Posted by
Ronald Lanham Jr. on Saturday, December 06, 2008 11:25:26 AM
This past Sunday was the first Sunday of Advent. Advent, for those of you that don't know celebrates the coming of the Messiah and his eventual return.
Advent
has always been one of my favorite aspects of the Christmas season.
When I was a member of the United Methodist church our congregations
would have an Advent wreath that would be lit by the acolyte. There
were four candles for the Sundays leading up to Christmas, and one
larger candle in the center representing Christ.
We also had a Chrismon tree—a concept originally created by Frances Kipps Spencer, a Lutheran, in 1957—that had Christ-oriented ornaments. Chrismon
are ancient symbols of Christianity, like the Pisces and crosses, as
well as others. The tree, like most Christmas trees, is an evergreen.
It represents eternal life through Christ.
My family created our
own Chrismon and an Advent wreath. We've somehow misplaced the wreath,
but our tree always has a Chrismon or two on it.
I don't know how
many other denominations beside United Methodist and Lutheran use the
Chrismon but I always enjoyed it. I'm sure pagans will say that we
stole the idea from them, but since God created the tree, it doesn't
really matter what either of us think.
Despite what this time of
year meant in the past, it has come to be the accepted time for
celebrating the birth of Jesus the Christ. However, over the last
several years more groups are coming out against public expressions of
Christmas, even when the property in question isn't owned by the
government.
The interesting thing about all the hubbub is that
the majority of the people who protest the most about Christmas
celebrations are people of no faith—atheists. Jews, Muslims, Hindus,
none of them argue about it. And some even get in on the fun, whether
they believe in the spiritual side of it or not. But atheists for some
reason have a chip on their shoulder about Christians. I hardly ever
hear of some atheist complaining about Eid al-Adha or Hanukkah decorations or celebrations. Admittedly there aren't as many overt displays of Jewish or Muslim celebrations.
However,
I think it goes deeper than that. They are more terrified of
Christianity than any other religion. It's not the Crusades or the
Salem witch hunts. Those were crimes against people of faith and they
happened centuries ago. And we have repented of those atrocities,
whether anyone accepts that or not. But just as there are, and were,
evil people who used the cover of Christianity to commit crimes that
Christ abhors, there have been more than enough atheists that have
committed crimes against humanity (read: Mao Zedong, Lenin, Stalin,
Hitler, Pol Pot, etc.). There have also been plenty of pagans that have
killed on genocidal scales. For Christians this is simply proof of the
fallen nature of man. For the atheist there's always the question:
“What drove them to do that?”.
Regardless, Advent is a time of
celebration and reflection for Christians just as Hanukkah and Eid
al-Adha are for Jews and Muslims, respectively. We should all live with
each other, if only for a month or so. There are so many real problems
in the world that we don't need to be squashing the holiday season
simply because we don't worship the same god, or any god. Take a deep
breath and listen to some Christmas songs, light a menorah or watch the sun from Stonehenge on the Solstice.
God bless.