Every year now Christmas becomes important not only to believers, but to non-believers and merchants alike. It makes for a peculiar three-part ballet: Faith, Fiction, Fortune.
Believers -- from young to old, from scholars to school kids -- find in the annual Christmas narrative a flame of hope. A flicker in the darkness that seems to say life is still worth living, because God came into our world to tell us so. And even when believers succumb to the seasonal sizzle of too much gifting and partying, somewhere inside they suspect the Jesus story is really what it's all about.
As for the non-believers, they once stood with their faces pressed against this annual candy store window. Lately, though, they seem interested in challenging the party. Scholars and skeptics alike question the ancient tale. And protest its public manifestations. They argue, especially in courts, that the Bethlehem story is a fiction, and a crime against the intellect.
As for the merchants, well they don't really have to take a side, do they? To them, Christmas means money, so merchandisers gamble much of their year on making it big during this month. If not now, when! And so our stores are usually even more decorated and crowded than our churches.
What to make of all this...?
Here's a thought. Christmas may be different things to different people, but watch a small child watch a small Nativity scene. Their little eyes always seem to provide a very large answer to the question.
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