Why Charles Dickens Is to
Blame for Modern-Day Christ-less Christmas
by lon vining
Dickens’ story of 'A Christmas Carol' influenced the holidays far beyond its literary mark and created a holiday with no hero. If you’re wondering what in the dickens I’m talking about, you’ve got it right: Charles Dickens. Dickens’ story of A Christmas Carol influenced the holidays far beyond its literary mark and created a holiday with no hero. You see, this Dickensian superstar led the cast of fictional characters that unleashed a new version of Christmas on an eager public in the 1800s and forever changed it.
Dickens’ story of 'A Christmas Carol' influenced the holidays far beyond its literary mark and created a holiday with no hero. If you’re wondering what in the dickens I’m talking about, you’ve got it right: Charles Dickens. Dickens’ story of A Christmas Carol influenced the holidays far beyond its literary mark and created a holiday with no hero. You see, this Dickensian superstar led the cast of fictional characters that unleashed a new version of Christmas on an eager public in the 1800s and forever changed it.
For those
who know the story well—and most do, as it has sold more than 5 million copies
since being published in 1843 and adapted into more movies and TV specials than
any other Christmas story—you may be surprised to hear Charles Dickens and his
fictional cast of not-so-merry men and ghosts implicated in anything so
serious. In fact, his tale of Scrooge’s reformation from merciless
penny-pincher to humanitarian is cemented in Western Christmas folklore as a
favorite holiday tale.
Ironically,
Dickens was trying to tell a tale to curb the evils of materialism and he ended
up creating a vacuum in our culture that has been invaded by the very ghosts of
excessive love of money that he once exorcised.
Rather
than a meaningful celebration of peace, sacrifice, humility and ultimate love,
families endure a rat race of frenetic shopping and preparations. While 86
percent say they expect to buy gifts for friends or family this year, only
about 4 percent say what they look forward to most is buying gifts, reports the
Pew Research Center. Even more troubling is that 33 percent of people admitted
they dislike the commercialism and materialism of the holidays.
So how
did we get to this place, and is there a way back out of it?
Christmas
prior to Dickens was much more of a religious celebration. As secularism grew
in the 19th century, Dickens penned a new ideal for the holiday. He downplayed
the religious aspects of the season and substituted a romanticized ideal of
family gatherings, “caroling out in the snow,” gift-giving and merry-making. By
staging his story in the idyllic past of Victorian England, Dickens also
rewrote history in his present. People seized on this romantic but Christ-less
vision for Christmas, and Western culture has never looked back.
It wasn’t
just Dickens. Men like Clement Clarke Moore, author of The Night Before
Christmas, wrote Christmas tales that were heavy on hope-filled ideas like
Santa Claus and magical winteresque scenes and absent of one thing:
Christ.
A
Christmas story devoid of Jesus is a story that lacks a hero, like the
disembodied head of a ghost of Christmas past. A Christ-less Christmas is like
a yearly birthday party where everyone has forgotten whose birthday it is. The
celebrating is fun, but celebrating for celebration's sake grows meaningless
after a while. If it’s only about the decorations, the parties and the presents
under the tree, there is very little to stop us from overspending,
overstressing and overmaterializing.
One need
not be a Christian to appreciate the story of Christ’s birth. The values the
nativity story embodies are universally needed—especially at Christmas. Christ
is more than a romantic symbol of the holiday—His values began the holiday. The
story of Jesus exudes the much-needed characteristics of humility, service to others
and sacrifice. That deity would be clothed in humanity and one day give His
life selflessly on a cross is the ultimate example of a selfless gift for
others.
Scrooge
learned this lesson from a troop of ghosts that showed him the error of his
selfish ways. But if Ebenezer’s holiday celebration had included Christ, he may
have never needed their visit in the first place.
If you’re
having trouble getting into the Christmas spirit, forget Dickens’ Christ-less
tale and remember the original spirit of Christmas, the child born in Bethlehem
who represents us all and represents hope, peace, self-sacrifice and a God who
loves us enough to become one of us.
Lon
Vining is
the director of outreach for Glorious Films and is an ordained Southern Baptist
minister.
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