Generally, the idea of Santa Claus is said to have had its origin in the life and work of St. Nicholas.
St. Nick it seems did a good many things but none of them had anything
to do with reindeer, presents and chimneys. As I write this, it is the
feast day of St. Nicholas. Probably as a result, I've heard the
following factoid regarding St. Nick about a half dozen times in the
last couple of days: "He slapped Arius." I think Arius probably
deserved it (you can Google it and discover why). In any case
though, that clearly doesn't have anything to do with him being kind to
Rudolph on Christmas Eve.
As a society, we've removed
a lot of the reason and much of the heart and depth of Christmas.
We've made it about shopping, presents, the "right" gift and of course
Black Friday and Cyber Monday. The Christians among us (me for example)
still observe the holiday as the observed birthday of Christ and
perhaps even celebrate Advent. There is an ongoing, much ballyhooed
"culture war" that involves whether we as a society will continue to
remember the reason we celebrate Christmas or whether we will find the
observance (now more than 2000 years old) so offensive that we must
avoid mentioning the word Christmas because it contains the religious
word Christ. Although I hate to admit it, this is likely a case where
if you have to have the debate, you've already lost the point.
This only applies to the public forum of
course. What we do personally we are free to hold. This is true even
when holding to that which is unpopular costs us and even costs us
dearly.
The clearer vision of what's going on with
St. Nick and Christmas is found in the Easter Bunny. In this case, the
Christian church deliberately co-opted a long standing pagan tradition.
The problem with the Easter Bunny as opposed to St. Nick is that the
"co-opting" had nothing discernible to do with the death and
resurrection of Christ. Thus, once the reason for the holiday is
forgotten as a matter of societal practice, the Easter Bunny continues
without even an echo of its intent to reinforce the life and work
of Christ. Even the faint echo of the original cause is lost, to society at least.
I've saved the most egregious example of
this kind of distortion of purpose and intent for last. The greatest
heathen in the pantheon of linguistic
blasphemy is this: social justice.
Note that Christianity survived approximately 1,807 years without benefit of that phrase but somehow during that time, managed to far surpass anything the concept
could hope to express. It was cooked up by the Jesuits sometime around 1840. During the years before we were all saved by the shiny new word, missionaries carrying the
truth and love of Christ, healing and economic aid and every manner of good and sacrifice (sometimes unto death) were sent out.
It was (and always has been - even absent special new words) a holistic Gospel that encompassed both the
physical and spiritual well being; exactly as it was when Christ taught
and lived it. And even as it still most often is now in the post social justice revelation era in which we find ourselves.
I've known a Jesuit or two and I suspect that if those boys had kept the phrase to themselves, we'd all still be OK. By OK, I mean we'd have a common understanding of what the goal of a social mission is...And we'd have that sort of clarity of mission because we'd recognize the love of Christ in those that sent us, those that traveled with as and those we eventually served.
Of course, this being a broken
world, there have been many failures and abuses in the carrying forward
of Christ's mission, regardless of the language used to describe it. However, any complete tally of virtue vs. trespass
in this regard will result in only one conclusion. Namely, Christians
have been stumbling along in their brokenness for 2000 years trying to
live out the love and and care of their namesake. In that time, God has
worked miracles large and small to bring the love of Christ to all
mankind in both physical and spiritual realities.
It's not
enough to address physical need but not embrace the broken in your best imitation of Christ's love. Both are necessary. Mother Teresa said this: “Today it is
fashionable to talk about the poor. Unfortunately, it is not fashionable
to talk with them.” On that path lies the point. Social justice is a
legal and moral concept. It is fine as such. However, person to
person, man to God and God to man it ignores the fundamental reason for
any virtue of service. Namely, it ignores the healing, love and wonder
of Jesus Christ. It ignores the reality and hope of redemption and completion implicit in the gift. The thing is, that kind of giving has to include an element of the self of the giver.
When I raise this point, I usually get a few different things played back to me: "Well it's just a word and we all know what it means." Actually we don't. It's been co-opted by everyone from Protestants to the Libertarians to the Green Party and virtually every other assembly of humanity that might ever have interest in helping someone else.
Another playback is: "It's just good to do something regardless of the reason." The problem here is that where the presence of man is, there also is his heart. When the heart of man is involved you don't just do something. You do it for a reason. In the kingdom of God, the heart of the individual always trumps the shadows dancing in front of us.
When I told my wife what I was going to write about today she said
something to the effect of, "Oh, that's very efficient. You'll
make everyone mad all at once and then you can just have one big apology for
everyone." I have to say, that right there is a wise woman. You don't need to be afraid if you run into me when you're on a social justice mission or errand though. I don't correct grammar or spelling either any more unless asked and then I try to let it be a gentle thing.
Still though, my aspiration for this Christmas and Easter and always is that the great body of Christ can carry forward the present reality of his love and Spirit. My prayer is that we can communicate the reality that man doesn't live just by bread, but by the breath, will and love of the God that spoke us. I pray that I can carry that message in the warp and woof of my soul and my deepest inner being. And finally I pray that the love and nature of Christ so consumes me that its presence in me is unmistakable, even for those closest to me.
"My prayer is that we can communicate the reality that man doesn't live just by bread, but by the breath, will and love of the God that spoke us. I pray that I can carry that message in the warp and woof of my soul and my deepest inner being. And finally I pray that the love and nature of Christ so consumes me that its presence in me is unmistakable, even for those closest to me. "
ReplyDeleteJeff, this is a beautiful prayer and one I will be praying for myself too. Well said and AMEN {I agree-right?} Thank you as always for your thoughtfulness and willingness to articulate your process as it is at this moment.