Christmas Thoughts
‘Tis the season to be jolly’. Hmmm.
The older I get, the less jolly I feel at Christmas time. It seems the real reason for the season, the
birth of Jesus, is slowly being pushed aside to make room for all the
commercialism that now dominates this holiday.
I don’t like it.
There has also been a lot of skepticism over the
past few years about the roots of the celebration of Christmas, and so I
decided to investigate it myself. It
seems that Christmas, initially called the Saturnalia Festival, started as a
pagan holiday. Romans adopted it with
hopes of turning people to Christianity.
From “Christmas, the Real Story”
In the 4th century CE, Christianity imported the
Saturnalia festival hoping to take the pagan masses in with it. Christian
leaders succeeded in converting to Christianity large numbers of pagans by
promising them that they could continue to celebrate the Saturnalia as
Christians.[2]
The problem was that there was nothing intrinsically Christian
about Saturnalia. To remedy this, these Christian leaders named Saturnalia’s
concluding day, December 25th, to be Jesus’ birthday.
I
know there are numerous Christians who have chosen to forego Christmas because
of these origins. I have thought long
and hard about this scandalous past and have decided that I don’t want to give
up the celebration of the birth of our Savior because of its shady beginnings
almost 2000 years ago. If we give up on
Christmas, we will lose the most valuable opportunity of the year to reach out
to others to share the gospel story. As
rapidly as Christian rights are being removed, we must keep Jesus’ birthday
alive for as long as we can. It doesn’t
matter when it happened; the story needs to be told..
Besides,
I don’t think Jesus would have overlooked an opportunity to tell the good news,
especially to a group of worldly people who didn’t follow Him. He would have been the first to invite the
pagan celebrators of Saturnalia to His house for a birthday party.
There
are many, now, in our society, who live these holidays far from the truth, as the pagans did, but we
can’t allow that to blemish what we know to be the reason for the season
Sure,
we can become overwhelmed at the worldly celebration, but we have the right to decide
how we spend our time during this season. We can choose to not get caught up in the
excessive spending and busyness that easily engulfs us and distracts us from
the birth of Jesus.
What
a wonderful time to reach out to the needy or to share the good news with those
who have discounted it. We are all in a
giving and receiving mood this time of year, so let’s not discard these golden
opportunities to share the story of Jesus.
Besides, it’s much easier to spot the naysayers, during the holidays,
who want to take away our rights to display a nativity scene or sing Christmas
carols. Those are the people we need to
reach out to the most.
What’s
important is that we continue to observe this momentous occasion. The world will always add their own spin to
what we do as Christians. We can’t allow
that to interfere with the truth of why we celebrate Christmas. If we do, then the enemy has won. He doesn’t want the story of Jesus known. He will always try to make us doubt what we
know to be the truth. He will keep us
busy following the customs of the world and miss the importance of this
day. Choosing to give up Christmas
because of its origins is succumbing to the legalism of religion that Jesus
detested.
I
visited my mother’s church today, and they showed a video of a flash-mob at a crowded mall breaking out in Christmas carols.
It was awesome! People stopped
everything they were doing and joined in.
Two actors dressed as Mary and Joseph walked out carrying an infant
during Silent Night, and everyone in that mall got down on their knees. It still brings tears to my eyes as I write
about it. The traditions and music we
have passed down for generations are a powerful force behind the importance of
this holiday. We can’t ever forget
that.
Christmas
is not about celebrating on the exact date that Jesus was born with precise details; it’s about telling the miraculous story about the birth of our
Savior.
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