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AJ
DiCintio
Christmas Times Four
December 23, 2009
"For unto you is born this day in the
City of David a Savior, who is Christ the Lord.
"And this shall be a sign unto you: Ye shall find the Babe wrapped in
swaddling clothes, lying in a manger.
"And suddenly there was with the angel a multitude of the heavenly host
praising God and saying, ‘Glory to God in the highest, and on earth
peace, good will toward men!’”
One might write thousands of words in an attempt to capture the essence
of the Original and Real Christmas; but the truth is that those few from
Luke say everything we need to know regarding the Christmas about a
Power greater than humans, the Christmas about faith, love, hope,
redemption, moral guidance, and spiritual salve, the Christmas that, for
two millennia, has guided and inestimably enriched the lives of
millions.
There is also the Christmas of appurtenances, from artistic masterpieces
to ordinary signs of the season which, at their best, create memories
that serve as life-long fonts of indescribable joy and prompts to
insight, the first exemplified by James Joyce’s description of a turn of
the century’s Irish boy’s reaction to his first return home from
boarding school:
Going home for the holidays! That would be lovely: the fellows had
told him...The lovely smell there was in the wintry air: the smell of
Clane: rain and wintry air and turf smouldering...The telegraph poles
were passing, passing. The train went on and on. It knew. There were
lanterns in the hall of his father's house and ropes of green branches.
There were holly and ivy round the pierglass and holly and ivy, green
and red, twined round the chandeliers. There were red holly and green
ivy round the old portraits on the walls. Holly and ivy for him and for
Christmas.
And the second by Fitzgerald, whose Nick Carraway, a stranger in the
obscene land that is the East of the Roaring Twenties, grows in
self-knowledge as he recalls Christmas trains that puffed their way
through his youth:
One of my most vivid memories is of coming back West from prep school
and later from college at Christmas time...the long green tickets
clasped tight in our gloved hands. And last the murky yellow cars of the
Chicago, Milwaukee and St. Paul railroad looking cheerful as Christmas
itself...We drew in deep breaths of it as we walked back from dinner
through the cold vestibules, unutterably aware of our identity with this
country for one strange hour, before we melted indistinguishably into it
again. That’s my Middle West—not the wheat or the prairies or the lost
Swede towns, but the thrilling returning trains of my youth, and the
street lamps and sleigh bells in the frosty dark and the shadows of
holly wreaths thrown by lighted windows on the snow.
There is the Christmas of non-Christians and atheists who perceive the
holiday as an exquisite expression of the human need for God, a need
that allows human beings to avoid living a truly natural life in all the
astonishing brutality such an existence entails.
So it is that the Deist Jefferson — whose invocation of the "Creator” in
the Declaration reveals his refusal to lie that he had discovered
human rights in nature — proclaimed that the Babe wrapped in
swaddling clothes, lying in a manger grew up to preach a "system of
morality” that is "the most benevolent & sublime probably that has been
ever taught.”
Finally, there is the Christmas of those who claim to disbelieve in any
metaphysical reality but never explain how they employed the Scientific
Method to arrive at the mountain of "moral imperatives” they embrace
with a hypocritical, dogmatic faith so arrogantly intense that they
would force it upon the nation, even the world, through the power of the
governmental gun.
Despite the love of power and neurotic guilt that impel them to make a
religion of politics and gods of politicians, these frauds blow long and
hard about their intellectual superiority.
That explains why, on a bitterly cold Christmas Eve that finds others
enjoying the warm, joyous confines of churches and decorated homes, they
can be found standing ice footed and icicled nosed, slipping and sliding
in the middle of the street, their numbed eyes scanning the purposeless,
uncaring stars, hoping to find one that brings the perfectly delicious
thrill of nature’s loving kiss.
About AJ DiCintio
A.J. DiCintio is a Featured Writer for The New Media Journal. He first exercised his polemical skills arguing with friends on
the street corners of the working class neighborhood where he grew up.
Retired from teaching, he now applies those skills, somewhat honed and
polished by experience, to social/political affairs.
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