It’s Christ-mas, whatever we call it: Michael Hewat

The festival is about the birth of Jesus, regardless of what the Post Office puts on the stamps, says Michael Hewat
Christian traditions have been marginalised and we now want to enjoy festivals such as Christmas and Easter without accepting their origins. Photo / AP
The perennial storm about the meaning of Christmas has hit the letters page, its eye not in a tea cup but on a humble postage stamp.
Not that the subject of Christmas stamps is a trivial one. They used to be an institution in their own right. As well as always having a Christian subject, they embodied the Christmas spirit of generosity – the Post Office delivered cards bearing the seasonal stamp at a discounted rate.
The more cynical of us may have regarded this as no more than a fair discount for bulk use, but in a spirit of reciprocated generosity let us concede that the Post Office was being magnanimous – and rue that those days are long past.
Back to the meaning of Christmas though. There is little point in trying to argue, as Brian Leybourne has, that it has nothing to do with the birth of Christ. You can’t eliminate etymology from the debate, and the etymology of Christmas couldn’t be less ambiguous.

 

It’s Christ-mas, whatever we call it: Michael Hewat

From http://www.nzherald.co.nz/opinion/news/article.cfm?c_id=466&objectid=11175341

 

9:30 AM Friday Dec 20, 2013 11 comments

The festival is about the birth of Jesus, regardless of what the Post Office puts on the stamps, says Michael Hewat

Christian traditions have been marginalised and we now want to enjoy festivals such as Christmas and Easter without accepting their origins. Photo / AP

The perennial storm about the meaning of Christmas has hit the letters page, its eye not in a tea cup but on a humble postage stamp.

Not that the subject of Christmas stamps is a trivial one. They used to be an institution in their own right. As well as always having a Christian subject, they embodied the Christmas spirit of generosity – the Post Office delivered cards bearing the seasonal stamp at a discounted rate.

The more cynical of us may have regarded this as no more than a fair discount for bulk use, but in a spirit of reciprocated generosity let us concede that the Post Office was being magnanimous – and rue that those days are long past.

Back to the meaning of Christmas though. There is little point in trying to argue, as Brian Leybourne has, that it has nothing to do with the birth of Christ. You can’t eliminate etymology from the debate, and the etymology of Christmas couldn’t be less ambiguous.

Theories about origins aren’t much help either. Apart from the flaws in the Saturnalia theory noted by Jonathan Godfrey, while various ancient winter solstice festivals may have been antecedents to Christmas, the fact that they were usurped by the Christian festival centuries ago speaks for itself.

Christmas – like Easter – displaced the pagan festivals, rather than evolving out of them. Even where imagery coincided, as with the coming of light into the world, Christmas drew its meaning solely from the well of scripture.

That Christians took over symbols from pagan festivals underscores how complete the Christianisation of pagan cultures was. Christians had the confidence to appropriate such symbols for their own ends, imbuing them with new (Christian) meaning.

What we have seen over the past 50 years, however, is significant movement in the opposite direction. Christian Christmas traditions and rituals have been consciously marginalised or secularised, as attested by the demise of the primary school nativity play and the rise of the non-religious carol.

For Christians, the 1984 Band Aid hit Do They Know It’s Christmas? was not only a question about starving children in Africa. It applied equally, albeit very differently, to the materially indulged but spiritually bankrupt children of the West.

In many ways what we now do at Christmas is an uneasy amalgam of the Christian and the secular.

We eat and drink, Santa bears gifts, a kaumatua may say a karakia, we sing carols – including O Come All Ye Faithful – but a reading or enactment of the nativity story is off limits.

Theologically this is a muddle. The Christ child needs to be in or out, faithfully celebrated or excised altogether.

If it is excision, some other meaningful and commonly agreed upon name and reason for the season need to be found.

Neither Saturnalia nor Santamas are likely to cut it. Nor is simply being together as family and enjoying a spirit of goodwill likely to provide sufficient reason.

Sadly, for too many, family and goodwill seldom overlap. Those who do enjoy family time need no additional stress-filled festival to do so, especially with New Year and summer holidays pending.

While non-Christians work all this out, Christians – who still make up 43 per cent of the population – might return to the biblical narratives and ponder more deeply the significance of what they celebrate at Christmas.

It would be naive to think that the secularisation of Christmas has not taken any toll.

At the heart of the biblical narratives are two truths.

The first is that in Jesus, God took on human form. Jesus was not merely a prophet or holy man but God’s only Son – Immanuel (God-with-us). His birth was miraculous. His mother Mary conceived without sexual intercourse, under the power of the Holy Spirit.

This was no easier to believe then than now, as Mary’s reaction to its announcement attests. But faith avers that nothing is impossible with God.

Secondly, Jesus came into the world to save people from their sin.

Yes, sin is still the underlying problem with the world. It alienates us first from God, then from one another, culminating in death. Only God can resolve this problem, and he has done so in his Son Jesus Christ.

Believing this doesn’t come naturally, either. It requires both faith and humility, the acceptance that God has done what we cannot do for ourselves.

We are a society of mixed beliefs, and everyone has the right to celebrate in a way consistent with their beliefs.

Nevertheless, as long as Christmas bears Christ’s name, and coincides with the church’s celebration of his birth, it is unreasonable to ask Christians to surrender their longstanding proprietary rights to this festival.

Rather, a secular alternative should be instituted. It already has its own stamps.

Michael Hewat is vicar of West Hamilton Anglican parish.

