A Christmas Reflection
Thursday, December 13, 2007
Dear Friends,
First, I want
to invite those of you in the
Waterloo-Cedar
Falls
area to join me this
Saturday, December 15th from
10:00
– noon at the
Cedar
Falls
Community
Center
at 6th and Main streets.
Local organizers are planning a spirited
discussion of John Edwards’
mission and message, and Lynn and I are helping
to lead it. You can
contact Lisa Eiklor at kentaddleman@earthlink.net
for
details.
Today, I want
to reflect on Christmas. And please know that
while I speak as a
Christian, I appreciate the religious and
spiritual significance of this season
for a wide range of faith traditions.
Originally a
celebration of the birth of Jesus, the modern
Christmas
has far more to do with mega malls than manger
stalls. It’s as if
the true Christmas has been stolen
by a Wall Street grinch and contorted into a
month-long orgy of consumption and
materialism. Each
year we obediently,
almost compulsively, parade off to the biggest,
newest shopping mall.
Each year, the pilgrimage begins earlier
than
the year before.
This year, at 12:01 a.m. the day after
Thanksgiving, Jordan
Creek Mall threw open its doors to an onslaught
of all-night shoppers amidst
unprecedented hype and glitter.
I understand
that, for many struggling small-business
owners, Christmas is a make-or-break
opportunity to close the year in the
black. Small
businesses are the backbone
of
America’s
economic strength, and nearly every penny I
spend – not just at Christmas, but
throughout the year – is at a locally-owned
business. If we all
try harder year round to shop on
Main
Street and at
older malls in the hearts of our cities
and towns,
America
and our economy will be better off for it.
Yet it is
beyond me what our modern Christmas shopping
frenzy
has to do with the birth of Jesus. In the
Christmas story, three wise men came bearing
gifts – not to their wives,
children or friends but to a homeless babe,
born out-of-wedlock, lying on a bed
of straw.
And while the
wise men were well-intentioned, their choice
of gifts is puzzling.
Here’s the Holy
Family. Poor. Homeless.
Hungry. Soon
to be immigrants in
a foreign land.
Soon to be fugitives on
the run from political persecution.
Their needs include housing, food and
above all justice – not gold,
frankincense and myrrh.
Though generous,
the wise men seem a bit clueless, giving not to
the true needs of this
destitute family but from the excess of their
own luxury.
I don’t mean to
suggest that the Christmas message has
nothing to do with giving.
Indeed, the
birth of Jesus is THE critical event through
which God gave his Son to
humankind. Jesus,
in turn, gave his own
life for our redemption.
And during that
life, he sets an example for us by constantly
giving of himself.
But the important point is that he gave
not
to gratify people’s greed but to fulfill their
need.
He gave sight
to the blind.
He gave food to
the hungry.
He gave comfort
to those in mourning.
He preached
release to the captives.
So, along with
giving gifts to our family and
friends, let’s give of ourselves to those in
need –
not just personally, but collectively.
We might
volunteer at a homeless shelter . . . and work
for
an end to economic and social policies that
exacerbate poverty.
We might visit
seniors in a nursing home . . . and lobby for
laws that pay direct-care workers livable wages
and allow more seniors to stay
with their families longer.
We might spend
time not only with our own kids but with
disadvantaged kids . . . and work to reform
government spending priorities that
grossly under-fund child welfare programs.
Human need on
this planet is huge but finite. If we – as individuals
and through our local,
state and national governments – put our minds
and hearts to the task, we
could, as John Edwards says, end poverty in our
lifetime. We have
the natural resources.
We have the economic wherewithal. We have the technical
knowledge. All we
lack is the will.
Thank you, and
may you enjoy a blessed, peaceful Christmas
season.
Ed Fallon