Happy Christmas
By jxmartin
Wed, 15 Dec 2021
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4 comments
“Oh Holy Night. The stars are brightly shining. It is the night of our dear Savior’s birth.” These are the words to one of the more treasured Christmas carols that we hear at this time of year. But what do the words mean?
History records that there was born into the Mideast, some two thousand years ago, a child that a carpenter named Joseph and his wife Mary welcomed to the planet, while staying in a manger somewhere near their ancestral town of Bethlehem, in the area of present day Israel, during one of the great census treks of the era.
No one really knows the circumstances of the birth of this child, Jesus, other than Joseph and Mary. They were never the talkative types. Some time, within the next year or so, three wise men came to pay homage to this birth foretold in scripture, carrying gifts of Gold, Frankincense and Myrrh, all precious commodities at the time.
One wonders what a poor carpenter like Joseph would have done with such treasures. More than likely the local church or village officials scarfed up that horde for “safe keeping.” There is no historical record of snow in the desert at that time. Nor were there any reindeers or fat, roly-poly men, in red sweat suits, stomping around and hollering “ho ho ho.” That accumulation of pageantry all came in later centuries, when one culture after another piled their cultural lore onto another, like items tacked onto a collage of transparencies on a bulletin board.
Christmas trees were provided by the 18th century Germans whose ancestors had worshipped deities in the trees, often knocking upon them for good luck. The whole glittering and decorated tree arose from those origins. Gift giving probably filtered in around the same time, perhaps confused with various saintly figures honoring St. Valentine, his day and the tradition of bearing personal gifts to loved ones.
It really took the power of New York’s Madison Avenue advertising industry to develop the whole package that included massive shopping sprees at huge retail chains in the 20th century. Poems like “The night before Christmas” and NY Sun editorials like “Yes, Virginia, there is a Santa Claus” kept the ball rolling in the public’s mind. Films like “Miracle on 34th street,” “It’s a wonderful life” and “White Christmas” implanted the whole notion of a snowy Santa Claus with twelve reindeers dropping presents from the sky like the ancient myths of gods delivering gifts from the heavens.
Collectively, we all bought into the attractive package and fostered it upon generations of youngsters, coming of age. “Black Friday” and Boxing Day, with their shopping orgies and a hundred other traditions are all still developing. The most recent splurge of internet shopping is only the latest manifestation. But as all of this developed, I wonder if we haven’t forgotten the main focus of the holy day.
A baby named Jesus was born of a poor carpenter in the Middle East some 2,000 years ago. This infant grew up to be a man, perhaps one of the most influential wise men in all of our recorded history. He preached love, mercy and forgiveness. He advocated feeding the poor and caring for the sick and the old, concepts not yet known in his time. His philosophy of peace, justice and mercy, with a concern for the less fortunate, was revolutionary for its time. It indeed toppled the existing world order in years to come. Great religions like Judaism, Islam, Catholicism, and all of the various Protestant sects, flourished from the teachings of this humble son of a poor carpenter. The world was made forever better by his coming. And it is that presence, that sense of love and mercy that we celebrate amidst all of the glittering hooey every December 25th.
So, with all due deference to the small ones amongst us, I still enjoy hearing the lilting, almost haunting melody “Oh Holy night, the stars are brightly shining. It is the night of our dear savior’s birth.” And of all the fable’s, one got it right. Dicken’s, in his wonderful tale “A Christmas Carol,” had Tiny Tim whisper “God Bless us every one.”
-30-
(703 words)
Joseph Xavier Martin
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Comments
Love all of those things in
Love all of those things in that last paragraph. I wish Black Friday wasn't a thing in the UK. It's the very definition of "artificial". Lots of really interesting information here, nicely presented of course.
Enjoyed this. Paul
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Merry Christmas to you too
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Merry Christmas to you too Joseph, and thank you for this thoughtful piece - and for your much appreciated and enjoyed contributions to our site all through the year
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