Dr. Morris says he can not improve on this. -Sara (his secretary)
Christmas
Time
The
celebration of Christmas has changed completely during my lifetime (80 years).
As a child, Christmas was centered around the white, clapboard church built by
my great grandparents on both my mother and father's families in 1874 as they
recovered from the Civil War and the destruction of every religious symbol in
the community when the Yankees moved through on Sherman's march to the sea.
I
personally object to Christmas decorations in a house of worship. Most of the
decorations are symbols of the pagan activities of that season of the year
which the Christians took over from the worshipers of heathenism. But, in the
very isolated, rural communities, the poverty which was there when I was a
child (remember there were no radios, television had not been invented, one
telephone in the entire community, no electricity) gave the children in Sunday
school a reason to look forward to this time of year, because it was a time
that they participated in enjoyment not found at any other time.
I
still remember there were children in the community, at the church, who had
never seen an orange or banana. The only Santa Claus they knew anything about
was the one they saw on the pages of the Sears Christmas catalog, which came to
every home. They could wish for things but the chances of them getting any
thing was slim to none. My mother related so many times about how she and her
sister wanted a doll for Christmas. They each received a child's purse in which
a note that read, “Perhaps next year will be better and you will get a doll.
Signed, Santa.”
Over
my long and exciting life of traveling the world as a blind person, then, as
now, having everything described to me by someone else, I was interviewed by a
reporter from a large newspaper about my experiences around the world at
Christmas time. It is very simple, only in those countries where Christ is
known will you find the celebration of Christmas. Certainly not in the 48
Muslim countries. Perhaps the most exciting Christmas was celebrated at the
South Pole, Antarctica. Next in excitement
would be spending Christmas Eve at Bethlehem in
the Holy Land. I fully described this
experience in one of my blogs.
How,
when I arrived at the hotel in Bethlehem from Jerusalem, the place was
full and my driver and I were given rooms on the outside in rooms reserved
during tourist season for bus drivers. I described how cold it was in Bethlehem that time of the year, emphasizing, again, the
known fact that our blessed Lord was not born in the latter part of December
because there were no shepherds in the fields with sheep at such a cold time of
year in the Holy Land. But, on that Christmas
Eve as all my senses reconciled my metabolism in the physical knowledge of that
part of the world at any time of the year, I rejoice just to be there. On
Christmas Day, I went into the Church of the Nativity, which is built over the
cave where our blessed Lord was born. Even though being in the Holy Land at
Christmas, celebrating the birth of the Light of the World, my guide told me he
did not see one Christmas decoration, one Christmas light, EXCEPT in a small
store just across from Absalom's Tomb (Absalom, son of King David).
I
was in Athens, Greece at Christmas one year. The
people at the hotel and others told me they had never seen one city so
beautifully decorated as Athens.
Of course, having been here several times, I knew the Acropolis, on which the
Parthenon is located, is always illuminated at night. Crawling up the Acropolis
to the Parthenon on Christmas day, reaching Mars Hill (where the Apostle Paul
had much to say about the God's of the Athenians) I thrilled in the knowledge
that all history, every calendar, every date on any document, all punctuated by
the birth and life of one solitary man, God-man. When you move around the
Mediterranean, you realize this one solitary figure of history never walked
over 50 miles from where he was born, never owned anything except his robe for
which His crucifiers gambled as he hung on a tree.
This
Christmas, you do not have to travel the world as I have at Christmas time
(South Pole, Holy Land, Majorca, Holland, Greece, Rio, Tokyo) to know the real meaning of Christmas.
When you look at the Christmas tree, think of the tree on which our blessed
Lord was crucified. When you see the thorns on the holly tree, think of the
crown of thorns on His head. When you see the red berries, think of the drops
of blood he shed for you, when you see the bright lights which the world has
distributed up and down every street, a world which has denied Him over and
over, think of the Light of the World and the fact that every day, in every
way, the world prefers darkness to light.
Over
spending, over eating, over activity, is the way pagans celebrate Christmas. To
the world, it is not a holy day but a holiday. Keep pagan practices out of your
house of worship; there is nothing more beautiful than Christian Church,
Christmas music. The gifts of Santa Claus do not compare and should not be
mixed with the incomparable gift of the Christian Christmas. Don't get
confused, God is not mocked. For the believer, the believer in Christ,
Christmas is a time to rejoice in children, even in seeing a pregnant woman.
God chose to put a tent of human flesh on a small baby born of a virgin mother,
to live among us, to die for us, and has told us only to remember Him at the
communion table. Celebrating the Lord's supper is the only way we were
instructed to remember him. The rest is just peripheral, to be done with
sobriety, thoughtfulness, and an excellent time to show man's humanity to man.
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