{"id":4026,"date":"1994-11-01T01:00:00","date_gmt":"1994-11-01T01:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/vol-75-no-6-november-december-1994-the-spirit-of-christmas\/"},"modified":"2022-11-27T02:10:17","modified_gmt":"2022-11-27T02:10:17","slug":"vol-75-no-6-november-december-1994-the-spirit-of-christmas","status":"publish","type":"rbc_letter","link":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/vol-75-no-6-november-december-1994-the-spirit-of-christmas\/","title":{"rendered":"Vol. 75 No. 6 &#8211; November\/December 1994 &#8211; The Spirit of Christmas"},"content":{"rendered":"<div id=\"layout-column-main\">\n<p class=\"boldtext\">The Christmas season has become inescapable                     for everyone in our society, Christian or otherwise. But Christmas                     has also been drifting back to its origins as a general celebration                     of life. And what it stands for applies to people of any religion.                     Can anyone rightly object to peace and goodwill?<\/p>\n<p> It is probably only a nostalgic illusion that the Christmas                     season gets longer every year, but it certainly does seem                     that way, doesn&#8217;t it? The frost has barely penetrated the                     ground here in Canada before tinsel decorations start sprouting                     out on the streets, and we are arbitrarily treated to the                     tediously familiar strains of Christmas music in shopping                     malls.<\/p>\n<p>Whether or not it really does consume a larger part of our                     lives than it did in the good old days of our unreliable memories,                     the buildup to Christmas nonetheless makes hungry demands                     on our physical, financial, and emotional resources. Swept                     along by the advertising, the shopping, the partying, the                     special media presentations and all the rest, people in this                     society find it impossible to ignore.<\/p>\n<p>The main complaint about Christmas, of course, is that it                     has become scandalously commercialized. Viewed critically,                     the season may be seen as a state of artificial excitement                     whipped up by business interests to hustle consumers into                     buying things they otherwise would not buy.<\/p>\n<p>When it is not blatantly pitched at children who can be                     expected to harry their parents into providing alluring gifts,                     Christmas advertising attempts to pry open pocket books through                     mawkish appeals to sentimentality. Imbued with a feeling of                     obligation to &#8221; buy, buy, buy,&#8221; families that could use money                     to meet more practical needs may blow it on costly presents                     and other luxuries.<\/p>\n<p>Still, the commercialization of Christmas seems to be one                     of those things that everybody talks about but nobody does                     anything about. The reality is that it has become a kind of                     necessary evil in the retail sector of our economy, in which                     a &#8220;good holiday season&#8221; may spell the difference between an                     annual profit and loss for many stores.<\/p>\n<p>Part-time workers and students seeking pocket money have                     reason to be thankful for the materialistic turn Christmas                     has taken. Others owe a major part of their livelihood to                     the season &#8211; for instance, farmers raising turkeys or growing                     Christmas trees.<\/p>\n<p>&#8220;Oh, this Christmas season!&#8221; sighs a character in a story                     by Hermann Sudermann. &#8220;I believe it was invented by some evil                     demon expressly to annoy us poor bachelors, to show us the                     more clearly the desolation of our existence. For some it                     is a source of joy, it is for us a torture.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>That forlorn individual might have been speaking for all                     the multitudes of people who find themselves out in the cold                     at this time of year, looking in at the special warm glow                     it generates in contented households. Their ranks include                     the homeless, the bereaved, and individuals separated from                     their loved ones for any number of reasons. Within families                     themselves, the public display of extravagance makes it a                     bleak time for those financially unable to join in the spending                     spree.<\/p>\n<p>Even members of reasonably affluent families may experience                     a kind of guilt at the fact that their relationships do not                     live up to the blissful scenes presented in the mass media&#8217;s                     seasonal programming.<\/p>\n<p>On television, the cosy affection of close-knit and trouble-free                     families reaches its peak around the Christmas tree. The underlying                     message is that there is something wrong with people who do                     not celebrate the occasion in an atmosphere of unconditional                     harmony.