War on Christmas, consumerism, Jesus, the least of these, love, Christmas
(This article is also posted as audio file read by the author at the end of the post).

Ah.... I LOVE this time of the year!

Some people wait with bated breath for duck season, some for deer season, but for me it is all about Christmas season. That's right I'm one of those lefty, liberals that have declared a War on Christmas. That's right! Sign me up for the War on Christmas! … but maybe not for the reasons you might imagine.

You see, while I am signing up to help in a War on Christmas, I'm not on, what by default gets called, the “non-Christian” side. I’m also not signing up for the side that news pundits falsely purport as the “Christian” side. If anything, I’d make the argument that the dominant face of Christianity, as it is seen on television and promoted through news programming, is itself far from what Christianity is supposed to be about. It is a sort-of white-washed, sanitized version of Christianity that every year presents an increasingly cleaned up version of the Christmas story to the viewing public.  

You see, the baby we remember this time of year, was not part of the dominant culture the way the religion he started now is. The religious stories that were told in those days were told under the shadow of the dominant culture. They were stories of oppression and hardships, stories of overcoming unthinkable odds, stories of hope for a people living in times and cultural positions that – well, quite frankly felt hopeless.  

But today, our stories are told from places and positions of power. Today, Christianity is the dominant culture.  So, instead of story of a olive skinned middle-eastern, unwed, pregnant mother, who was seen as little more than property, giving birth to what the world would surely see as an illegitimate child who was wrapped in what rags they could find and placed in a smelly, flea infested feeding trough in the midst of a dark musky smelling animal stall… instead of that story, we end up with a clean, white skinned European woman giving birth to a glowing baby wrapped in impossibly white swaddling clothes and laid to rest in a manger that looks more like a crib than a trough in the midst of a barn that is more kept and clean than many of our houses.

So, “War on Christmas?,” sure sign me up. I'm pretty sure I'd prefer the elimination of what our modern “celebration” has become to the increasingly white-washed version we hear every year.

The Christmas story has been hijacked by a dominant culture. Places of power and positions of prestige have warped the comeuppance sensibilities of the original Christmas story. God’s vision of liberating the oppressed, the down trodden, has been slowly replaced year after year with a story that no longer brings fear to the Powers that Be, but rather supports the big business agendas of profit and mass consumerism.

“War On Christmas?” – come to think of it – they’re right. There is a “War On Christmas,” but it is actually waged by many of the very people who think Christmas is getting squeezed out of our culture in the name of plurality and other religions. If the Christmas they support wins – well, I for one, would have to say all is lost.  So, yes, there is a “War on Christmas” and we Christians have been supporting it. If the present day, white-washed version of Christmas continues to be the dominant version, then I believe a great darkness will smother us in a sea of privilege and perverse oblivion to the struggle of those most in need – the oppressed, the downtrodden. 

If the Christmas Present, with it's full on worship of consumerism, continues to masquerade as Christmas Past, our Christmas Futures will increasingly become a time when we give out of our abundance rather than out of a response to need and out of a response to God’s love – the kind of Christmas where we give to those who already have abundantly while the oppressed, the downtrodden, watch our overindulgence and rightfully judge us by actions that run contrary to our words of a child born to bring light into the dark corners of the world.

 
 
Christmas, consumption, compassion
As Christmas quickly approaches, it gets harded and harder to not get caught up in the consumerism that has come to define the season.  Amidst all of this season's consumption, groups like adventconspiracy.org are advocating a change - a change from consumption to compassion.  What if this Christmas season, instead of giving presents to our family and friends, we put the same time and effort we spend shopping for and thinking about those presents into spending time with them - presence rather than presents, substituting compassion for consumption?

Take it one step further.  What if, rather than spending all that money on each other, we spent the money on “the least of these?”  What if, instead of fulfilling our perceived "needs," we filled the real needs of people around the world as our gift to our friends and family, by giving a family in Zambia a milk cow or someone in the Uganda honeybees.  That $150 Kinect for  XBOX 360 will be yesterday's news next Christmas.  The milk cow and the honeybees, which you can help provide for $50 or less, will be providing much needed nutrients for years to come. 

Maybe you don't feel like you can afford to just "give" your money away, even if it is for a good cause.  In financial times like these, many of us really can't.  Just keep in mind, if it is bad for us in the world's riches nation, it is probably worse for others around the world.  So, here's an alternative to alternative gift giving ideas: microloans.  Groups like kiva.org are pulling together small (or even large) amounts of money from those who have to help out those who have less.  It is an opportunity for those who are "the least of these" to, through their own inventiveness and hard work as well as the good will of others, better their lives through loans they would not have had access to otherwise.  

Does all of this mean I'm suggesting that there should be no presents to open around the tree this Christmas and we'll just have to sit there and...and talk?  (I know, sounds horrible doesn't it?)  No, that's not what it means.  Over and beyond giving cards to let people know what you have done for "the least of these" in their name, there are plenty of other ways to give that doesn't mean throwing inordinate amounts of cash at the large companies that frequently, through questionable production and employment practices, take advantage of "the least of these" around the world so that we can play video games for less than 200 bucks.  Check out buynothingforchristmas.org and sites like it for more information.  

In doing these things, not only will you be helping those in need, but you will also be helping fight the systems of domination that help keep the under-served “in their place.”  In order to prepare the way for the Lord, in order to begin to taste what the peaceable kingdom of God here on earth might be like, we must (as John the Baptist told us) lower the mountains and raise the valleys - if you have more than you need share with those who do not have enough, begin dismantling systems that support consumption and domination.  (see my sermon “All Means All”).

As Christians we should stand more strongly in our convictions and start looking critically at the domination system out of which we operate.  We should stop shopping at stores that get their goods from places that require workers to perform for little pay in substandard and sometimes unhealthy work conditions.  Which means not buying clothes from places like Wal-Mart and even Target.  We should stop buying food from places that take advantage of migrant workers, overlooking their human rights in an effort to provide cheep food.  Which means we stop eating at places like McDonald's, Taco Bell and Subway until they correct their dominating ways (like all three have in their most recent cases).  We should stop allowing our consumer oriented lifestyles to destroy our environment.   We should show compassion to workers around the world by buying Fare Trade goods, so that we can be insured that no one is being dominated or taking advantage of because of our support.

This Christmas, let's honor the greatest gift of all by giving the world the greatest gift we can give it - peace, real peace.  As worshipers of the Prince of Peace, let's take a stand again our domination oriented systems of consumerism and adopt instead a peacefully oriented system of compassion.  

Education is the first step.  So, go learn more about things like  Living Wages, Fare Trade Goods and  Advent Conspiracy... and start living into compassion.

This Christmas lets give the best we have, let's give ourselves to God and to the work of God.  Let us deny the shallow consumerist disposition of the systems of domination and leap into the depths of a life lived in compassion.  Let's prepare the way for God by leading peaceable lives that value ALL flesh.  This Christmas let 's begin living lives that will allow us, and all of God's children, to have a taste of what the peaceable kingdom of God might be like.