- No, heโd say Happy Birthday to Me or Merry Me-Mas
- The most stupid thing ever said on Twitter? Take a bow
- Like a brown skinned Middle Eastern man in sandals walking about with a gun isnโt going to get riddled with bullets?
The best I could come up for my own response was
- If he was back among us, heโd say โJESUS CHRIST, WALSH!! WHAT THE HELL IS WRONG WITH YOU???
Apparently, Joe Walsh is imagining a Jesus ready to actually fight in the โWar Against Christmasโ that certain folks annually claim is being fought by political and socialย liberals such as myself as part of a continuing effort to make atheism the religion of the land.
A salvo in the war against the war on Christmas a decade ago was Sarah Palinโs Good Tidings and Great Joy: Protecting the Heart of Christmas.ย I didnโt read the book (and wonโt), but Iโm quite confident that I know the general thrust of her argument, if she bothered to have one.ย Liberal atheist grinchesย are out there trying to steal our crรจches, monitor our language so that we will be embarrassed to say โMerry Christmas,โ be forced to say something insipid like โHappy Holidaysโ or โHow are you doing during this lovely Holiday season?โ and make it a thought-crime to think about the baby Jesus.
I find this paranoia amusing, sad, or maddening depending on my mood. If oneโs faith is rattled by such matters, one has larger issues to confront than the possibility that not everyone shares oneโs faith. The Incarnation that I anticipate during Advent that begins next Sunday and celebrate at Christmas is at the center of what I believe concerning Godโwhether an oversized fake baby with a halo and pious expression gets to lay in a manger while observed by other pious statues and animals on the front lawn of city hall doesnโt have much effect on that belief.
This is not to say, however, that I deny that Christmas is under attack. It is, on at least two fronts. One of them is obviousโall you have to do is walk into any store where you can buy something between Halloween and January 1. One Saturday early this month, I needed a package of large paper lawn-and-leaf bags as I cleaned leaves from our tiny yard. Upon entering the Loweโs a mile away and heading for the place where blowers, bags and rakes were two weeks ago when I bought bags the last time, I was immediately disoriented.
Autumn leaf-control tools and accessories had been replaced by mass quantities of the worst that commercial Christmas has to offer. Fake trees, gaudy and tasteless lawn decorations and tree ornaments had taken over the right front quadrant of the store, supported by the ever-offensive strains of Xmas muzak in the background. WHAT THE FUCK!!!??? I thought, as I do every year in November when I am smacked in the face by the Ghost of Capitalist Christmas for the first time in the season. Halloween was just two weeks ago! Thanksgiving isnโt for another ten days! Thanks for making me hate Christmas all over again, Loweโs!
Iโm convinced that this is more than simple capitalism run amuck. Thereโs something sinister lurking behind the scenes. Everything we see and hear at the end of each calendar year is designed to convince us that we need to buy a bunch of stuff we canโt afford in order to prove our affection for people in our lives, all overseen by a fat guy with a white beard in a red suit.What more insidious undermining of an adult, vigorous, intelligent faith could there beโthe divine turned into a fat guy with a beard who can be bribed by good behavior into fulfilling even the most trivial desires?
A jolly elf who effectively seduces millions of people every year into believingย that and behaving as ifย the best place to celebrate Christmas is in one of our contemporary cathedrals of worshipโthe shopping mall. Get thee behind me, Santa. The war on Christmas has been underway for a long time, waged not by liberal, politically correct atheists seeking to undermine traditional values, but rather by the insidious and inexorable pressure to trivialize and commodify everything. The heart of Christmas is no more present in lawn ornaments, โPut Christ Back Into Christmasโ slogans, and โMerry Christmasโ lapel buttons than it is in the extravaganza of holiday paraphernalia that screams at me every time I drive down the street or walk into a store between Halloween and New Yearโs Day. The heart of Christmas is in the silent mystery of the Incarnation, in the strange and beautiful ways in which the divine chooses to enter our world in human form on a daily basis. There are many ways to connect and resonate with the heart of ChristmasโSanta is not one of them.
But there is another front in the war on Christmas, this one self-inflicted by those of us who claim to be Christian. In a recent interview with Krista Tippett on NPRโsย On Being, Jesuit author and spiritual advisor James Martin spoke of how we have sanitized the Christmas story into something appropriate for polite conversation, crรจches, cards, and movies.
I think itโs been tamed. Itโs not only been commodified and commercialized; itโs been tamed. Itโs a nice, pretty story about two nice, good-looking people, usually white, who had a pretty baby in a manger. But in a sense, itโs a terrifying story in terms of what they had to undergo. And itโs alsoโI have to sayโit is a shocking story. Itโs not just a baby. It is God being born in human form. And itโs just as shocking as the resurrection. And I think weโve tamed it. And in a sense, it doesnโt demand our belief. We can just kind of look on it, and say, โWell, thatโs cuteโ . . . And I actually have to say, I am really getting to the point where Iโm starting to loathe the Christmas season.
As I had the opportunity in a recent semester to discuss some of the seminal texts of the Christian faith with my freshman students, I reminded them that at the heart of the Christmas story is an outrageously ridiculous, but beautifully attractive, idea: God chose to become human. God continues to engage with the world through humans. We have surrounded ourselves with all sorts of distractions in order to avoid grappling with a most basic truth: God loves us. That changes everything. And it doesnโt make me want to go to the mall or to church.