Christmas Traditions
TRADITION: This piece is a sort of tradition here at The Passing Parade;
I trot it out every year at this time and I hope you enjoy it as much
as I enjoyed not having to think of something new to write.
There
are twelve days of Christmas, and I’m sure if you’ve somehow managed to
forget that fact over the course of the year retailers from one end of
this our Great Republic to the other will forcibly refresh your memory
for the next few weeks. Whether you want to or no, you will hear in
great detail about lords leaping and laying ladies while pipers pipe and
voyeuristic geese pay five gold rings just to watch. I’ve always
wondered why just about every picture of Times Square before its current
incarnation as Disney World North had a goose or two in the background.
There were just too many of them for this to be some sort of odd
ornithological coincidence.
But avian porn is not the subject of
this screed, so let us move on before the police arrive. The subject of
today’s lecture is the twelve days of Christmas and what they mean to me
in five easy lessons. For the better part of the late and deeply
unlamented twentieth century it was the fashion among a certain set of
people to bemoan the commercialization of Christmas, that the demands of
Mammon were stifling the essentially religious nature of the holiday,
even to the point where that great philosopher and theologian Linus Van
Pelt had to explain to Charlie Brown what Christmas was all about by
quoting the Gospel according to Luke. Charlie Brown did not seem
impressed by this argument, falling, as it did, between commercials for
Benson & Hedges cigarettes and the new 1967 Ford Mustangs.
The
fact of the matter is that Christmas has always been a commercial
bonanza, a state of affairs that began when the Roman Emperor
Constantine decided that maybe Christianity wasn’t such a bad idea after
all. Constantine came to this conclusion after he’d had a dream the
night before the battle of the Milvian Bridge in which he saw a shield
emblazoned with a Christian cross bearing the words IN HOC SIGNO VINCES
(in this sign you shall conquer). After the alarm slave went off the
next morning, clocks being fairly scarce in those days, Constantine put
Christian crosses on his soldiers’ shields; as the enemy army
outnumbered by about four to one, Constantine figured any edge he could
get was a good one; and then proceeded to march out and stomp on the
competition big time.
Having won the crown in a pretty convincing
fashion—Constantine didn’t have to dangle Chad over a cliff or
anything—the new emperor decided to return the favor God did him and
make Christianity the state religion of the Roman Empire. Once a faith
exclusively practiced by the most rejected and despised elements of
Roman society, the Christian faith became the most inclusive faith in
the Mediterranean world since now everyone and their Uncle Bob had to
join whether they wanted to or not, everyone, that is, except
Constantine himself. Unlike, for example, Marshal Feng, the twentieth
century Chinese warlord who converted to Methodism and then decided that
his army should come to the Lord as well, and sped up his army’s
salvation by having them stand in formation while he baptized them with
holy water sprayed from a fire hose, Constantine chose to exempt himself
from the revival, correctly figuring that if he stayed a pagan he could
go on doing all the fun stuff that pagans got to do like murdering his
political opponents, seizing their property, and selling their families
into slavery without this sort of thing bothering his conscience all
that much. If he was still a pagan, after all, who could blame him for
acting like one?
Our current holiday problem started when
Constantine decided that a holiday celebrating the birth of Jesus would
be just the thing to make himself look good on The O’Reilly Factor.
There was, however, one small problem: no one knew when Jesus was born.
The Gospels simply say that the birth occurred when Quirinius was the
governor of Syria. This might have been enough information in the hands
of a competent archivist to pinpoint a likely date, but competent
archivists were hard to find in ancient Rome due to the Roman mob’s
insatiable appetite for watching overweight, middle-aged clerical types
with the wife, the 2.7 kids, the dog, and a thirty year mortgage on a
house in the suburbs try to stab each other to death with quill pens in
the Coliseum.
Constantine, having no solid information to work
with, asked the Senate and the people of Rome what they thought of July
15th as the date for Christmas. The Senate and the people of Rome,
mindful of the fact that Constantine had the bad habit of feeding people
who disagreed with him to lions and tigers and bears, oh my, for the
entertainment of the people in the cheap seats, told Constantine that
July 15th was a wonderful idea. Roman retailers, on the other hand,
mindful of losing the 4th of July and Bastille Day sales, told him that
while his idea was wonderful, it would be even more wonderful at some
other time of the year. One clever gent who owned a shoe store on the
Appian Way suggested, after giving the matter some thought, that the
Emperor make December 25th the date for his new holiday.
