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Stanford: Evangelicals should declare victory in the War on Christmas

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Posted: Friday, December 23, 2011 3:29 pm | Updated: 3:40 pm, Fri Dec 23, 2011.

This column might offend you if you subscribe to the ubiquitous evangelical complaint that secular America wants to take the "Christ" out of Christmas, and for that I am sorry. But if you don't mind, let me tell you a story.

Despite what Rick Perry claimed in his infamous "War on Christmas" ad, Texas schoolchildren do "openly celebrate Christmas." Today, my two sons are having Christmas parties at their Austin public elementary school. "There's going to be food and crafts and activities and stuff like that," said my 3rd grader. "The usual."

Last year my oldest son's class sang holiday songs about Kwanza and Chanukah, but not as some exercise in multiculturalism. Some kids in his class celebrate those holidays.

They also sang a song about a Jewish man traveling with his very pregnant wife who was pleading with an innkeeper to rent them a room. It seems this man, Joseph, was trying to find a safe place for his wife to give birth to a child who was not his son but who would be his king. I cannot imagine a more Christian song to sing anywhere, much less in a public school.

If there is a War on Christmas, the liberals are getting routed. It's time for evangelicals to declare victory on this front and fight the real secular threat to the true meaning of Christmas: Santa Claus.

Politically conservative Christians are fighting the wrong War on Christmas. The real threat isn't those kids on Glee, federal judges trying to prevent the government from going into the religion business, or well-meaning schoolteachers who want to honor the traditions of all their students.

The real threat to Christmas is Santa and the gospel of gimme, gimme, gimme. We've gone from St. Nicholas performing the miracle of bringing butchered and pickled children back to life to sitting on the laps of department store Santas and telling them what you want. And judging from the stress I see in everyone's eyes, the circulars in my Sunday newspaper, the countdown of shopping days, or the commercials telling me that I need to give my wife a new car or diamond jewelry to make her happy, it's clear that Santa is winning the War on Christmas, and St. Nicholas is losing.

This faith in the redemptive power of the purchase has blinded us to what evangelicals say is the "reason for the season." It's not enough to insist that Christ stay in Christmas. Politically conservative evangelicals should stop harping about activist federal judges and do for others what we wish that innkeeper had done for Joseph and Mary.

Child homelessness is up 38 percent since the start of the Great Recession, leaving 1.6 million American kids looking not just for a room at the inn but a safe place to live. Ellen L. Bassuk, president of the National Center on Family Homelessness, says the recession has made more kids homeless than Hurricanes Katrina and Rita. Instead of hyping the War on Christmas to score political points, wouldn't it be nice if Rick Perry and his supporters helped those children displaced by this man-made disaster?

A pagan symbol that Christians have adopted for this holiday-the Christmas tree-is also being politicized. Some conservatives claim that the tradition is based on St. Nicholas, the patron saint of children, and that civic attempts to rename them "holiday trees" when put in the public square exhibit hostility to Christians.

Actually, Baltic tribes started the tradition back in the 15th Century to cheer each other up. They would bring an evergreen tree into the public square on the winter solstice, dance around it and then light it on fire. This was, of course, before the advent of Netflix.

Later people took to bringing the trees indoors and adorning them with lit candles, fruits, nuts, paper ornaments and garlands to celebrate having survived the darkest days of winter. And while religious significance has been attached to Christmas trees for several hundred years, the tradition that gives me the most comfort on long winter nights is the significance of the candles. To our Germanic ancestors, the lit candles on the tree meant that every day would get a little bit brighter and that the worst was behind them.

As our country crawls out of a deep recession despite deep political divisions, this is an affirmation we can all share. Perhaps it could even focus us all, both religious and secular Americans, on what really matters.

 

Copyright 2011 Jason Stanford, distributed exclusively by Cagle Cartoons newspaper syndicate.

Jason Stanford is a Democratic political consultant and the co-author of "Adios, Mofo: Why Rick Perry Will Make America Miss George W. Bush." Jason can be reached at stanford@oppresearch.com.

 

  • Discuss

Welcome to the discussion.

4 comments:

  • DJ100 posted at 4:45 pm on Fri, Dec 23, 2011.

    DJ100 Posts: 1

    Hi, Jason,

    You're kind of glossing over the United States with a napkin here. The war on Christmas may not be as intense in good old conservative Arizona, but it is roaring in America. Principals are saying green and red are too Christmasy. Santa's and reindeers, which have nothing to do with the real story of Christmas, are banned in places. Christmas "cops" are all over America. Your lib friends are in charge of 99.999 percent of the public schools and universities. I know there, I've been there as an employee and been warned by the Christmas "cops." If the war on Christmas can be compared to a football game, it's 41-7 Scrooges. And another matter: your attitude toward conservatives isn't very charitable, though you hold yourself up on a pedestal of righteousness. You assume for conservatives that you know our priorities and attitudes; you don't. Your rant intermingling activist judges and Joseph and Mary is downright bizarre. Editor, anyone? Editors, Tribune? You let this pass as logic?

    Merry Christmas, with a capital C!

     
  • Rich posted at 7:53 pm on Fri, Dec 23, 2011.

    Rich Posts: 1865

    "Jason(sic), your little friends are wrong. They have been affected by the skepticism of a skeptical age. They do not believe except they see. They think that nothing can be which is not comprehensible by their little minds. All minds, Jason(sic), whether they be men’s or children’s, are little. In this great universe of ours, man is a mere insect, an ant, in his intellect as compared with the boundless world about him, as measured by the intelligence capable of grasping the whole of truth and knowledge.

    Yes, Jason(sic), there is a Santa Claus." Francis P. Church

    "Your rant intermingling activist judges and Joseph and Mary is downright bizarre." It is, indeed.

     
  • Dale Whiting posted at 8:49 am on Sat, Dec 24, 2011.

    Dale Whiting Posts: 3705

    Jason,

    St. Nick was not the first anonomous gift giver. If I recall the geography and century correctly, it was a 6th century rich young man in Fethiye, on the Meditereanian Sea Coast [today Turkey] who sold all of his treasures, wrapped the money up in cloth sacks and threw them through the open windows to families with small children and them became a penniless priest. Though Muslim today, the Turks are proud of this point of Anatolian heritage!

    But your point is well taken. Commercialization of such things as Mother's Day and Christmas has overtaken their original points. So don't mind Rich and DJ100. They probably never had THE Christmas Spirit and hence missed your point entirely. You were not as much hitting on Evangelicals and their questionable goals and priorities as you were on the observation that they missed the real target. Or is that Target? Likely they did hit Target!

     
  • Accuracy posted at 9:24 am on Sat, Dec 24, 2011.

    Accuracy Posts: 1921

    In 1897, an 8 years old, Virginia O'Hanlon, wrote a letter to the editor of the New York Sun asking if Santa Claus was real. In a touching story, the Editor's Response was “Yes, Virginia, There is a Santa Claus”.

    We know that the real spirit of Santa Claus exists in our world today; and, will continue on just like the editor wrote in 1897.

    This time of year, the majority of folks are a little friendlier, kinder, more giving and even think about things like the real meaning of Christmas.

    Christians carry this same spirit as a part of their everyday lives throughout the year because of Who lives inside of them. Evangelicals don't have to think about a baby in a manger only this time of the year, because they can celebrate Him throughout the year.

    Yes, Jason Stanford, there is a Jesus...

     

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