<\/p>\n<p>Psychologists report a high incidence of depression around                     Christmas among people who feel that their lives should be                     more like those ideal fictitious situations. They are distressed                     because they feel that, at this emotive time of year, they                     should by rights be happier than they are.<\/p>\n<p>In countries such as Canada where many religions co-exist,                     the general celebration of the birth of Christ places an added                     psychological strain on many non-Christians. Much to the discomfort                     of their parents, little Hindus or Muslims or Buddhists cannot                     be expected to understand why they should be excluded from                     the singing, the gift-giving, the pageantry and the revelry                     that surround them, tending to eclipse their own cultural                     celebrations. The feast of Hanukkah has taken on increased                     importance among Jewish families in western countries because                     of its proximity to Christmas. Jewish children are able to                     celebrate a sort Of parallel feast &#8211; presents and all &#8211; connected                     with their own faith.<\/p>\n<h3>Smoothing the way for pagans to become followers of the cross<\/h3>\n<p>Well-meaning attempts have lately been made in multicultural                     communities to circumscribe the Christian content in Christmas                     decorations and events like Santa Claus parades and school                     pageants. There have even been attempts to suppress the use                     of the word &#8221; Christmas,&#8221; so as not to offend people of other                     faiths.<\/p>\n<p>So far, these ventures in social engineering have had little                     effect. Given centuries of conditioning in places where the                     majority of people were at least nominally Christian, it is                     difficult to instil the feeling that Christmas is just another                     faceless holiday like, say, Labour Day.<\/p>\n<p>In any case, the fact is that, for all its outward rituals,                     Christmas is no longer a very &#8220;religious&#8221; occasion. The degree                     of devotion with which it is observed among Christian themselves                     is left largely up to individual belief.<\/p>\n<p>It has long since been generally understood that you do                     not have to be a Christian to have the Christmas spirit. After                     all, the most popular and affecting of modern Christmas songs,                     &#8220;White Christmas,&#8221; was written by an American Jew, Irving                     Berlin.<\/p>\n<p>Traditionalists who object to the commercialization and                     secularization of the feast are prone to say that it is &#8220;taking                     the Christ out of Christmas.&#8221; Some point with horror to the                     habit of abbreviating the name to &#8220;Xmas&#8221; as though it were                     a modern abomination, oblivious of the fact that &#8220;X&#8221; is an                     age-old symbol for Christ derived from the first letter of                     the name in Greek.<\/p>\n<p>Non-Christians and non-practising Christians who feel uneasy                     about participating in the event may take some comfort in                     the fact that it was not an exclusively Christian celebration                     to begin with. When Christianity was being suppressed by the                     Roman Empire and the later barbarian conquerors, members of                     the faith joined in the winter pagan rites for protective                     coloration. Later, when the religion came out of the catacombs,                     Christian missionaries merged their ceremonies with local                     modes of worship, reasoning that it would smooth the way for                     pagans to become followers of the cross.<\/p>\n<p>Lacking an exact record of Christ&#8217;s birth, church leaders                     settled on December 25. It was an improbable date in the context                     of the Christmas story; for instance, in that inclement season,                     shepherds in Galilee were unlikely to be watching their flocks                     by night. But the date had an advantage; it coincided with                     the pagan period of rejoicing at the rebirth of the sun after                     the longest night of the year in the northern hemisphere.<\/p>\n<p>Originally Christian communicants confined themselves to                     performing a special mass, <em>Cristes maesse<\/em>, amidst the                     hubbub of the pagan winter solstice festivities. The timing                     fitted neatly with the concept of Christ bringing light to                     the world.