Now it
was Constantine’s turn to object. At a meeting of the Imperial Chamber
of Commerce, he quite rightly pointed out that December 25th was already
a holiday, the feast of Invictus Sol and his brother Herschel, the
inventors of the pneumatic Roman army chariot wheel and can opener, a
device upon which the good fortune of the Roman Empire did not rely in
the slightest. Then Constantine had the Pope read the relevant portions
of the Gospel of Luke. The Pope stumbled through the text, His Holiness
being unused to reading anything longer than an address; he had come to
Rome to get a job in the Post Office in Gaul and wound up as Pope for
lack any other available employment; and after he finished reading
Constantine asked the retailers how they proposed to get around the
Gospel’s clearly pointing to a summer date for Christ’s birth. After
all, first century Judean shepherds did not keep flocks of sheep out on
barren hillsides by night in the middle of winter just on the off chance
that a passing heavenly host with some free time on their hands would
wander by belting out their rendition of Handel’s ‘Hallelujah Chorus’ in
digitally remastered stereophonic sound. Clearly, December 25th did not
meet the high burden of theological and historical proof required for
such an august feast day.
Then someone, possibly the shoemaker
who first suggested the idea of the 25th, or maybe his twin brother—no
one could really tell them apart—told the Emperor something that
emperors, as a class, love to hear: he was emperor, therefore he could
put the holiday anywhere he felt like putting it. And so he did, on the
25th day of December, the high burden of historical and theological
proof bending slightly in deference to Constantine’s need for campaign
contributions; not everyone in the Roman Empire thought that
Constantine’s being emperor was such a good idea and he needed money
fast; armies, then and now, don’t come cheaply.
Well, over the
centuries more and more days got added to Christmas; travel was slow in
those days and most people had to use oxcarts that only got twelve miles
to the dry gallon of oats, despite the best efforts of the ruminant
companies to meet new government mileage standards. The retailers,
however, loved the ever-lengthening Christmas season and did their level
best to stretch the season out even more. Matters came to a head in 800
A.D., when on the first day of Christmas the Pope crowned Charlemagne
Holy Roman Emperor and Charlemagne discovered that he and his entourage
were stuck in Rome until the end of Christmas, which occurred sometime
in the middle of April. This was a major source of annoyance for
Charlemagne, who wanted to go home for the holidays, and so in his third
official act, the first two being an announcement that alternate side
of the street parking rules were in effect and the world’s first pooper
scooper law, Charlemagne decreed that Christmas would only last for
twelve days.
Retailers throughout Europe objected, which seems to be a
theme here, saying that a twelve day Christmas season would drive them
out of business; there wasn’t enough time for the scribes to pump out
advertising copy in a twelve day season. Charlemagne said, tough luck,
pal, in Latin and French, and doesn't almost everything sound better in
Latin and French, and then left town with the imperial crown in his
luggage, as well as a couple of counterfeit Rolexes he’d bought from a
Senegalese immigrant who’d set up his blanket in front of St. Peter’s
Basilica.
The retailers, of course, did not go down without a fight.
They’ve been pushing the seasonal envelope ever since Charlemagne rode
Out of Town for a second place finish in the fifth race at the Roman
Aqueduct. This explains why today, in our modern postindustrial
information society, the official Christmas season begins with the
Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade and why we still have an annoying carol
about the twelve days of Christmas. The unofficial Christmas season, of
course, begins near the end of August. This may be why everyone is so
happy when Christmas finally arrives—it means that we won’t hear about
the damn day again for at least another eight months, something for
which we should all shout, Hallelujah and Happy Holidays to all and to
all, a good night!
PS. I actually have written something new for this blog and as soon as I type it up and do some editing, I will post it here as soon as possible.
Labels: archives, baked goods, Christmas, good gnus, history, holidays, Roberta Vasquez, smoking