Let's Rethink Our Holly-Jolly Christmas  Songs
 
 
By _Russell D.  Moore_ 
(http://www.christianpost.com/author/russell-d-moore/) , Christian Post Guest 
Columnist
December 20, 2012|8:58 am
Sometimes I learn a lot from conversations I was never  intended to hear. 
This happened the other day as I was stopping by my local  community 
bookstore. It's a small store, and a quiet store so it was impossible  not to 
eavesdrop as I heard a young man tell his friend how much he hated _Christmas_ 
(http://www.christianpost.com/topics/christmas/) . And, you know what, the more 
he  talked, the more I understood his point.
This man wasn't talking about the hustle and bustle of the holidays, or 
about  the stresses of family meals or all the things people tend to complain 
about.  What he hated was the _music_ 
(http://www.christianpost.com/topics/music/) . 
This guy started by lampooning Sting's Christmas album, and I found myself  
smiling as I browsed because he is so right; it's awful. But then he went 
on to  say that he hated Christmas music across the board. That's when I 
started to  feel as though I might be in the presence of the Grinch. You know, 
when every  Who down in Who-ville, the tall and the small, would stand close 
together, with  Christmas bells ringing; they'd stand hand-in-hand. And the 
Who's would start  singing. The sour old green villain didn't like that. 
But then this man explained why he found the music so bad. It wasn't just  
that it was cloying. It's that it was boring. 
"Christmas is boring because there's no narrative tension," he said. "It's  
like reading a book with no conflict." 
Now he had my attention.  
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I'm sure this man had thought this for a long time, but maybe he felt freer 
 to say it because we were only hours out from hearing the horrifying news 
of a  massacre of innocent children in Connecticut. For him, the tranquil 
lyrics of  our Christmas songs couldn't encompass such terror. Maybe we should 
think about  that. 
Of course, some of the blame is on our sentimentalized Christmas of the  
American civil religion. Simeon the prophet never wished anyone a "holly-jolly 
 Christmas" or envisioned anything about chestnuts roasting on an open 
fire. But  there's our songs too, the songs of the church. We ought to make 
sure 
that what  we sing measures up with the, as this fellow would put it, 
"narrative tension"  of the Christmas story. 
The first Christmas carol, after all, was a war hymn. Mary of Nazareth 
sings  of God's defeat of his enemies, about how in Christ he had demonstrated 
his  power and "has brought down the mighty from their thrones and exalted 
those of  humble estate" (Lk. 1:52). There are some villains in mind there. 
Simeon's song, likewise, speaks of the "fall and rising of many in _Israel_ 
(http://www.christianpost.com/topics/israel/) "  and of a sword that would 
pierce the heart of Mary herself. Even the "light of  the Gentiles" he 
speaks about is in the context of warfare. After all, the  light, the Bible 
tells 
us, overcomes the darkness (Jn. 1:5), and frees us from  the grip of the 
devil (2 Cor. 4). 
In a time of obvious tragedy, the unbearable lightness of Christmas seems  
absurd to the watching world. But, even in the best of times, we all know 
that  we live in a groaning universe, a world of divorce courts and cancer 
cells and  concentration camps. Just as we sing with joy about the coming of 
the Promised  One, we ought also to sing with groaning that he is not back yet 
(Rom. 8:23),  sometimes with groanings too deep for lyrics. 
The man in the bookstore knew that reality is complicated. There's grit, 
and  there's tension. Without it, Christmas didn't seem real to life. It's 
hard to  get more tense than being born under a king's death sentence (Matt. 
2:16), and  with an ancient dragon crouching at the birth canal to devour you 
(Rev. 12:4).  But this man didn't hear any of that in Christmas. I'm glad I 
overheard him. 
We have a rich and complicated and often appropriately dark Christmas  
hymnody. We can sing of blessings flowing "far as the curse is found," of the  
one who came to "free us all from Satan's power." 
Let's sing that, every now and then, where we can be  overheard.

-- 
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