<\/p>\n<p>Christmas as such was not widely celebrated until the fourth                     century AD, mainly because the first Christian leaders feared                     anything that might precipitate a relapse into paganism. They                     condemned the public celebration of birthdays as most objectionably                     pagan, recalling the orgies that once took place in the course                     of commemorating the Roman Emperors&#8217; births.<\/p>\n<p>The early churchmen preached that the date of a person&#8217;s                     physical birth was of no consequence; what really mattered                     was the date of one&#8217;s spiritual birth on becoming a Christian                     through baptism. Thus for many years the chief celebration                     of Christ&#8217;s coming into the world was of his baptism, marked                     by the feast of Epiphany. Some sections of the Eastern Orthodox                     Church still combine the observance of Christmas (properly                     speaking, the Nativity) and the Epiphany on January 6.<\/p>\n<p>In strict Christian liturgy, the Nativity is merely the                     fourth- ranking feast of the year, after Easter, Pentecost                     (the visitation to Christ&#8217;s disciples of the Holy Ghost),                     and the Epiphany. Christmas was variously celebrated in January,                     March, May and September in different locales until the late                     December date become standard some time after AD 500.<\/p>\n<p>The prime model for this Christianized winter feast was                     the Saturnalia, honoring the Roman god of agriculture. Many                     of the customs we now observe at Christmastime can be traced                     back to this pre-Christian affair, notably the hanging of                     decorations, the lighting of candles, and the giving of presents.                     When, in our present-day armed forces, the officers serve                     Christmas dinner to the enlisted ranks, they are following                     a tradition that harks directly back to the Saturnalia banquets                     at which masters waited on their slaves.<\/p>\n<p>In fact, most of the customs we automatically follow at                     Christmastime today have their roots in pagan rituals. Though                     the Christmas tree as we know it comes from eighth century                     Germany (or, arguably, Latvia or Estonia) it represents an                     extension of the age- old worship of trees as spirits. The                     ancient Egyptians are known to have put up green palms indoors                     during sun-worshipping ceremonies. The Romans hung trinkets                     on live pines, while the Druids used tree branches to make                   offerings of cakes, candles and painted fruit to the gods.<\/p>\n<h3>The lighting on suburban streets goes back                   to primitive belief<\/h3>\n<p>Popular singers who croon about the genesis of romance under                     the mistletoe are unwittingly referring to the pre-Christian                     role of that plant as a symbol of forgiveness and reconciliation.                     Among the ancient Britons, enemies who met under the mistletoe,                     which grew as a parasite on the branches of oaks, were obliged                     to drop their weapons and embrace &#8211; hence the modern convention                     that couples who find themselves under the mistletoe at a                     Christmas party must kiss.<\/p>\n<p>In northern cultures, the dark days of December were a time                     of superstitious dread, so people placed wreaths of ivy and                     evergreen boughs in their houses to evoke the mysterious power                     of the evergreen to resist wilting in the deadly cold of winter.                     This explains the ubiquitous presence today of artificial                     decorations and wrapping paper bearing an evergreen or ivy                     motif.<\/p>\n<p>Ancient northerners believed in having plenty of light in                     the form of bonfires and torches to encourage the sun to make                     a speedy return to its full life-giving power. When you drive                     down a suburban street and see all those coloured fairy lights                     festooning the houses and lawn ornaments, you are witnessing                     an electric variation of those hopeful rites.<\/p>\n<p>Pagan influences set the tone of Christmas as a time of                     unrestrained merriment. Europeans in the Middle Ages adopted                     that idea with enthusiasm and aplomb. For ordinary folk, the                     holiday happened to fall at an ideal time for letting oneself                     go, in the lull between harvesting and planting when farm                     work was in abeyance. Latter-day Scrooges who deplore the                     waste of productivity and overindulgence during the Christmas                     holidays may be referred back to the days when the carousing                     went on practically non-stop for the better part of a month.<\/p>\n<p>From that era comes the custom of the wassail bowl, containing                     a special brew for all comers. The custom is perpetuated today                     by people who serve their guests eggnog, punch, or other specially                     prepared seasonal drinks.