Fascinating tome Billy.  Loaded with lots of interesting information 
throughout.  

 

I especially resonated with your observation about “the meaning of the holiday

and its place in American culture, certainly since some point

in the mid 19th century. You may as well denigrate weddings,

birthday parties, and graduation ceremonies. These observances

are part of who we are as Americans.”

 

Chris 

 

 

From: BILROJ via Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
[mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Saturday, December 9, 2017 2:17 PM
To: [email protected]
Cc: [email protected]
Subject: [RC] Part #1 The Real Treasures of Christmas

 

  

  

  

Part #1

 

The Real Treasures of Christmas

 

 

 

By: Billy Rojas

 

Multitudes of Christians  -an many non-Christians-  have favorite carols 

of the holiday season that are cherished from year to year like golden coins 

locked away in a secret corner of their home. However,  for most people, 

while there always are exceptions, their choices of favorite carols are 

effectively made for them by the limited menu of Christmas songs promoted 

annually by the entertainment media. They are parts of a cultural canon 

in which anything remotely like deep Christian faith simply cannot rise 

to the surface; it would be drowned out, overwhelmed by everything else.

 

These "December songs" heard on radio shows, or presented to crowds

in public shopping venues like large shopping malls, or heard as part of 
television

programs, or sometimes sung at office parties or during social gatherings among 

friends, while many certainly are "good" in an objective sense, have 
nonetheless 

all been sanitized, scrubbed clean of any references to the 'hard truths' 
taught 

by Christian faith. These truths are deliberately excluded from observances  

of the birth of Jesus.

 

To be certain there are plenty of references to the nativity of the

infant Jesus, to Wise Men  -Magi-  from the East, to angels and shepherds

and Mary and Joseph, but the truths in question are about far more

than a 'magical birth,' or about colorful symbols of the season,

or about universal platitudes promoting "peace on Earth" or

good will among people. These are hardly bad things but

the point is that the sentiments involved have become cliches

and, these days, exist in sanitized form and not much else.

 

What is also true is that  in many carols, whatever their origin, sound like 

they were created by  Hollywood composers, polished, ready for movie

sound tracks, to be played by studio orchestras that double as ensembles

to provide music to sell cars, smart phones, or investment plans.

Not that these are bad things, either; they are not. But it is to note

that commercialization allows some expressions and not others,

including expression of values that are antithetical to the profit motive,

antithetical to quest for status, or antithetical to values that minimize

the worth of our cultural heritage.

 

Precisely because many contemporary values are non-Christian,

or even anti-Christian, Christmas itself has been compromised away

in innumerable ways, and often by people who never think of their

actual values this way, as derived from the realm of the financial

market, from every-man-for-himself self-centeredness, aka, libertarianism,

or from a moral relativism that denies that there are any worthwhile values

outside of economic self-interest. These realities are rationalized to 
nothingness

by a business system that relegates culture  -our values, morality, 
philosophies,

preferences in entertainment, etc. - to near insignificance. We live in an

Adam Smith world where Smith never wrote his Theory of Moral

Sentiments to warn people that without religion-derived morality

their lives inevitably are ruled by base passions, by egos run amuck,

or by complete absence of any kind of education to lasting values.

 

All of this and abysmal disinterest in modern-day creativity of the highest 
order,

hence masterpieces of art  -or song, or drama-  that, if they are noticed at 
all, 

are regarded as diversions which we can take or leave and who cares

one way or the other? 

 

Which is to say that we would all be better off, immeasurably better off,

if we take a clinical  look at the Christmas we do not have because

American popular culture does not allow us to see what is there to

be seen. Now is the time to explore a realm where everything comes

together, ideas and values and morals and aesthetics, how we decide

what is beautiful and what is not, namely, the world of Christmas carols.

