Friday, December 28, 2007

My Christmas Conundrum

There are many Christians who have objections to different aspects of Christmas. For many years I and many other like minded Christians have decried the secularization of Christmas. It has become a holiday centered around Santa Clause and reindeer and frantic shopping and over extending one's self financially to meet various relatives', friends', and colleagues' elevated expectations. The only Christ to be found in most Christmas celebrations is in the name, unless of course it is spelled Xmas to remove even that last vestigial reference to Jesus.

If I may digress here for a paragraph, the letter X actually is an accepted symbol of Christ. This should probably be kept to ourselves though. I'm sure that the ACLU, who in rather Grinch-like fashion try to steal a little bit more of our right to public expressions of Christmas each year, would probably object to that spelling also if they were to learn this.

Then there are the very strict, fundamentalists Christians who make the point (a very valid point by the way) that Christmas, as most Christian holidays we celebrate, finds it's origins in pagan traditions. Neither our Lord nor any one else in our Holy Bible ever commanded us to celebrate this holiday.

As for myself, frankly I have not been that ardent of a celebrant. I mean I'm not Ebenezer Scrooge or anything, but I could take it or leave it. If we had all stopped celebrating it a few years ago I would have offered no protest over it. I would have looked back at some aspects of it with a certain fondness. I like the pretty lights and some of the tunes are catchy and sing-a-long-able and who doesn't like celebrations that include lots of turkey and stuffing and usually multiple deserts, but my life in general would go on and my spiritual life would not suffer the least bit in it's absence. I would still be just as grateful for Christ's incarnation as ever I was.

BUT ...

The attacks on Christmas now come from secularists. As secular a celebration as Christmas has become, as much as it's focus has shifted away from Jesus' birth, to the point where many Christians barely see it as a Christian holiday, the secular progressives still have a problem with this holiday. Even after it has been gutted of it's spiritual significance and left only a shell of it's former self, they still can't stomach an official national holiday with any trace of Christian tradition or symbolism - overt or implied.

What is the conscientious Christian to do? Do we defend this holiday that can at this point only minimally can be called Christian and that many us only lukewarmly embraced to begin with? Or, do we let the secular progressives win the day and take control of the public square whilst our ideals and traditions are impugned, trampled on and quashed?

Quite the conundrum ...

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