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December 3, 2008
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Home > 2007 > DecemberChristianity Today, December, 2007  |   |  
Tidings
Do They Know It's Hanukkah?
There's more than one "happy holiday" for Christians this season.



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The Christmas wars have changed focus in the last few years. There are still the reruns of fights over displaying nativity scenes, stars of Bethlehem, and less religious displays like Christmas trees on government-run spaces. Hundreds of lawyers are standing by, waiting for a city council to squelch caroling or a school principal to crush a candy-cane handout.

But since 2005, when the "war on Christmas" reached a fever pitch, some organizations and many individual Christians have put more emphasis on the season's greeting. At the grocery store last year, I was surprised by the indignation of a fellow shopper when the clerk wished her "Happy Holidays." The woman glowered for a moment, then responded, without a hint of merriment, "Merry Christmas."

Apparently she wasn't alone. One organization is selling bumper stickers that read, "This is America! And I'm going to say it: Merry Christmas!" and "Merry Christmas! An American Tradition." (I don't remember the American part of the Christmas story, but I haven't re-read Luke 2 yet this year.) Also for sale: "Just Say Merry Christmas" bracelets. ("They're guaranteed to ward off the evil spirits of the ACLU grinches," says the ad.)

Just say Merry Christmas? To everyone? Regardless of whether they actually celebrate Jesus' birth? To borrow a line from Band Aid (creators of the worst holiday song of all time), "Do they know it's Hanukkah?" For the story of Hanukkah ironically sheds light on the aggressive "Merry Christmas!" trend.

In 167 B.C., the Maccabees rebelled against the Syrian king Antiochus IV, who desecrated the temple in Jerusalem with an altar to Zeus, and tried forcibly to Hellenize the Jews. After years of fighting, Judas Maccabeus and his small band of guerillas drove the Syrians from the temple, then cleansed and rededicated it. Modern Hanukkah observances focus less on Judas's military victory than on the miracle of a single day's worth of consecrated oil—the only container undefiled by Antiochus—burning for eight days.

Christianity has its own Hanukkah story in John 10, one that has little to do with the Nativity, and that took place about two centuries after the Maccabees revolted.

"Then came the Feast of Dedication at Jerusalem," John writes. "It was winter, and Jesus was in the temple area walking in Solomon's Colonnade."

There's no menorah recorded here, nor a manger. Instead, there is a revolutionary in the temple that Judas Maccabeus had reconsecrated after defeating a massive imperial army, on the day that his victory was remembered. It was a provocative act, and John reports that Jesus' fellow Jews were provoked. "How long will you keep us in suspense?" they asked. "If you are the Christ, tell us plainly."

Jesus did answer plainly, but he didn't talk about Judas Maccabeus, Antiochus, Caesar, or Rome. "I did tell you, but you do not believe," he said. "You do not believe because you are not part of my flock." After another exchange, Jesus departed "across the Jordan to the place where John had been baptizing in the early days. Here he stayed." Where Judas Maccabeus had fought his opponents, Jesus escaped.

The Jewish Hanukkah story is one of triumph over a culture that wanted to force the Jews to assimilate against their will. The Christian Hanukkah story is one that starts with Jesus asking provocative questions, but retreating rather than forcing the issue.

To insist that non-Christians say "Merry Christmas" instead of "Happy Holidays" runs against the lessons of both Hanukkah stories.





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Displaying 1 - 3 of 36 comments.See all comments
Beth   Posted: December 05, 2007 2:21 AM
Awesome article! I'm an ex-pagan in love with Jesus and I don't think I'll ever do Christmas again. It's too remeniscent of my old pagan ways. It comes from Saturnalia and the rebirth of Mithras the Sun God, along with a handful of other pagan gods and traditions, because of the winter solstice and the fact that the days start getting longer after (around) December 21-22, as well as the fact that the pagans worshiped nature. (See Jeremiah 10:2-5) It's too much paganism, commercialism and misinformation as far as I'm concerned - tricks of the devil. Straight up: the Christmas tree is a giant fallic symbol, Santa Claus was invented to sell Coca Cola and Jesus wasn't even born in December. I wonder how He would really feel about being associated with such things? For me it's like Bible Tarot cards. You can put Biblical faces on them and call 'em what you want but they're still Tarot cards. So tonight I lit my menorah and thanked God for sending Jesus to fulfill the law.

Brian   Posted: December 03, 2007 12:49 PM
I don't see how this article encourages phrase-ology as a weapon in the supposed "culture war," so point missed might be yours. As a Jew, I can't and don't take part in the meaning of the season. I don't say "Merry Christmas." It makes little sense, too, for me to say "Happy Chanukah" to anyone except for Jews. So I say "happy holidays," and mean it. I've no problem, and many of us would agree, with *any* well-intentioned greeting being dropped on me. Frame of reference notwithstanding, good cheer is good cheer. My real problem is exactly the folks who respond to "happy holidays" with a bellicose "Merry Christmas," as if I killed their dog. The presumption that I should care if someone celebrates the birth of their Savior or half-off at the mall is as obnoxious as the inundation with Xmas from the end of October forward. So, kudos to you, Mr. Olsen, for a lovely article. Bottom line - say what you mean and mean what you say. Both our faiths would have us do this.

Lutheran Chick   Posted: December 04, 2007 1:26 PM
I hope CT doesn't fire Ted. I love his articles and this is one of his best. No one is forbidden to say "Merry Christmas." If you don't like the rules your employer has established, get another job. Or go out on your lunch hour and wish everyone you meet a "Merry Christmas." It IS a free country ... which means we can all worship in whatever way we choose and celebrate the holidays we want to celebrate. But to those who want to worship as real Americans worship, perhaps you should consider the religions of the Native Americans.

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