The second holiday film we saw was The Noel Diary. We chose it because the lead actor, Justin Hartley,
starred in This is Us, which is one
of our favorite television dramas. The
Noel Diary is a typical heartwarming rom-com (romantic comedy) where boy
meets girl, with a little parent-child reconciliation thrown in for good
measure. We enjoyed it.
Shortly after watching those movies I read an article by the
Religion News Service entitled Everyone
Gets Their Love Story, subtitled How Christmas Rom-Coms Have Taken over the Season. It chronicles
how Christmas movies have changed over the years. There are now more faces of
color and even some LGBTQ romances. Times have changed. It is all an attempt to
cash in on the $700 billion Christmas industry, which the article calls “the Christmas
Industrial Complex.”
Anyway it got me thinking about how holiday movies nowadays are
so different from the ones I grew up watching - films like It’s a Wonderful Life, Miracle on 34th Street, White
Christmas, and A Christmas Carol. It
also got me thinking about how all these Christmas films – new and old – have
so little to do with the themes of the Christmas accounts found in the gospels.
Holiday movies are “feel good” flicks. They are often about
romantic love, designed to pull on our heartstrings, and invariably have happy
endings. How different from the Bible narratives. The biblical Christmas
stories have no romance. Mary and Joseph are in an arranged marriage, which got
off to a rocky start due to suspicion of adultery. There is no mention of any love between the
two lead actors in the nativity drama. There is no post-Christmas sequel to
tell us how the holy couple eventually fell in love and lived happily ever
after in Nazareth.
Most importantly there is no happy ending. The Christmas
story in the Gospel of Matthew ends with mass murder, traditionally called “The
Slaughter of the Innocents.” King Herod
decides to eliminate a possible rival for his throne by murdering all the
children in Bethlehem age two and younger. As the camera fades on the exiting
Wise Men, we hear the sound of young mothers weeping in grief.
True, God warns Joseph about the murder plot, and the holy
family escapes safely to Egypt. But God does not intervene to save the other little
children of Bethlehem or warn their parents. That is troubling to anyone raised
on the Sunday School song “Jesus loves the little children, all the children of
the world.”
The holy family lived as refugees in a foreign land for
several years. One can only imagine how difficult those years were. Then Joseph
died at some point after Jesus’ twelfth birthday, leaving Mary as a single mom
raising a houseful of kids on her own. She did not remarry a rich, handsome
stranger and grow old together, like Ruth in the Old Testament story. No Hallmark
ending for Mary of Nazareth.
The biblical Christmas stories are so different from the
plots of Christmas films that it makes me wonder how rom-coms came to dominate
holiday flicks and why Christians are okay with that. Indeed nostalgic Christians
seem to be the target audience for many of these “family-friendly” films. The
most likely explanation is that Christians - like everyone else – tend to only
see God at work in happy endings.
Yet by insisting on storybook endings we are missing the
most powerful truth of Christmas: God is present in the unhappy times as well. God’s
presence includes the good and the bad. God is the light shining in the
darkness of real life, which includes grief, sorrow and hardship.
That is why the gospel writer Matthew reminds us: “All this took place to fulfill what the Lord had said through the prophet: “Behold, the virgin will be with child and will give birth to a son, and they will call Him Immanuel” which means, “God with us.” God is with us no matter what. To that Christmas ending, I say, “Amen.”
Amen.....
ReplyDeletePersonally, I don't watch a lot of Christmas movies. I do like to watch Patrick Stewart's Christmas Carol and The Muppet Christmas Carol (I'm a sucker for muppets). However, my favorite Christmas movie of late is The Christmas Candle. Yes, it has a happy ending but I see it as showing how the Spirit moves in mysterious ways to bring about renewed faith.
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