Thursday, November 01, 2007

And So This Is Mixmas

So I turn on the radio this morning and I am informed by local radio station 99.1 'The Mix' that the Christmas season is upon us. Or to be more correct, the 'Mixmas' season: all Christmas music, all the time. So for the next two months, I can be guaranteed a steady stream of Brenda Lee's 'Rockin' Around the Christmas Tree', Lennon's 'So This is Christmas', a various assortment of Neil Diamond Santa tunes, and the ubiquitous 'Same Old Lang Syne' by Dan Fogelberg. I'd like to drink a toast to his innocence. Two things bug me about this.

First of all, these radio stations have, for the most part, removed all Christmas songs having anything to do with Christ. Therefore, we are forced to here the same songs over and over again by different artists, and they are all about Frosty or Santa or snow. The profound irony here is that, if this is what Christmas has been reduced to, then what are we celebrating for two long months? How many different versions of 'Santa Claus is Coming to Town' one generation can produce? Or how many pitches Bruce Springsteen actually falls short in trying to reach the high notes in his embarrassingly awful version of the same?

Second, and even more concerning to me, is the redefining of the Christmas season itself. In capitalist America, where the veil of Christmas is still encouraged for the sheer revenue that it generates, the celebration begins immediately after Halloween. Stores are turned from orange and black to red and green. Pumpkins are replaced with holly. Candy corn is replaced with candy canes. And scary stuffed men are replaced with Santa Clauses. The pumpkin patches in the middle of malls are replaced by Santa's Workshop. And of course, Christmas music is everywhere. This continues through December 25th, when all of the buying is occurring, but then magically on the 26th it is all gone. The Santas removed, the colors changed, and the Christmas music gone. As American Christians, this seems quite normal and many of us capitulate, removing our lights and trees by New Years Eve. We eliminate all traces of the celebration from our houses almost as quickly as the stores. What we don't realize, however, is that the Christmas season has been redefined for us by the retailers.

According to the Christian calendar, the season begins with the Feast of Advent, the first Sunday of which is the first Sunday of December. What follows is several weeks where we prepare our hearts through meditation on the incarnation, acts of mercy, and fasts to receive our coming king Immanuel. The Feast of the Nativity, or Christ Mass, begins on December 25 and continues until January 6. We are meant to revel in the reality that our savior has come to earth and has been born. We are meant to celebrate and feast this reality for two weeks. But we don't. Instead we tear it all down as soon as it has begun, giving ourselves hardly any time to appreciate the wonder. And we go back to our daily lives, not realizing that the world has changed - God has entered it.

I do not blame the retailers or even the radio stations - they do not know any better. But we as Christians should. We should reclaim the significance of our feast. And we should start by celebrating it according to the time of holy tradition, not according to the time of 'Mixmas.'

3 comments:

Cindy said...

You should send this post into some publications, it would be a great editoral article as we enter the Christmas season!

Matt Purmort said...

Sometimes I am envious of the Eastern Orthodox for having a liturgical calendar where the feast days are slightly different. Often America has done its celebrating when Christmas and Easter occur for them. From my friends I know who are Eastern, I think it helps them to focus in a way those of us who follow the western calendar are not able.

Anonymous said...

I was in a department store yesterday (NOT Christmas shopping)and the sales lady told me to be sure to come back next weekend, because to kick off the holidays, they would sell me this coupon booklet for $5, with the proceeds going to charity, I would receive some very good 20% off opportunities, and they would even be playing their Christmas music to help me get a jump on my Christmas shopping.
Exact words.
I told her that I do indeed celebrate Christmas, but politely asked didn't she sometimes wonder if they alienate more people than they "help", by putting on their holiday music so early, so blatantly commercializing the season? She agreed but said people need help to get "in the spirit", so that they can get all their shopping done early, so they can truly enjoy the blessedness of the REAL season when it comes. Interesting. I agree with Cindy....you SHOULD send it in.
Very good blog. What global warming is doing to delay the onset of our "holiday spirit", the retailers can surely make up for with their Mixmas, their coupons and their tinsel in November. Sure wish I could just concentrate on being thankful for my blessings this Thanksgiving month. MomK