January 5, 2019
MY CORNER by Boyd Cathey
Did You Celebrate a “Politically-Correct” Christmas?
Friends,
Before
the recently-past Christmas Octave is completely out of mind and prior to
returning our thoughts fully to more mundane and ordinary affairs of this
“cold
mid-winter,” I wanted to share one more essay I wrote, published by THE REMNANT
newspaper. You may recall that it
originally appeared as an installment of MY CORNER back on December 10. For
publication in THE REMNANT (volume 51, number 22, the December 31, Christmas
issue), I edited it slightly. And as it was a meditation on the Holy Christmas commemoration,
I am sharing it with you now—I believe it is never out-of-place
to
remember and celebrate that incredibly history-changing and miraculous
event that took place two millennia ago.
In this
case, however, my object was to examine just one example of the continuing and
frenzied attacks against anything associated with the observance and memory of
that marvelous and shattering Happening.
The
Enemies of that Event, indeed, are Legion, and these days they assault it in
various and multifaceted ways: some are
outright opponents, and these we know face to face, just as we know their
frenetic hatred. Others, however, more devious, pretend to be defenders of the faith, but
through their cowardice and treason pollute, dishonor, and deface it. Or, as the great English Restoration author Sir Thomas
Browne commented (in his work, Religio Medici) over three centuries ago,
due to corrupt zeal and perversion, they remain prisoners of error and actually
enable the destruction of truth.
Yet, truth cannot be silenced,
despite what our enemies do and say. As President Jefferson Davis
once said (1873): “Truth crushed to earth is still truth, and like a seed
will rise again.”
From
Holy Scripture we have the iron-clad promise that in good time Our Lord, Who
triumphed over the grave, will also triumph over Evil, and in Glory “shall judge the living and the dead, by his
coming and his kingdom” [2 Timothy 4:1]
Here
is my latest essay:
BANNING THOSE “HATEFUL” CHRISTMAS SONGS – WHAT WOULD DANTE SAY?
December 31, 2018 Volume 51, number
22
By Dr. Boyd D. Cathey
It was one of those little things—one of those sudden
interruptions of a pre-planned schedule—that stops you in your tracks, that
convinces you to alter what you had hoped to accomplish during the day. As I
briefly caught a segment of “Fox & Friends” the morning of December 10,
before switching the channel to hear some classic Christmas music and prepare
my Christmas cards—there she was, Deana Martin, daughter of the late Dean
Martin, interviewed about the recent spate of banning of the romantic Christmas
song, “Baby, it’s cold outside.”
I did a double-take. I remembered vaguely the song. It
was written back in 1944 by lyricist/composer Frank Loesser, and then featured
in the 1949 musical comedy, the film Neptune’s
Daughter starring Esther Williams, Red Skelton, and Ricardo Montalban. It
actually won an Academy Award for best song that year.
It is not a song I find that attractive or appropriate
for Christmas. Just a trifle, but that is not the point. In December 2018 it
was being banned by radio stations as an example of “toxic masculinity” and
“sexism.”
Dean Martin sang and recorded the song in 1959. “When I heard it,” Ms. Martin declared, “I said, ‘This can’t possibly
be.’ You know, it’s a sweet, flirty, fun holiday song that’s been around for 40
years for my dad. He did it in ’59. But when I saw it, I tweeted, ‘I think this
is crazy’.”
Here is a portion of a report featured on National
Public Radio (NPR):
“…The call
and response duet has a female voice trying to tear herself away from her date
in myriad ways: "I've got to go away ... Hey, what's in this drink?"
And finally, "The answer is no."
But her declarations of "no" are far from final, with the male
voice, wheedling "Mind if I move in closer ... Gosh, your lips are delicious
... How can you do this thing to me?"
Cleveland's WDOK put its foot down where the
female voice could not, announcing its ban of the song last week. "I do
realize that when the song was written in 1944, it was a different time, but
now while reading it, it seems very manipulative and wrong," host Glenn Anderson wrote on the station's web site. "The world we live in is extra sensitive now, and people
get easily offended, but in a world where #MeToo has finally given women the
voice they deserve, the song has no place." Brian Figula, program director
of KOIT saw the headlines and determined the song would have no place at his San
Francisco station. He banned it on Monday.” [Amy Held, “'Baby, It's Cold Outside,' Seen As Sexist,
Frozen Out By Radio Stations,” at: https://www.npr.org/2018/12/05/673770902/baby-it-s-cold-outside-seen-as-sexist-frozen-out-by-radio-stations
]
The
cries of “date rape” and “toxic masculinity” resounded on feminist Web sites,
via Twitter, and Facebook. “Ban it!” they screamed. “It is an ugly example of
historic male dominance and manipulation of women!” they wrote.
But
just as the effort to exile one more piece of historic Americana gained
momentum there was, as well, a backlash from angry listeners to have the song
restored, and a few stations have, given the public outrage, altered course and
brought the song back.
Nevertheless,
this most recent example of what feminism has brought us got me thinking: just
in the past several years there have been dozens of similar episodes, calls to
ban or expunge songs associated with Christmas and the Christmas holiday. Those
efforts have usually employed the twin accusations of “racism” and
“sexism”—charges that have been weaponized by the post-Marxist Left and the
Progressivists who now dominate not just the Mainstream Media, but the
Democratic Party, and almost the entirety of academia and Hollywood. And in
numerous cases, the results have seen familiar and traditional tunes,
previously considered part of our historic musical heritage and Christmas
season, disappear from the airwaves.
