No parties or concerts or shopping. No gathering with
believers to usher in Advent by singing “O Come, O Come, Immanuel.” No
Christmas caroling. No candlelight service singing “Silent Night.” No large family
gathering on Christmas Day to exchange gifts. It feels like the Grinch has succeeded
in stealing Christmas this year.
Pandemic and politics have dominated the season. Instead of
peace and joy there is ongoing anxiety about the future of our country.
Hundreds of thousands more American may die before COVID is finally defeated.
At the same time anti-democratic forces in our country seek to undermine our
democracy and destroy our beloved freedoms. The Sound of Music with its backdrop
in fascist Austria suddenly seems like a possibility in our own land in future
years.
A New Hampshire state representative and school board member
from a nearby town posted anti-Semitic Nazi propaganda online this week. There
have been calls for her resignation, but she has refused to step down. She has not
apologized for the content of the post, but has only made excuses. A lawyer and
fellow Republican defended her, saying she did nothing wrong. How did we get
here? No wonder my emotions are not in sync with the holiday spirit! Where is
the peace and joy and love?
On the other hand, perhaps my emotions are more in sync with
the spirit of Christmas than I realize. The first Christmas took place in a very
stressful time. It happened during military occupation by an authoritarian
regime, who ruled Palestine with the traitorous collaboration of religious
leaders. After the first Christmas the local autocrat sent in troops to slaughter
children in the streets of Bethlehem to preserve law and order.
Perhaps the circumstances of Christmas this year are not an
obstacle to the celebration of Christmas. Perhaps they are an aid to seeing
what Christmas is really about. Perhaps the political and societal turmoil of
our time gives us insight into what Christmas is really about.
Christmas is not about the cultural and religious
embellishments that have smothered the holiday over the years. It is not about
Hallmark sentimentality. It is the celebration of the birth of a controversial
leader who identified with the poor and outcasts of society, as represented by
the shepherds who attended his birth. As a young man he was executed by the
government and religious leaders for treason and blasphemy.
Not much has changed. The powers of moral and spiritual darkness always lurk at the fringes of human civilization and seek to rule. Occasionally they dominate a culture and control the government and religious establishment. But as the apostle John’s Christmas poem says, darkness will not ultimately win. “The light shines in the darkness, and the darkness cannot overcome it.” That is what we celebrate at Christmas. Anyone up for a chorus of Edelweiss?