 

None of this is intended to bring back the ghost of Christmas past,

the era of Oliver Cromwell and the Puritans who followed after him

in 17th century America when the holiday was effectively outlawed

in Massachusetts and other parts of New England. Our Founding Fathers

were part of a generation which still had memories of Puritan laws and

customs that snuffed out celebration of Christmas in areas where a dour

form of religion stood in opposition to such 'heathen' practices as singing

songs during the time of year when Christ's birth should be observed with

prayers and devotions and solemn remembrances. The whole idea of

Christmas merriment was anathema to the Puritans. But we don't want 

that kind of Christmas; we regard any such thing as beyond comprehension.

 

Not that all people in America of that era regarded Puritan views favorably.

The Dutch did not, nor did the Germans, the Cavaliers of the upper South,

the Anglicans wherever they might be, nor the French or the Swedes.

But no-one could overlook the Puritans; a major part of the economy

in the brand new United States was the property of New England

Calvinists. Antagonizing the Puritans did not make logical sense. Hence,

decades after anti-Christmas laws were repealed in Massachusetts and

elsewhere, deference was still paid to Puritan sensibilities even in the cities

like New York.  

 

Clement Moore, author of  "A visit from St. Nicholas," aka, "Twas the night 

before Christmas," grew up at that time and knew it all too well. And he was

at least somewhat sympathetic to the Puritans. One couplet from the poem,

about "clatter" in the middle of the night, is an oblique reference to a common 

practice of the time, of rowdy boys who would march through the city streets 

and cause disturbances in order to extract gifts of food or drink from local 

home owners.  The poem presupposed familiarity with this questionable custom

that Clement Moore clearly did not approve.

 

This is to refer to America in the 1820s; Moore wrote his verses

in 1823. Christmas caroling was still not a universally accepted custom,

nor was much else about the holiday which, as many Protestants saw it,

reflected so much Catholic superstition anyway.

 

As well, many Americans of the time were smokers;  tobacco fortunes

financed the economy of the era (several Founding Fathers owned large

tobacco plantations, including Washington, Jefferson, and Madison)

and any new popularity for a Christmas holiday would need to address

pro-smoking values of the day. Hence another couplet that seldom

meets approval today, about Santa and his tobacco pastime:

 

The stump of a pipe he held tight in his teeth 

And the smoke, it encircled his head like a wreath...

 

 

The main Winter holiday in early 19th century America was 

New Year's Day. Still, Clement Moore was drawn to the idea 

of making Christmas the better choice for a family celebration 

and followed his friend Washington Irving in promoting the

concept. But, as the Wikipedia article on the subject points out,

Moore hit upon the idea of romanticizing Christmas Eve as the

best way to advance Christmas itself since that way Protestants

would not need to feel any sense of compromise with Catholics.

But in 1832 there still was no reference to singing carols even though, 

to be sure, people in various places were doing exactly that

even if the custom was not universally accepted.

 

Keep in mind that another now universal custom, Christmas trees,

were not, for the most part,  introduced into seasonal traditions until 

the 1840s. The holiday was still "emerging" in the new nation.

 

 

A fascinating article about the history of Christmas from Slate magazine

for November 30, 2011, provides still more details about how it was

that the "American way of Christmas" finally broke into the open to

become the festive and largely secular holiday it now is. This is Nathan 

Heller's essay, "Christmas Carols  -Why do we keep singing them?"

 

At the same time that Clement Moore was writing his poem the very

first stages of a revival of carol singing had started in Britain. Hence

Davies Gilbert's 1822 volume of rediscovered Christmas carols,

followed a few years later by another Christmas songbook, by

William Sandys, which popularized a number of carols that have

been with us ever since, including “The First Nowell, the Angel

did say," and "Hark the Herald Angels Sing." Modern Christmas

was evolving into the holiday we know and love.

 

What made an enormous difference was the 1843 publication of

Charles Dickens' A Christmas Carol which told the story of  Scrooge,

Tiny Tim, and the Ghost of Christmas Past  -in contrast to the merry

and fun-filled Christmases of an idealized British past. In this telling

Scrooge is a stand-in for the Puritans, whom, clearly, need to go.

