Monday, December 18, 2006

Somebody ruined Christmass for me

I grew up in a home that celebrated Christmas. The presents. The tree. The ornaments. The cookies for Santa. The whole bit. Our gifts were piled up under the tree complete with ribbons and nametags - as is customary in every house. The tags told us who the gifts were for and who they were from. Dad. Mom. Grandmother. Santa. We opened one present on the Eve and the others in the morning after. Sleep was always light. Bing Crosby sang in the background.

We drank eggnog, watched Miracle on 34th Street, nibbled on sausage balls and sipped apple cider.

Of course, in our house Christmas was not really Jesus' birthday. It was just a day that the world celebrated Jesus' birthday. (The irony of the "world" celebrating anything about Jesus did not strike me until long after I realized that it was actually my father who ate Santa's cookies.)

So here I am:

I don't like Christmas trees. Not even the real ones. There is something weird about traipsing around the city to some empty car lot, buying a tree for 10x its actual value in cut wood, strapping it to the top of your Buick, hauling it home in the dead of winter, digging in the basement for a rusty tree stand, setting up the rootless tree in the tree stand, and then covering the rusty tree stand with an old sheet which serves a dual purpose as it hides the rust and catches dead pine needles. After the tree has "fallen out" we promptly decorate it with ornaments that would be considered gawd-awful gaudy in any other context. Glass eggs, plastic stars and hard Playdough moldings; Las Vegas neon, fiberglass and Gabriel cover the tree.

Speaking of ornaments, I don't like ornaments either. Ornaments are overly sentimental and overly fragile. Which means that the emotions tied to those sentiments are also overly fragile. If you've ever broken someone else's ornament, you know what I mean. And with the ornaments, we hang socks on our walls. Worse still, we put edible stuff in the socks.

I don't much care for Christmas songs either. Most of them. OK, I do like "O Holy Night" and "Breath of Heaven." But Jingle Bells, Away in a Manger, Bethlehem O Bethlehem and Frosty just don't do it for me.

Christmas is all warm and cozy, glittery and glitzy, scented and potpourried. But to me, it smells of tradition. And not that sweet smell of tradition that I associate with other sweet-smelling traditional things.

Admittedly, I have a tree this year. Plastic.

Bah. Humbug.

Yesterday I woke early, had a encouraging talk on Skype with my Negro friend, busted out the guitar and praised God and sauntered into the Assembly on a nice high.

Then the worship leader burst my bubble. She said, "I thought we would just sing some of our favorite Carols this morning. Now who has a favorite Carol?"

Descent.

We sang for 1/2 an hour or so. We had no songbooks handy so we muttered through the "famous" songs, remembering two-thirds of the first verses and most of the choruses. Does anyone know "Angels We Have Heard On High?" Sure! But only one out of the dozen did. Mumble. Hum. Mumble. "An oldie but goodie," I thought.

Today I am thinking, "Who ruined Christmas for me?"

I am torn.

I have a hard time calling it "Jesus' birthday." But I relish the opportunity to discuss the Incarnation.

I have a hard time with the god-like anti-burglar Santa Claus. But I have an easy time saying that the Father is a giver of good gifts.

I have a hard time with trees and ornaments and carols. But I love gifts and children's smiles and hot cocoa.

I have a hard time with the commercial Christmas. But long for the fellowship that the season brings.

I like sleigh bells and snowmen and chestnuts. Yep, they have those in China. Chestnuts, that is. But I find that I am embarrassed to gather around the piano to sing Jingle Bells and Come All Ye Faithful in the same medley.

And yet, year after year I do.

However, in my mind, somehow the religious has infringed on the fun.

Christmas has been washed away in the cynicism. All that is left is a bit of gratefulness.

Thanks to my brother and parents who gave gifts this year. Thanks to my wife and children for their smiles and joy and Bible stories and pecan pie. Thanks to my employer who gave me 3 weeks off for this holiday. Thanks to my co-workers for their kind words and chocolate.

If I push the tinsel out of my eyes, tip back my Santa cap and table my champagne, there is one thing that I am truly grateful for above all things. As is common in the Church:

But thanks be most of all to the Word of God who became flesh in the baby Jesus; who did not see equality with God something to be grasped but emptied Himself and took the form of a bond-servant. Who was born to lowly Jewish parents, in a dirty barn, in disreputable circumstances. Who grew in statue and in favor with God and man. Who lived sinlessly before the Father. Who fulfilled the law in a life of obedience and a bloody death. Who rose in the flesh again after 3 days in the ground and in Hades. Who reigns as the saviour of sinners.

Yes, thank God for Christ's mass.

6 comments:

Anonymous said...

http://www.gotquestions.org/Christmas-traditions.html

Anonymous said...

This year Jason took on the scrooge hat. My children pulled at my heart. They kept seeing Christmas trees everywhere and glowing when they would see them. Saying, "It is so beautiful mommy." So I bought them a small one. I pushed down their throat that it wasn't a Christmas tree but a Jesse tree. I was planning on using it to tell The Story, starting with the shoot that would come from the root of Jesse. Anyways, all was going well each day as we added to The Story and the tree. But one day one of my little angels was sitting infront of it grumbling, "This is an ugly tree. I don't want a Jesse tree. I want a Christmas tree." That pretty much blew any 'warm fuzzies' that I thought I was creating for them.

Anyways, each year I go through all my thoughts about the season with Jason. This time I didn't. The Lord silenced me by having to read Galations over and over again. So I found it funny that Jason was on the side I usually am on.
Being that all the celebrations here are founded from idol worship and pagan religion, I have gradually stepped back on many opinions. I have seen that faith works itself out in love. During the Spring festival, the most important festival of the year, there are many who stay in Shanghai and don't get to go home. They miss their families. We invite those left here to our house for as traditional as I can cook, new years celebration. Then they can stay for as long as they want. It has been a good lesson for me and an encouragement to them. Father never wanted us to be "scrooges", but to give thanks and love those around us. I am glad He is still teaching me.


(Yesterday, I was struck by Galations 2:14. I wonder to what extent they lived like Gentiles? )

Anonymous said...

Jeeeesh, you get a whole friggin' 3 weeks off!? What kind of job do you have anyways?

Julie Anne said...

Hi Lisa,

Sorry, but your grouchy Little Angel provided me with a good laugh! And I love the Jesse Tree idea... I've never thought of that before. We don't have a tree, we have a manger John made for us. We fill it up with presents starting a couple of weeks before "the big day" :)

What has made Christmas fun for us is starting our own traditions that the kids look forward to--the manger was the kids' idea, so it's special to them. And we take them all shopping, at different times, to get gifts for eachother. They love picking out what they think their siblings would like. It's sweet. I feel like teaching them to enjoy giving is so important.

Hope the Holiday is fun and meaningful for your kids...and maybe they'll start enjoying the Jesse Tree...maybe you could throw some extra tinsel on it or something? :)

Deborah Fantasia said...

I think the true meaning of Christmas is Jesus birth (obviously.)
I agree, I don't think it's all about the trees or decorations it's about being together with family !(and maybe cookies:)
I hope you guys have a blessed holiday filled with joy, love, and happiness !!
Deborah

jw said...

Happy New Year everyone.

May you be faithful to your spouses, your work and your God in the next year.

I am not one for New Year's resolutions because of past failures but I can certainly commit to continue doing what I am already doing!

God be with us this year in purity and devotion and faith in love.

Grace to all believers.

Love,

j

P.S. AJR, I stretched the truth a bit...I only get 18 days off. 12 and 1/2 are work days. Whew! Glad to get that off my shoulders.