“Now is the winter of our discontent!” So speaks Richard, Duke of Gloucester at the beginning of Shakespeare’s play, “Richard III”. If I have ever read or seen Richard III, I remember nothing. Except this line (and a quick online search for context...) From a trailer or a commercial or something. But it has popped for me, at least a variation of it, in describing this season as the “Christmas of our discontent.”
Ours? Implies “we”, so...who are we? Us of the church. But its Christmas, what is there to be discontented about?
It is summed up well
in a couple of bumper stickers, "Gen X memes" for those of us of a certain age... "Jesus is the Reason for the Season”. It is a polite reminder, hinting that other "reasons" for Christmas are sneaking in. More to the point, “Keep Christ in Christmas.” I feel like it should be written like this: "Keep Christ in Christmas". This has more clarity to it. If "Christmas" were a company, Christ is the founder and somewhere along the way the greedy Board of Directors is trying to show him the door.
Imagine the
innkeeper showing up at the stable at about 3 o’clock in the morning to show Mary, Joseph, and Jesus the door, something about extra "manger rent" or something...
This discontent exists. I have felt it personally. Christmas getting hijacked, everyone wanting a piece of it. There is something about Jesus in
the manger, his parents standing close by, the shepherds and animals
surrounding him, the angels gathered overhead in a glorious choir. There is something in their song, “Glory to
God in the Highest and on earth, peace among those with whom the Lord is
well-pleased.”
There is
light in the midst of darkness. There is quiet in the midst of noise. There is
hope in the midst of pointlessness. There
is peace in the midst of anarchy. There
is God in the midst of godlessness.
There is a gift in the midst of greediness. The world, sinful and broken, has latched
onto Christmas like nothing else in our faith.
I do not believe it is malicious appropriation so much as unrecognized
desperation.
It is HERE that I believe we should be focused with discontent. The world is desperate for something they see Christmas providing. If I am so tied up with the conviction that the world has hijacked 'my' Christmas, how easy is it for me to keep the world, ‘them’, at arm’s length? Devote myself to shielding ‘the real thing’ from the excesses of the popular cultural?
When this is the season where the 'world', and the sinful, broken people who live in it, are closer to the truth of Jesus Christ than maybe any other time of the year?
Yes, there is a veneer of overhyped sparkle that seems to get thicker over the celebration of Christmas every year. But this is also the time of deepest depression, of highest suicide rates, of disconsolation and disconnection. A Christmas of Overhyped Sparkle does not touch the soul, it cannot provide answer to the sadness. But we know the truth, the Christmas of Jesus, it does. And the devil has worked wonders to keep us, the faithful, from truly seeing that.
Let us not be content to let that stand. This is the Christmas of our Year of Jubilee, of our celebration of the gifts of Christ. Let us share the wealth that can not be measured in any earthly terms.
Besides, Christmas is God's Holiday for us. Can the world really be expected to take it over? Or is the real truth that Christmas will take over the world? The Christmas of Christ. Our Christmas. The gift that we can offer to make it everybody's true Christmas.
Pastor pete
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