The Tyrannies of Christmas
By: Mariah Lynn Parker
Christmas is an extremely tiresome and stressful time of
year. There is the Christmas parties, the presents, the lights, the family, etc.,
but when and why did Christmas become such a stressful time of year? Christmas
hasn’t always been about the glitz and glamour; it used to be much simpler.
People forget that Christmas is a celebration of Jesus Christ’s birth. This
important aspect has been pushed to the back of everyone’s mind during the
holidays.
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A major part of Christmas is the almighty Santa Claus that
brings little children gifts on Christmas Eve. But how does Santa Claus connect
to Christianity and the birth of Jesus Christ? Surprisingly, Santa Claus is not
some mythical creature. He was an actual living and breathing human being.
Santa Claus’s real name is Saint Nicholas. Saint Nicholas was born in Patara
and later moved to Myra (modern Turkey), where he was elected bishop. During the
era that Saint Nicholas lived in, a young woman had to had a dowry before she
could be married. It’s a custom we have eliminated in our culture because we
believe in the equality of women and men. Saint Nicholas wanted to help a poor
nobleman with three daughters, but he wanted to do it anonymously. He did not
want to be praised for his generosity. He just wanted to give for the pure joy
of giving. Thus, three bags filled with gold were thrown through the nobleman’s
window. However, the nobleman figured out who was the generous gift giver and
any anonymous gifts were attributed to Saint Nicholas. This man was pure and
good, yet he had to spend several years in prison because of his faith. Many
prisoners were converted to the Christian faith by his witness. The stories of
Saint Nick didn’t hit America until it was spread by the Dutch settlers.


Santa Claus has changed dramatically through the years.
Originally, he was dressed in his traditional Bishop’s robe. It wasn’t until
the 20
th century that he began to be dressed in the red and white
outfit in which he appears to us now in the person of his many “helpers”. In
1874, Santa Clause only had eight reindeer that pulled his sleigh until
“Rudolf, the Red Nosed Reindeer” was written.
Even though Jesus is supposed to be the main star of the
Christmas season, he is mostly outshined by Saint Nicholas. This is because
Saint Nicholas has become the symbol of Christmas because he conveys a spirit
of generosity and love, and as we remember him we too give gifts. Santa Claus
has become a healthy part of the Christmas holiday because it persuades us to
give, yet this has also become corrupted over the years.
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Instead of giving to the poor and needy that we should
during the Christmas season, we instead become greedy. The rich by more and
more gifts for their family and friends and the poor are stuck with the bare
minimum that churches give them. The churches donating to the poor connects the
true background of what Christmas should be for everyone, to what it has become.
This greediness can be shown primarily on Black Friday. Black Friday is the kickoff
of the holiday season with extreme discounts and deals in stores on the day
after Thanksgiving. For many people, this is a time to get serous Christmas
shopping done, even before Thanksgiving Day is over. Black Friday is a major
shopping holiday, but only in America. The term “Black Friday” was coined in
the 1960’s to mark the kickoff to the Christmas shopping season. “Black” refers
to stores moving from “red” to the “black”, back when accounting records were
kept by hand and red ink indicated loss, and black a profit. Ever since the
start of the modern Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade in 1924, the Friday after
Thanksgiving has been known as the unofficial start to a bustling holiday
shopping season. But why did this shopping frenzy become so popular and
accepted? As retailers began to realize they could draw big crowds by
discounting prices, Black Friday became the day to shop, even better than those
last minute Christmas sales. Some retailers put their items up for sale on the
morning of Thanksgiving, or email for sale online specials to consumers days or
weeks before the actual event. The most shopped for items are electronics and
popular toys.

Why is an event of running around and spending money on material
items become so important? When did Christmas get so far away from Jesus? Yes,
people do still go to church on Christmas and pray before Christmas dinner, but
this holiday has gotten so far away from what it should be.
Another absurd tradition is Christmas lights. Christmas
lights are a custom that goes back to the use of candles to decorate the
Christmas tree in upper-class homes in 18th-century Germany.
Christmas tress displayed publicly and illuminated with electric lights became
popular in the early 20th century. By the mid-20th
century, it became customary to display strings of electric lights along
streets and buildings. Another example of something that has nothing to do with
Jesus.

Yes, all these little traditions are fun and sometimes
joyful, but they are so far from the point. The United States is the worst ones
that corrupted Jesus’ birthday. We use this time of the season as an excuse to
buy so many things that we go into debt, to gorge ourselves and convince ourselves
that we will be healthier when the new year comes around, and we tell ourselves
that we don’t need to go to church but twice a year for Easter and Christmas.
There should be no reason that someone feels like they are forced to go to
church. The fact is that not all the people that celebrate Christmas even
believe that Jesus or God exists. They do it purely for the sweets and
presents. This is one of the holidays that should have never gotten corrupted
in the first place.
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Christmas is the celebration of Jesus’ birth, the one who
saved us from our own sins. Yet the modern American has become so far attached
from this fact. The people that don’t go to church or ever pray all year
celebrate it without thinking about the true meaning of these glorious festivities.
When did it change so much that instead of telling our children to be good
because God is watching over us, to be good because if you aren't Santa won’t
bring you gifts? When did our society become so selfish and materialistic that
simply praying and living in the light of God wasn't enough to be good, but the
fact that there is a possibly of not getting some temporary materialistic
object is more heartbreaking. There needs to be a change. Jesus needs to be the
main event, not Saint Nick, not Black Friday, not Christmas lights. Christmas
should be a holiday of joy and love, not of debt and stress. If we take in God
and celebrate the one person that saved all of our sins, maybe Christmas will
be a little more holy and good and less stressful.