 

The Dickens' classic is with us still, of course, year by year reinforcing

its powerful messege that Christmas should be a time of good cheer,

of sharing, of celebration, and other noble things including religious

remembrances, but as a holiday with "no edge." This is the problem.

Not that Christmas should be gray and solemn  but that it should

make life's realities part of the picture  -as do a number of 

now-forgotten Christmas carols.

 

It isn't just seasonal songs. If you take the time to study the history of 
Christmas

observances in American you will learn that throughout the 19th century,

even as late as the 1950s, there were plenty of reminders that some people

are evil and need to be dealt with as such, that each of us has a "dark side"

that should never be overlooked, that children can be horrible little creatures

far from the contemporary view based on the "cult of the child" that sees

no evil in youth, especially in one's own offspring. 

 

As for faith, the subject of sin was never far from the surface, and the themes

of suffering, tragedy, and sometimes loss, concepts that "don't make the cut" 

as far as commercial retailers are concerned.

 

Any kind of reality-based Christmas has pretty much vanished.

It is time to bring it back. Life is not all candy canes, marshmallows,

well behaved children with no flaws, and enactment of every

warm and fuzzy sentiment you can think of.  Yes, we can make the 

most of the holiday season; we should do so for everyone's sake,

this is a large part of what Christmas is all about. But we need to

work at it, and sometimes sacrifices are necessary to make things 

happen. And the best exemplar of what Christmas is all about

is Jesus, whose life was filled with suffering as well as hope,

and with sacrifices of many kinds.

 

As Nathan Heller put it, in our time "an important feature of Christmas carols

is that they are only nominally about Christmas. Listeners faced with

the full canon might distinguish between sacred songs (those that make

some mention of Christ's birth) and secular ones (Santa Claus, snowmen,

mistletoe, "cheer" and all manner of wassailing), but this is like insisting

on a basic difference between hot cross buns and Danishes.

Both are iced and sweet..." and if you have one you 

pretty much have the other.

 

Such religion as there is, generally focuses on lowest common denominator fare,

"what everyone knows," a moral universe for kids but sold to grown ups as if

baby ethics is all that anyone needs to worry about, and a lot of common

symbolism  -apparently on the view that every spiritual issue has long been

resolved, there are no questions anyone needs to ask, there is no depth

to religion anyway, and what we have in common is all that matters

since all religion reduces to Civil Religion.

 

Our genuine differences are discredited in the process, there is no such thing

as diversity except insofar as every people is supposedly just like all other

peoples as soon as you scratch the surface. You can have your own

colorful costumes, you can eat ethnic foods that others have no appetite for,

you can convene ceremonies where the language of choice isn't English,

but otherwise we are sold a bill of goods to the effect that everyone

is the same. If you disagree, as many Evangelicals and Greek Orthodox

and traditional Catholics do, as revivalist Lutherans and faithful Baptists 

also do, you are un-American and need to be re-educated.

 

Hence the "demotion" of carols that don't meet the needs of the secular paradigm

for Christmas as a holiday that should be acceptable to everyone  -incredibly,

including Muslims, who outright reject the idea of  Christmas as little more

than a form of idolatry.  And not just Muslims.

 

One of the great weaknesses of the Baha'i Faith, for instance, is that it

regards Christmas as obsolete and something that should be phased out.

Which is to hopelessly misunderstand the meaning of the holiday

and its place in American culture, certainly since some point

in the mid 19th century. You may as well denigrate weddings,

birthday parties, and graduation ceremonies. These observances

are part of  who we are as Americans.