From http://www.nzherald.co.nz/opinion/news/article.cfm?c_id=466&objectid=11175341

(and comments)

 

“The full flower that is the hope of all mankind may be found in the figure and life of Jesus. In Jesus’s own life was the Being of his nearness to God that He expressed as no other could, the Spirit and Will of God.

“I am a follower of Jesus, I am a believer, and I know had I not been a person of faith, I couldn’t be here in this place, and I wouldn’t be walking the path that I’m on now. “

– craig (as inspired by the words of Tyler Perry)

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Picture from http://www.tworiversblog.com

Salvation the forgotten key to true magic of Christmas

Michael Hewat: Salvation the forgotten key to true magic of Christmas

By Michael Hewat

5:30 AM Friday Dec 23, 2011

From http://www.nzherald.co.nz/nz/news/article.cfm?c_id=1&objectid=10774902

Biblical insight adds meaning to the festive period of gift-giving, writes Michael Hewat

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Michael Hewat: Salvation the forgotten key to true magic of Christmas

                       

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The reason Christians celebrate Christmas is that God took on human form and entered the world to redeem it. Photo / Thinkstock

Eric Weiner, author of Man Seeks God: My Flirtations with the Divine, wrote in an opinion piece in the New York Times recently that Americans are terrible when it comes to talking about God.

But at least Americans talk. Articles on religion are extremely rare in New Zealand’s leading daily, and without Garth George and Glynn Cardy they would be nigh non-existent. What is completely missing, though, is any kind of serious engagement and debate about significant issues of faith.

Is this because religion does not matter to New Zealanders? Census figures indicate otherwise. Perhaps it’s because we fear the polarisation which Weiner bemoans as a blight on religious debate in the United States.

Yet we seem quite able to cope with the polarised opinion which invariably dominates in every other field of intellectual engagement. Witness the way climate change and fiscal policy, for example, are debated with an almost religious fervour.

As we approach the most widely celebrated Christian festival of the year, it is surely reasonable to debate its significance – or is Glynn Cardy’s four reasons to celebrate the last word on Christmas for this year?

As interesting as his historical background on the Winter Solstice celebration is, this tradition has nothing to do with what or why we celebrate at Christmas in New Zealand. At best it may have a residual influence on how we do so, though when did anyone here last light a Yule-log? This tradition is lost and irrelevant to a 21st-century Kiwi Christmas.

The Santa Claus tradition, on the other hand, has without question grown to become the dominant one, and I agree with Cardy’s summary of its best and worst features. The point that needs to be made, though, is that Santa Claus is not himself the reason or cause we celebrate, but an inspiration and symbol of how we celebrate: by giving gifts and feasting.

How and why Cardy separates what he calls the Pageant tradition from the biblical story of Jesus’ birth will be the greatest mystery any of us face this Christmas.

Does he really think these are separate traditions, that there would be a nativity tradition without the infancy narratives in Luke’s Gospel?

When Cardy finally gets to the Bible‘s Christmas tradition, he asserts that it is not about a baby but about a man Jesus, of lowly origins standing with people of lowly origins against the power and wealth of the mighty.

Cardy concludes that the Bible tradition, merged with the other three traditions but with no suggestion that it is primus inter pares, offers us insights into how we might better live.

This is simply incorrect. True, Jesus’ birth was lowly and he was a man of humility. True, Jesus stood up against oppressive human wealth and power, and the Church is called to proclaim and live out that message all through the year.

But the reason Christians celebrate at Christmas is that God took on human form in Jesus of Nazareth and entered the world, as a baby, to redeem it.

John’s Gospel speaks in terms of the Word (which is God) becoming flesh and dwelling among us so that we might truly know who God is and be reconciled to him. In Matthew’s Gospel the angel who appears to Joseph says: “Joseph, Son of David, do not fear to take Mary as your wife, for that which is conceived in her is from the Holy Spirit. She will bear a son, and you shall call his name Jesus, for he will save his people from their sins.”

There it is, the simple message of Christmas. God entered the world in the person of his son, Jesus, to redeem the world and every person in it from sin. Given that, according to the Bible, sin is the root cause of all suffering, sickness and death – indeed the whole fallen state of the world – it is no wonder that this is supposed to be good news, a cause for great celebration.

Hence the response of the lowly shepherds and the Magi from the East. They recognised the uniqueness of the birth of the baby Jesus and responded with worship and gifts. In doing so they submitted their lives to his lordship. Saint Nicholas’ legendary gift-giving was a similar response.

Of course there were negative responses to Jesus’ birth, too, notably that of King Herod. Instead of celebrating, he allowed his own sinful nature to take full flight and sought to kill Jesus, killing many other babies in the process.

Few of us like to think of ourselves as sinners. Such a notion offends our pride and reeks of judgment. Perhaps that is the primary reason why the Christian tradition has fallen out of favour or been reworked to make Jesus less than our saviour.

Offer small children the choice between a candy cane and a $100 note and they will be sure to choose the candy cane. Likewise, children will choose Santa over Jesus.

Celebrating Christmas the Santa way may bring immediate benefits, making us more generous and big-hearted and festive for a day. But celebrating the Christ way is to acknowledge that we have a saviour and Lord who can redeem our fallen nature, transforming us and the world permanently into a far better place.

That is cause for lasting joy and peace, and a meaningful way open to us all.

Michael Hewat is vicar of the West Hamilton Anglican Parish

By Michael Hewat

 

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/nz/news/article.cfm?c_id=1&objectid=10774902

 

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