<\/p>\n<h3><span class=\"quote\">&#8216;No Christmas!&#8217; they cried; and plum puddings were banned by law<\/span><\/h3>\n<p>This is often done on Christmas Eve, which was really part                     of the same day among the early Christians who, like the Jews,                     started the day at sunset. It was then that carols were sung,                     the word having been derived from the Latin <em>cantare<\/em>                     &#8211; to sing &#8211; and rola, an expression of joy. One might think                     that such a light-hearted feast would come last on the list                     of things that Christians could find to quarrel about. But                     it did become a subject of bitter controversy and contention                     after Martin Luther&#8217;s Reformation in the 16th century.<\/p>\n<p>Luther&#8217;s disciples tried to tone down the revelry, especially                     the heavy gambling involved, but they preserved the Roman                     Catholic custom of marking the occasion. In England, the Anglican                     Church also decided to carry on the Catholic festive tradition                     with some restrictions on its wilder aspects. It was a policy                     for which the leaders of the Church of England were fiercely                     attacked.<\/p>\n<p>Under the influence of John Calvin&#8217;s cry of &#8220;thrift, industry,                     and sobriety,&#8221; the English Puritans could not stand to see                     these qualities turned on their heads at Yuletide. Railing                     against the heathen character of the celebrations, the Puritans                     declared that Christmas should be kept as a fast instead of                     a feast.<\/p>\n<p>After Oliver Cromwell&#8217;s Commonwealth seized power in England                     in 1642, a law was passed banning Christmas observances. The                     Puritan Parliamentarians went to the lengths of outlawing                     plum puddings and mince pies. Town criers roved the streets                     shouting &#8220;No Christmas!&#8221; Whole congregations were arrested                     for defying the ordinance.<\/p>\n<p>The ban was repealed after the Restoration in 1660 of the                     suitably nick-named &#8220;merry monarch,&#8221; Charles II &#8211; but not                     before the Puritans had carried their detestation of this                     &#8220;pagan mockery&#8221; across the Atlantic to the American colonies.<\/p>\n<p>In 1659 the General Court of Massachusetts imposed a law                     making any observance of December 25 a penal offence, punishable                     by a hefty fine of five shillings. The resistance to Christmas                     in the future United States gradually died out over the next                     two centuries; but it lived on in Scotland, where Calvin&#8217;s                     ideas held sway in the dominant Presbyterian Church.<\/p>\n<p>Despite their exposure to media influences from England                     and the U. S., Scots today still treat Christmas as a minor                     occasion, very much secondary to Hogmanay, their New Year&#8217;s                     celebration. Similarly, the big day in mainly Calvinist Holland                     is the Feast of Saint Nicholas on December 6, when presents                     are given out.<\/p>\n<h3>Not enough good will towards men, and therefore not enough peace<\/h3>\n<p>With the Dutch colonization of what is now the northeastern                     United States, the gift-giving saint underwent a metamorphosis                     from &#8220;Sint Nikolass&#8221; to &#8220;Sinterklass&#8221; to &#8220;Santa Claus.&#8221; It                     was not until well into the 1880s that he emerged as the jolly                     figure driving a team of flying reindeer on Christmas Eve.                     That was thanks to the poem &#8221; The Night Before Christmas&#8221;                     by Dr. Clement Clarke Moore of New York City, and cartoons                     in <em>Harper&#8217;s Weekly<\/em> by Thomas Nast depicting a suitably                     jovial philanthropist.<\/p>\n<p>A Turkish-born bishop, the real St. Nicholas was indeed                     revered for his generosity. But long before he was born in                     the fourth century, Christmas and its antecedent feasts were                     known as a time when people gave the generous sides of their                     natures free rein.<\/p>\n<p>The Romans instituted the custom of distributing gratuities                     to tradespeople, a tradition we carry on when we stick a few                     dollars in a Christmas card for our newspaper carrier or regular                     waitress. ( The forerunners of all greeting cards, Christmas                     cards were a 19th century English innovation.) Medieval churches                     had boxes hung on their walls in which parishioners put money                     for the poor, the precursors of today&#8217;s Salvation Army kettles.                     