Thursday, December 24, 2009

19. An Atheist's Christmas Prayer

For weeks now, we’ve all shared a similar American experience. Crowded stores and rushed traffic pacified only by lamppost holiday lights and random greeting cards from those relatives we’d all but forgotten we had. Spirits lifted by music and familial warmth, we avoid caloric overload as best we can. Spirits dampened by thoughts of those who are no longer here to share in our oddly-enjoyable hysteria, we make a hog-like mess of the divinity and peanut brittle on our collective countertops. Some of us -- (me) -- even spend the entire season pointedly wearing Santa hats and adorning our shoes with jingly bells.

Don’t knock it till you’ve tried it.

That’s right. Odd as it may seem for Little-Miss-Atheist, the Christmas season is my favorite time of year. Bar none. It’s a holiday that transforms my house into a very interesting place, to put it mildly. My sweet husband tolerates my compulsive need for round-the-clock Christmas carols – largely by vacating the house as much as possible. My son alternates between relieved and terrified that his mother has suddenly become the cheeriest woman on the block. I smile more. I bake more. And, believe it or not, I sing the religious hymns as loudly and as gleefully as every reindeer and Santa mash-up that dashes its way across the radio.

That said, I’ve been sitting on this post for weeks. Partly because I wasn’t sure how to address the topic without sounding dry or self-indulgent. Mostly because I didn’t know whether I had anything to contribute to what has apparently become a controversial subject; and even if I did… whether or not I could adequately express my feelings is another matter entirely.

We all know by now (or at least, we damn well SHOULD) that winter festivals have occurred throughout recorded history; longer, unless I miss my guess. Today we call it Christmas, Hanukkah, or Kwanzaa. Yesterday we called it Yule, Epiphany, or Saturnalia. Whether it’s a preparation for Wild Hunt, a hopeful salute to the season’s Solstice, a visit from the magi, or even an old Norse feast marked by the sacrificial bloodletting of horses and cattle – the lore and legends are meant to inspire hope for the future, a bit of warmth to pull us through the long nights and harsh weather. Gathering together to consolidate our status as a family, or a community, or a society is a profoundly human need. A deeply-rooted desire that, when fulfilled, leaves us renewed and emotionally capable of moving forward.

In our fledgling years as a civilization, it is events like these that quite literally kept us alive – simply by keeping us together. What happened, then, to turn it into a month-long effort to pull us apart?

Every year, opinion pages, blogs, and announcements across America light up with people desperate to take sides; erecting walls between “Merry Christmas” and “Happy Holidays”, decorated trees and interpretations of tradition. People yell. People push and defend. Turning it into a private war rather than a public celebration.

Again, I have to ask…. What happened?

There is an easy answer, of course. But it is… too easy. I gain nothing from it and neither do you.

So instead, to bridge the gap, to take my small step toward the world peace being wistfully sung for on iPods the nation over, I – an outspoken atheist, rationalist, and skeptic – want to send this small Christmas prayer into the electronic void, not expecting any response. Not really expecting anyone to understand. But hoping I’m wrong on both counts.


This Christmas, I pray that the struggle over the “true meaning” of the holiday is wiped away, replaced by the desire to honor what Christmas means to you and not to your neighbors.
I pray that we as a nation can learn to put aside the party lines and shields of segregation to leave the world better than we found it.
I pray that we as a race can learn to prosper without greed, without indifference.
I pray that the good times outweigh the bad, and that we enter the lives of those we are lucky enough to encounter with the grace and respect that everyone deserves, regardless of their status, regardless of our creed.
I pray we wake up one day with the recognition that – black or white, rich or poor, religious or not – we all want the same things, even if we disagree on how best to achieve them.
I pray that those who need shelter will find it.
I pray that those in pain will find an end to suffering.
I pray for peace.
I pray for hope.
Most of all, I pray that tomorrow will be better than it was today.
For all of us.

3 comments:

  1. I hope you don't mind that I reposted this (giving you full credit and a link to your page, too). It was perfectly written and I wanted to share. Love this site! Merry Christmas and here is to more closet doors opening around the world!

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  2. Not at all -- I'm honored that you would want to share it. Merry Christmas & a Happy New Year to you as well, and thank you kindly for the comment!

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  3. I grew up in a family that wasn’t necessarily atheist but they were not religious either. I grew up not realizing that Christmas was a celebration of the birth of a “religious” figure. I was a kid for hell sake. For all I knew he was King Christ Tut the mummy. And I really didn’t care as long as Santa pilled gifts under the tree. As I grew older that blissful ignorance changed to pure glee of watching my kids’ eyes light up when they saw what ol’ Saint Nick had brought for them.

    Christmas has always been to me a special time of giving of ourselves to people; ones we care about and otherwise; good will toward men, and all that. It’s about family, friendship, love and togetherness. I love Christmas. It’s one of my favorite holidays because of how it makes me feel and how it brings people together. It’s serene and peaceful but that doesn’t make it necessarily only for the religious. Family, in itself is just as much a religion wouldn’t you say? And insomuch as it is, Christmas is a celebration of that.

    In a later post you mention worn out phrases that curdle into guano stew. The following idea has a similar effect for me: I’ve been advised constantly by people I come into contact with, that God is the most important thing in their lives … and then their family, coming in a distant second; that God commands this of his followers. If there is a God, I can’t imagine for the life of me that he would be so selfish. My kids are the most important thing in my life. When I was married that also included my wife. Nothing could be more important than them. That’s what Christmas is to me, take it or leave it.

    “… the desire to honor what Christmas means to you and not to your neighbors.”

    True dat!

    Falconer

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