as we’ve stood on our soap boxes in the middle of a beautiful Celebration of Charles Dickens type Christmas and explained to everybody else that they were doing it wrong and unless they were religiously celebrating, it wasn’t Christmas.
That is a lie.
A person doesn’t have to be a member of the immediate family to enjoy a birthday party. The next door neighbors can have a slice of cake and sing happy birthday with the family and nobody minds at all.
Christ came to the whole world: Catholics, Protestants, Wise Men, Shepherds and all. I can’t imagine that he’d want us to throw a members only, exclusivist birthday party for him- and the fact that we, who should know him so well, seem to claim that he would- gives the world a very mistaken opinion about him. We ought to be ashamed of ourselves. Or, at least, I am ashamed of myself, and I intend to behave better in the future.