Monday, December 05, 2005

Objectifying Faith


I've been thrashing around in my head, attempting to answer a bit of guilt: Why am I such a curmudgeon when it comes to Christmas?

This nativity scene says it all.

Penguins.

I laugh and poke fun at holiday stupidity and excess. I do it because I follow Jesus. If Jesus turned tables in anger over Passover marketing, what do you think he'd do about Christmas - a holiday bearing his honorable title?

I do not assign blame for the demise of Christmas onto the "secular culture." Why are we always so surprised when people who lack faith don't get it? Of course Madison Ave. will have a different view of a holy day than a person who actually believes Jesus came. It is only natural for a naturalist to fumble the ball when the Hail Mary pass is made by a fundamentalist. Put Jesus in the hands of a religion-neutral social economy and what do you expect? Reverence?

I blame Xmas on Xians.

It's because we are so prone to objectification. When Moses went up the mountain, the void had to be filled; a golden calf did interim duty. When Moses returned, a couple of tablets of stone came with him. The tablets were interesting, but it wasn't the tablets that were important, it was what was written on them: God's words.

But evangelicals, in desperate need of an Object, insist that monuments with the ten commandments be placed in government buildings. What makes us think this will work? It's never, ever, worked before. This is a silly, unnecessary, childish tantrum over something that is trivial, at best, and deceptive, at worst.

Deceptive because we make the assumption that having engraved words on a stone will do ANYTHING. Madonna - singer, not Virgin - wears a cross near her pointy brassiere. Does this phase her? Does this change her? Does this make her holy? If the cross doesn't work for Madonna, the Ten Commandments aren't going to work for the United States government. And in some locations, such placement may produce justifiably similar disgust.

The same is true of Nativity Scenes, angels, stars.

I don't have answers. I know how to poke a finger at the problem, but I don't have a clue how to fix it. It is exhausting for me to envision how we could ever turn this Polar Express around.

So I'll sit here by the fire, listening to "White Christmas," slurping some Egg Nog, smelling the pine air, and praying that the little porcelain babe over there in the made-in-China creche might just come alive, toddle over over to me, and whisper The Answer in my ear.

5 comments:

Mary DeMuth said...

You know what's ironic? France, the most secular nation I've encountered is awash in nativity scenes EVERYWHERE! (And nary a penguin in sight!) The nativity scene hasn't converted the French yet.

Unknown said...

Maybe that's why I am seeking a simple Christmas this year. It's everywhere and nowhere. :)

michael snyder said...

Great post, glad I found your blog through the Masters' Artist. Consider yourself bookmarked.

Mike

michael snyder said...

Great post and great insight...penguins. Glad I found your blog through the Master's Artist and consider yourself bookmarked.

Mike

Anonymous said...

I wonder if Christians feel a need to rescue Christ; make sure He doesn't vanish from public view. A fear that if He is not "front and center" in every arena of mankind, people will not remember Him, making His sacrifice a waste.

Seems kinda backwards . . . didn't He come to rescue us?

Great article and I totally agree.