 

Ironically, in Buddhist countries, and now even in Hindu India, Christmas

is taking on a life of its own even if the populations involved do not share

Christian beliefs at large. But Christmas trees are a national obsession in

Buddhist / Shinto Japan, and many people in India can see all too well

the possibilities in Christmas customs to supplement their own holiday

seasons like Diwali. Hence the rise of Hindu interpretations of  Christmas

now celebrated on the Internet with good natured animations in which

Santa wears a turban, Rudolph has become a unicorn, and angels

sure look a lot like Hindu Dhakini maidens.

 

Christmas is about sharing and this can mean sharing our culture with others,

win / win, nobody loses, and the world becomes a little better in the process.

But it would mean the most if Buddhists and Hindus and others understood

that Christians really believe the essentials of their faith, are committed to

the truths of their religion, and take pride in their heritage.

 

Until about 1960 America's Jews understood the principle involved very well,

indeed. Hence the rise of Chanukkah as a sort of  "Jewish Christmas,"

an insignificant holiday elevated into a major new tradition featuring

gift giving, exotic seasonal decorations, and family reunions above

and beyond those demanded by the Orthodox calendar. That is, Christian

Americans insisted that Jews should have their own version of Christmas

so that they would not feel "left out" during this special time of year

experienced by all other Americans. The messege was one of

inclusion, acceptance, and brotherhood.

 

Also seldom recognized is the fact that Christmas carols are a gateway

into history. Nathan Heller also recognized this quality of the songs we sing

at  Christmastide:

 

"Carols not only to a time before Shakespeare but before Beowulf  -and then

to many eras in between. When people speak about "Christmas spirit," they

mean a form of reassurance virtually expunged from modern life: the comfort

of continuity,  the pleasure of return, the knowledge that not everything

we have will one day disappear. Christmas carols are our mainstream

window to the past and as a consequence, the closest thing we have 

to a guarantee of our own era's future."

 

They may also be a portal to other cultures even if not all Christmas songs

have this quality. But knowledge is now widespread that many of our

cherished Christmas customs have nothing to do with Jesus and a lot

to do with the Roman Saturnalia, with Pagan Anglo-Saxons and their 

Yule celebrations, or with Mithraic religion that originated in classical era 

Persia;  the birthday of Mithras, deity of contracts and justice, who bequeathed

the custom of shaking hands to posterity, was celebrated  -a century before

Christ-  on December 25.  

 

There also are such traditions as the German fixation with decorating little 
trees 

for the season, with creches that were popular in medieval Italy, with a flying 
man 

in a red suit as originally conceived in Scandinavia and the Low Countries, 
with 

good St. Nicholas of Asia Minor (now Turkiye), and with much else that 

connects us to the peoples of most of the nations of Europe and, in cases, 

some of the countries of  Latin America. In time, many Americans speculate,

there will be connections to the other continents even though what

has been done so far has been unconvincing.

 

Some Christmas songs take us into the American past, which has value

of its own. Jingle Bells, for instance, dates to 1857. Originally it was

intended to celebrate Thanksgiving, but before the 19th century ended 

the only seasonal songs were devoted to Christmas and the music

about a sleigh and snow covered byways fit well enough with those themes 

to became a December perennial.

 

In 1862 a Welsh melody from maybe 1550 AD became the basis for 
"Deck the Halls," possibly referring to nostalgia for life before the

Civil War.

 

Although a few additional songs or carols were composed during the balance

of the 19th century and the first years of the 20th, it wasn't until the 1930s

that the idea of creating new Christmas music on a regular basis "took off."

Hence Winter Wonderland and   
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Santa_Claus_Is_Coming_to_Town> Santa Claus Is 
Coming to Town, both

from 1934, and I've Got My Love to Keep Me Warm, in 1937, and several 

others from that era. Baby, It's Cold Outside, first appeared in 1944 and 

Let it Snow in 1945. By the 1950s there was a virtual industry in writing

new Christmas songs every year.

