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By Leonard Peikoff
Christmas in America is an exuberant
display of human ingenuity, capitalist productivity, and the enjoyment
of life. Yet all of these are castigated as "materialistic";
the real meaning of the holiday, we are told, is assorted Nativity tales
and altruist injunctions (e.g., love thy neighbor) that no one takes
seriously.
In fact, Christmas as we celebrate it today is a 19th-century American
invention. The freedom and prosperity of post-Civil War America created
the happiest nation in history. The result was the desire to celebrate,
to revel in the goods and pleasures of life on earth. Christmas (which
was not a federal holiday until 1870) became the leading American outlet
for this feeling.
Historically, people have always celebrated the winter solstice as the
time when the days begin to lengthen, indicating the earth's return to
life. Ancient Romans feasted and reveled during the festival of
Saturnalia. Early Christians condemned these Roman celebrations they
were waiting for the end of the world and had only scorn for earthly
pleasures. By the fourth century, the pagans were worshipping the god of
the sun on December 25, and the Christians came to a decision: if you
can't stop 'em, join 'em. They claimed (contrary to known fact) that the
date was Jesus' birthday, and usurped the solstice holiday for their
Church.
Even after the Christians stole Christmas, they were ambivalent about
it. The holiday was inherently a pro-life festival of earthly renewal,
but the Christians preached renunciation, sacrifice, and concern for the
next world, not this one. As Cotton Mather, an 18th-century clergyman,
put it: "Can you in your consciences think that our Holy Savior is
honored by mirth? . . . Shall it be said that at the birth of our Savior
. . . we take time . . . to do actions that have much more of hell than
of heaven in them?"
Then came the major developments of 19th-century capitalism:
industrialization, urbanization, the triumph of science all of it
leading to easy transportation, efficient mail delivery, the widespread
publishing of books and magazines, new inventions making life
comfortable and exciting, and the rise of entrepreneurs who understood
that the way to make a profit was to produce something good and sell it
to a mass market.
For the first time, the giving of gifts became a major feature of
Christmas. Early Christians denounced gift-giving as a Roman practice,
and Puritans called it diabolical. But Americans were not to be
deterred. Thanks to capitalism, there was enough wealth to make gifts
possible, a great productive apparatus to advertise them and make them
available cheaply, and a country so content that men wanted to reach out
to their friends and express their enjoyment of life. The whole country
took with glee to giving gifts on an unprecedented scale.
Santa Claus is a thoroughly American invention. There was a St. Nicholas
long ago and a feeble holiday connected with him (on December 5). In
1822, an American named Clement Clarke Moore wrote a poem about a visit
from St. Nick. It was Moore (and a few other New Yorkers) who invented
St. Nick's physical appearance and personality, came up with the idea
that Santa travels on Christmas Eve in a sleigh pulled by reindeer,
comes down the chimney, stuffs toys in the kids' stockings, then goes
back to the North Pole.
Of course, the Puritans denounced Santa as the Anti-Christ, because he
pushed Jesus to the background. Furthermore, Santa implicitly rejected
the whole Christian ethics. He did not denounce the rich and demand that
they give everything to the poor; on the contrary, he gave gifts to rich
and poor children alike. Nor is Santa a champion of Christian mercy or
unconditional love. On the contrary, he is for justice Santa gives
only to good children, not to bad ones.
All the best customs of Christmas, from carols to trees to spectacular
decorations, have their root in pagan ideas and practices. These customs
were greatly amplified by American culture, as the product of reason,
science, business, worldliness, and egoism, i.e., the pursuit of
happiness.
America's tragedy is that its intellectual leaders have typically tried
to replace happiness with guilt by insisting that the spiritual meaning
of Christmas is religion and self-sacrifice for Tiny Tim or his
equivalent. But the spiritual must start with recognizing reality. Life
requires reason, selfishness, capitalism; that is what Christmas should
celebrate and really, underneath all the pretense, that is what it
does celebrate. It is time to take the Christ out of Christmas, and turn
the holiday into a guiltlessly egoistic, pro-reason, this-worldly,
commercial celebration.
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