Years
ago, I recall similar efforts: Remember the old familiar religious hymns,
“Onward, Christian Soldiers” and “From Greenland’s Icy Mountains”? Both were
denounced as “colonialist,” “fostering Western imperialism,” and “racist.” The
late Bishop Vincent S. Waters, Catholic Bishop of Raleigh, more than fifty
years ago would host Saturday breakfasts to which a wide variety of religious
and secular leaders were invited. I was a regular attendee, and at one of those
breakfasts he had me seated right next to the Reverend W. W. Finlator, pastor
of the Pullen Memorial Baptist Church. Pullen Memorial was arguably the most
liberal congregation in Raleigh, maybe in all of North Carolina. It had seceded
from the Southern Baptist Convention, and its minister, Reverend Finlator, was
by any definition, a vocal denizen of the “religious left”—an oxymoron, if
there ever was one.
Back
in 1970 I think my dear friend, Bishop Waters, had seated me there on purpose,
for as soon as our conversations began, Finlator and I were at crossed swords,
and, in particular, about music; first about the use of the traditional Latin
liturgy (which I staunchly favored), but then turning to those hymns sung in
many Protestant churches, and the efforts to purge them because somehow,
somewhere, they might offend an Aborigine or Bantu in the jungles of darkest
Africa. Like most Progressivists Finlator believed that Christianity in its
public worship and manifestations and how it crafted its message, must change
with the times. Truth was dependent on the spirit of the age and needed to
reflect that in both its approach and its message.
For
me this was—and is—the total inversion of the truth of that message, of the
Gospel, and, effectively, of the consistent and never-changing teaching of the
Church.
Reflecting
now on the more recent controversies over those favorite songs we sing at
Christmas and the attacks made on them as “racist” or “sexist,” the
conversations I had with W. W. Finlator have come back to me.
The
same #Resist movement that has spawned violent demonstrations about our
historical monuments, most specifically those honoring Confederate veterans—the
same #MeToo frenzy that demands the emasculation of men in the name of “women’s
equality”—the same Progressivists who demand that those Nativity creches in front of public buildings be
removed—the same zealots who file lawsuits to ban prayer before a school board
or town council meeting—those folks are all part and parcel
of the same hounds of Hell who loathe
the very mention of traditional religion, who cannot sleep as long as one symbol of historic Christian
faith—one symbol vaguely connected to or representative of Western Christian
heritage—remains in public view, or in earshot. They may direct their emphases
to this or that despised aspect of our traditions, but they emerge from
essentially the same infernal source, and their disfiguring lunacy is both a
self-consuming madness and utterly destructive of the civilization and its
culture which we have inherited.
Just
a few days ago I came upon what may capture the eventuality of this infectious
and rancid brew—a fetid “rough beast” that encapsulates it all. A professor of
clinical psychology and “sexuality studies,” Eric Sprankle, at Minnesota State
University-Mankato,
“…has
accused God of sexual misconduct for impregnating Mary, the mother of Jesus,
without her 'consent'. Eric Sprankle, an associate professor of clinical
psychology and sexuality studies at Minnesota State University-Mankato,
criticized the Biblical Christmas story, saying the Christian deity was
'predatory' . 'The virgin birth story is
about an all-knowing, all-powerful deity impregnating a human teen,' Sprankle
wrote on Twitter. 'There
is no definition of consent that would include that scenario. Happy Holidays.” [https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-6471593/Minnesota-State-professor-accuses-God-sexual-misconduct.html]
Thus, an
all-powerful Male, indeed a deity, forced Himself on an innocent teenage girl,
“without her consent.” If this isn’t “rape” and “toxic masculinity,” then, pray
tell, what is? “To put someone in this position is an unethical abuse of power
at best and grossly predatory at worst,” the professor wrote.
The article from
the London Daily Mail goes on to
identify just who this Professor Sprankle is: “Sprankle is an apparent
Satanist, whose Twitter bio includes the phrase 'Hail Satan' in Latin. He
has also posted pictures of the Satanic Christmas decorations in his home, and
complained about the abundance of Christian student groups and lack of Satanic
groups on his university's campus.”
So, there you have
it—the ultimate expression of the ultimate destination where this multifaceted
movement for “liberation” is urgently headed. But the “liberation” proposed and
advanced is our delivery into the clutches of pure Evil which emits from the
very Bowels of Hell.
The great poet
Dante Alighieri, in his The Divine Comedy,
imagined as perhaps no other secular visionary what that Evil entailed. In Part
III, “Inferno,” in the lowest level of Hell he describes the frozen lake in
which the souls of the worst of the damned remain imprisoned for eternity,
ruled by, “the
Emperor of the Realm of Woe [who] stood forth out of the ice from midway up his
breast.” Indescribable pain and hopelessness, utter and uncontrollable frenzy
and madness, and unalleviated and concentrated hatred for the Good—characterize
the souls, the subjects of that dark lord. And that same fate is held up,
cleverly disguised as a tempting bauble, to inveigle us all.
The
Apostle in I Peter 5:8 describes and warns us of this: “Be sober and watch:
because your adversary the devil, as a roaring lion, goeth about seeking whom
he may devour.” (Douai-Rheims Version: this verse is used as verse in the
liturgical Office of Compline)
The surest way to reject
the “roaring lion,” this Hydra-headed Behemoth and its diverse and multifaceted
modern incarnations intent of gorging on the entrails of Western Christian
civilization, is to forcefully reject it and send it reeling back to the lower
level of Hell from whence it came.
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