 

The first in the 1950s category was actually composed in 1939, at which time

it went nowhere, only to be revived in 1949, when it became a hit  -to be 

followed by re-releases several times in the 'fifties,  each of which also

became "new" hits, namely, Rudolph the Red Nosed Reindeer. 

 

Sleigh Ride, by LeRoy Anderson, was a 1948 song that had a similar trajectory, 

popular from the outset only to become even more popular when it was 

re-released several times in the 1950s.

 

Frosty the Snowman was new in 1950, It's Beginning to Look a Lot Like 

Christmas came along in 1951,  I saw mommy kissing Santa Claus was

a hit in 1952, Santa Baby (by Eartha Kitt) was new in 1953, the

"Chipmunk song" (Christmas don't be late) came along in 1958.

 

The 1940s and 1950s were the halcyon days of creating new 

Christmas songs and carols. Such music was still fairly popular

in the new music market in the 1960s  but by the 1970s sales

for such songs went flat and they have remained flat ever since

at about 20% of the pace of the fifties. No new songs have

"moved the needle" in any subsequent years. And few since

that time have proven to be very memorable despite the fact

that people continue to write such songs. But none have been

"catchy" the way the 'classics' of the 50s were, and most have

turned out to be concert pieces that amateurs have had any

interest in trying to sing for themselves.

 

Among the few to emerge into the standard Christmas music

repertoire have been Do You Hear What I Hear? of 1962 and

Cyndy Lauper's Early Christmas Morning of 1998. But nearly all

of the later Christmas songs have not been carols at all, they have

been intended for virtuoso pop music performers.

 

This is true even for one of the best songs of this genre, Enya's 2008

White is in the Winter Night, which goes through the colors of Christmas

in its lyrics, red and green and blue, etc. Like other Enya songs this one

is pleasant to listen to but just about impossible to imagine any group

of carolers ever singing at someone's front door on a December eve.

 

What else has changed since the "golden age" of Christmas songs" has

been abandonment of the genre by Jewish musicians. The most popular Christmas

song ever written  -while this is in dispute-  possibly is White Christmas, a

1940 composition sung by Bing Crosby. This smash hit was written by

Irving Berlin, a Jew. Other Jewish composers were Felix Bernhardt

(Winter Wonderland), Jacob Levinson (Silver Bells), and Frank Loesser

(Baby its cold outside). In fact, at least 25 Christmas hits were written

by Jews, mostly in the 1940s and 1950s. Even the niece of  Senator

Jacob Javits, Joan Ellen Javits, got into the act with her pop song, 

Santa Baby, which  she wrote with Philip Springer.

 

What explains Jewish disinterest after those years? Two factors were involved.

First was the general decline in interest of musicians of all kinds. After all,

this is to discuss the era of the 'sixties when sex, drugs, and rock 'n roll,

pushed most other pop music themes aside, or, if songs were religious,

they might just as well have commemorated Krishna rather than Christ.

Second, Israel became an independent nation in 1948; it took a few years

before this new reality permeated Jewish consciousness at large, but it did,

and accommodation to Christian traditions no longer made the best sense

to many or most Jews in the music business because restoration of the

Jewish state became their natural priority.

 

In any case, while levels of popularity of Christmas songs that were achieved

in the 1940s and 1950s were never reached again, the genre has continued.

A market still exists and it isn't going away even if it now mostly consists

of a combination of niches  -rock, country, metal, etc.- none of which

are dominant in any national sense.

 

But there is something else. The fate of popular Christmas music is more than

a question of marketing or ephemeral tastes that don't stay nailed down. Nor 

is this simply a matter of the "Hallmark quality"  -light on content, heavy on

sentimentality- that characterizes many seasonal songs, viz., Have Yourself 

a Merry Little Christmas, Its the Most Wonderful Time of the Year, 

or  Here comes Santa Claus.

 

The religious meaning of Christmas, which has always given the holiday

its "backbone"  -its structure, deepest values, and important associations-

has been greatly compromised. And you cannot get the sought for effect

merely by playing Silent Night, O Little Town of Bethlehem,

or O, Holy Night, ad nauseum on the radio.