The boxes were opened on December 26, known ever since as                     Boxing Day.<\/p>\n<p>St. Nicholas was also renowned for his love of children,                     who still delight in his image. Christmas always has been                     a magical time for the very young. For a brief while, it puts                     the little ones at the head of the line, allowing them to                     fulfil their fondest desires even at the expense of a tummy                     ache. Children provide a foil for adults who enjoy celebrating                     Christmas hugely, all the while protesting, &#8220;We only do it                     for the kids.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>&#8220;Perhaps what Christmas is all about is to help us rediscover                     the child in all of us, the fact that. we have hearts and                     are capable of loving,&#8221; said Jean Vanier, the saintly Canadian                     founder of the L&#8217;Arche movement for mentally disabled people.                     Certainly it is a time when we tend to revive childhood memories,                     and when grown-up &#8221; children&#8221; feel a longing to be with their                     parents and siblings. Just as it is a time of renewal in the                     cycle of the sun, it is a time of renewal and confirmation                     of family ties.<\/p>\n<p>It is also a time to be with friends, showing our appreciation                     of them through our hospitality. But if we behave with extra                     kindness towards our intimates, the basic character of Christmas                     calls upon us to be just about as kind to everybody else.                     The traditional Yuletide throughout Christendom was a highly                     egalitarian feast, in which the more fortunate shared their                     bounty with their poorer brethren. This is the theme the familiar                     carol &#8220;Good King Wenceslaus &#8220;, in which the king of Bohemia                     regales a poor serf with food and drink.<\/p>\n<p>It is paradoxical that though Christmas is the most secular                     of all religious feasts, it is also the most &#8220;Christian&#8221; in                     terms of bringing to life Jesus Christ&#8217;s teachings. He urged                     generosity, tolerance, and forbearance, all of which we must                     exercise if we are to &#8220;keep Christmas&#8221; in the true meaning                     of the event.<\/p>\n<p>It is difficult to think about Christmas without thinking                     about the saying that Christianity might be a good thing if                     anybody ever tried it. All too many &#8220;Christians&#8221; only qualify                     for that description conceptually for a few weeks every year,                     oozing good will towards their fellow men until after the                     New Year, when they can go back to their dog-eat-dog existence                     and their indifference to the plight of other human beings.<\/p>\n<p>The strife-torn history of the world shows that Christians                     have a disgraceful record as followers of the figure whose                     birth was heralded by the words, &#8220;and on earth, peace, good                     will towards men. &#8221; Up to this very day, there has never been                     enough good will among Christians themselves, or between Christians                     and other believers. And because there was not enough good                     will, there has not been enough peace.<\/p>\n<p>The spirit of Christmas, by which people of any religion                     can abide, is a compound of kindness, generosity and understanding.                     Criticize the institution as we may, there is only one thing                     essentially wrong with it. And that is that everyone does                     not have the Christmas spirit all year round.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"author":79,"featured_media":0,"template":"","categories":[1],"rbc_letter_theme":[],"rbc_letter_year":[81],"class_list":["post-4026","rbc_letter","type-rbc_letter","status-publish","hentry","category-uncategorized","rbc_letter_year-81"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO Premium plugin v26.7 (Yoast SEO v26.8) - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-premium-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>Vol. 75 No. 6 - November\/December 1994 - The Spirit of Christmas - RBC<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/vol-75-no-6-november-december-1994-the-spirit-of-christmas\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"Vol. 75 No. 6 - November\/December 1994 - The Spirit of Christmas - RBC\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"The Christmas season has become inescapable for everyone in our society, Christian or otherwise. 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But Christmas has also been drifting back to its origins as a general celebration of life. And what it stands for applies to people of any religion. Can anyone rightly object to peace and goodwill? 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