In the late 1600’s in colonial Boston, the celebration of Christmas
was against the law. Indeed, anyone evidencing the “spirit of Christmas”
could be fined five shillings. In the early 1800’s, Christmas was
better known as a season for rioting in the streets
and civil unrest.
1
However, in the mid-1800’s some interesting things changed the cultural
response to the feast and, in 1870, Christmas was declared a federal
holiday (which is to say that prior to 1870, Christmas was not a day-off
in America). What happened?
American Christmas demonstrates the amazing influence of literature
on a culture. The first important book was by the author, Washington
Irving (of
Sleepy Hollow and
Rip Van Winckel fame):
In 1819, best-selling author Washington Irving wrote The Sketchbook of Geoffrey Crayon, gent.,
a series of stories about the celebration of Christmas in an English
manor house. The sketches feature a squire who invited the peasants into
his home
for the holiday. In contrast to the problems faced in American society,
the two groups mingled effortlessly. In Irving’s mind, Christmas should
be a peaceful, warm-hearted holiday bringing groups together across
lines of wealth or social status. Irving’s fictitious
celebrants enjoyed “ancient customs,” including the crowning of a Lord
of Misrule. Irving’s book, however, was not based on any holiday
celebration he had attended – in fact, many historians say that Irving’s
account actually “invented” tradition by implying
that it described the true customs of the season.2
The second book, however, was, by far, the more influential: Charles Dickens’
A Christmas Carol. When Dickens is dubbed, “the man who invented
Christmas,” it is not far from the truth. For the American cultural
celebration of Christmas largely began through the popularity of
Dickens’ classic story. That same fact, though, accounts
for much of the non-religious aspects of America’s celebration.
Dickens’
A Christmas Carol does not overlook the birth of
Christ. It presumes the religious aspects of the day and its presence is
woven throughout every part of the story-line. There is a brief mention
of Bob Cratchett and his son, Tiny Tim, attending
Church on the day. But it was not this part of the story that caught the
popular imagination. All told, it was the “spirit” of Christmas that
sold America on the importance of the day.
Dickens wrote in the depths of the Victorian era. That period was
marked, both in England and America, by a rise of romanticism, a popular
sentimentality for “old things,” “traditions,” and “customs.” The
century before had been dominated by the Enlightenment,
when all things rational ruled the day. Indeed, it is not incorrect to
see the sentimentality of the Victorian period as a reaction to the
coldness of reason. It was a swinging of the cultural pendulum.
America’s religious history has been a conflicted mix since the very
beginning. The New England colonies (among the earliest) were settled
largely by Puritans, dissenters from the Church of England, who wanted a
radical reform of English Christianity. Unable
to achieve their desires in England, they came to America and
established their Churches here. They opposed Church festivals and
frivolities of almost every sort. Their strict and dour form of
Christianity waned and morphed over the decades, becoming a fairly
moderate version of generalized Protestantism. The lower colonies
(Virginia and to the South) were settled (officially) by Anglicans.
However, migrations quickly populated those areas with dissenters,
particularly the Scots-Irish who were largely Presbyterian
with Baptists as well. Catholics were a tiny minority, restricted, for
the most part, to Maryland.
English Churches outside of the Catholic and Anglican were
non-liturgical. The “feast” of Christmas was as absent as the “feast” of
anything else. It was not part of their consciousness. Thus, the growth
of a popular Christmas in the mid to late 19
th
century took place outside the walls of the Church. It became a
cultural holiday, with an emphasis on family and the home.
Surprisingly, Christmas is probably far more a part of Protestant
Church life in America today than at any time in our history. But the
echoes of cultural Christmas remain strong. When Christmas Day falls on a
Sunday, Christianity in America revisits its
conflicted past. It is not unusual to see Churches of a more Evangelical
background cancelling Sunday services, deferring to Christmas as a
“family” celebration. For liturgical Churches (Catholic, Orthodox,
Anglican, Lutheran, etc.) such a practice seems scandalous
in the extreme.
I might note, however, that the “power” of Christmas as an event in our culture, is rooted in the
culture rather than the Church. In the Orthodox Church,
Christmas is but one of twelve major feast days. If those feast days
fall anytime other than a Sunday, attendance at Church will be thin
indeed. And though Christmas is one of the three greatest
of the twelve (Pascha, Christmas, Theophany), only Christmas and Pascha
(always on a Sunday) receive great attention in America. Those of us who
feel a certain superiority in our Church’s celebration of the Christmas
feast, would do well to reflect on our
own neglect of the other feasts.
This is not an article about what “should” be. Cultures are what they
are and got that way by their peculiar history. If America were an
Orthodox or Catholic country in its beginning, many of the other major
feasts would likely be national holidays and their
customs would be widespread. Such is the case elsewhere in the world.
There are protests against the secular Christmas that say, “Put the
Christ back in Christmas!” From a liturgical point of view I’ve wanted to add, “And put the
Mass back in Christmas!” It is, after all, a feast of the
Christian Church. Neither of these, however, will likely be dominant in a
culture that once had little Christmas at all.
Another suggestion I might make is to “put the Dickens back in
Christmas.” I can think of no better homage to the man who “created” the
modern celebration of the holiday than to read his delightful
A Christmas Carol. If you do not want to read, the single most faithful movie presentation of the book is (to my mind) the
version with Jim Carrey .
But, more than this, would be the moral of Dickens’ story: Christmas
is well-kept by a life of generosity and kindness. That dear story is
one of profound repentance, the healing of relationships and the
righting of wrongs. Dickens’ Christmas was synonymous
with a life lived in accordance with the gospel. He said it well at the
end of his story:
Bob Cratchit was very surprised, and so were many people who found
Scrooge so changed. Scrooge became a better person. To Tiny Tim, who did
not die, he was a second father. Scrooge became as good a friend, as
good a master, and as good a man, as the good
old city knew, or any other good old city or town in the world could
know. It was always said of Scrooge, that he knew how to keep Christmas
well. May that be truly said of us, and all of us!
I absolutely think that Christmas should be a time for Christians to
gather in Church to give thanks for the birth of Christ. But outside its
doors, no one of us could do better than Scrooge. The busy-ness of
Christmas, as well as the business of Christmas,
could do well to listen to the words of Scrooge’s partner, Jacob Marley,
the tortured soul doomed to wander the world in chains. Scrooge
observed to him that he was always a good man of business. Marley
replied:
“Business!” cried the Ghost, wringing its hands again. “Mankind was
my business. The common welfare was my business; charity, mercy,
forbearance, and benevolence, were, all, my business. The dealings of my
trade were but a drop of water in the comprehensive
ocean of my business!”
Would that such business were as popular as the tinsel and trees. Thank you Charles Dickens, for having said it so well.
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