 

That may be what media executives want others to think is all that is necessary

is to pay homage to religion, but religious people do not think so, not at all.

 

Christmas when all is said is about much more than the birth of Jesus.

The reason his nativity is important is because, so Christians believe,

Christ would live a life of agony in which he ultimately was killed

by a ruthless Roman government that oppressed the people of Judea. 

Along with this goes Biblical theology about the reality of Satan, about 

the problem of evil, about human weaknesses, and about suffering.

 

None of which has sales appeal, and Christmas, needless to say,

has become a commercial holiday moreso than not. It is no wonder

that the religious foundation of the holiday has been elbowed aside.

It is no wonder that religious lyrics of many songs are seldom even heard

in today's media, replaced by strictly instrumental versions of these

traditional songs. 

 

O come, O come, Emmanuel still sounds good when played by a string ensemble

and doing so allows a business to appeal to non-religious consumers. What this

does, however, is to deliver a feel -good melody to the multitudes at the

expense of the actual meaning of  the song.

 

Here are several of the original verses, uncut:

 

O Come, O come, Emmanuel

And ransom captive Israel

That mourns in lonely exile here

Until the Son of God appear....   

 

O Come, O come, thou lord of might

Who to thy tribes, on Sinai's height,

In ancient times didst give the law

In cloud, and majesty and awe....

 

O Come, thou rod of Jesse, free

Thine own from Satan's tyranny

>From the depths of hell thy people save

And give them victory o'er the grave.....

 

All of which is Christian Orthodoxy. The words express beliefs

that no sincere Christian can compromise away. Jesus is God's son,

the law was delivered from the Almighty to the people of Israel, 

hence to us all, and the big problem we all must face is courage

to stand up against evil that is manufactured by Satan that, if we

give in to temptation, condemns us to hell.

 

This is not about the latest toys for pre-schoolers, not about the comforts

of home in early Winter, nor about good intentions, or about wishing others

a bountiful future for the weeks ahead. This is about the place of Jesus

in your heart, about standards of right and wrong and basic morality

which sets down lines that should not be crossed, and about the existence

of the Devil and all that he does to cause mankind to fail and to fall.

 

When you think about it, still other traditional Christmas carols are

just as orthodox. Including the cheerful sounding God rest ye merry gentlemen.
The lyrics should actually read, "God rest ye merry, gentlemen," which was

the original. The song dates to about 1500 AD at a time when "rest" meant

something like satisfy and "merry" was defined broadly as well-being or

achievement. The carol wishes gentlemen, by extension all Christian people,

good things in life, and all that is necessary is to carry on, work hard,

and persevere. This isn't about taking it easy or about telling jokes

to get a few laughs to chase away the December blues.

 

Here are the words:

 

God rest ye merry, gentlemen
Let nothing you dismay
Remember Christ our Savior
Was born on Christmas Day
To save us all from Satan's pow'r
When we were gone astray
Oh tidings of comfort and joy
Comfort and joy
Oh tidings of comfort and joy

 

This is still more Christian orthodoxy.  Jesus saves us from the powers of 
Satan,

all of us are sinners but Jesus makes it possible for us to overcome evil 

in our lives through faith in him. "Comfort and joy" are the products

of  that faith, not a social good that arises automatically because people

are naturally good. On the contrary people are naturally wicked

and need to rise above the sin implanted within them from

the beginning. 

 

 

This said, I'm not sure what to make of the interpretation of this song

by the Mormon Tabernacle Choir with a large orchestra and company 

of dancers This production is available on YouTube and is quite a spectacle.  

It is Mormon pageantry  at its best, a Christmas extravaganza to marvel at.

But the Mormons didn't touch the lyrics, which they presented verbatim,

including direct reference to the Prince of Evil, Satan.

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