December 20, 2023
MY CORNER by Boyd
Cathey
Christmas: A Sign of
Contradiction and Hope, Against the Demons of This World
As Christmas 2023 rapidly approaches I am put in mind of a short
poem, “The Broad Winter,” written some seventy years ago by English poet, Jack
Clemo. It may seem a bit odd to cite this work during the Christmas Season, but
I will explain.
Here it is:
“The
darkness comes as you foretold.
You hear the fretful moan,
The alien winds that rave
As bitterly the grey truth breaks
On disillusioned Church and frantic world.
You see what form the judgment takes,
What harvest faithless generations reap:
The folds half empty, no clean pasture for the sheep;
Soil sterile where the liberal waters swirled
Which now have hardened into mud
Of festering ethic, fruitless hands grown chill
With their starved, pallid blood;
And the sky freezing still.
[And the
poet’s response]
When I saw this I chose to
dwell
With torturing symbols of the Citadel.”
Upon reading it you might ask: “Why would we wish to dwell on such dark
things during the Christmas Season which is, after all, a time of
inextinguishable and ineffable Joy? Why would we wish to read such a work that surveys
the ruin and apostacy of our modern world?”
Read the last two lines again.
They remind us that Hope and the Promises of Salvation and
Everlasting Life entered this world a little over 2,000 years ago. And those
Promises and that Hope cannot be extinguished or defeated by the powers of
Darkness, by Satan and his diverse minions of this world, no matter how strong
and invincible they may appear, or how much damage they have done to two
millennia of Christian civilization.
Thus it is that once more there are broad smiles on our faces,
despite the travails and difficulties we encounter in our own lives, and
despite the “faithless generations” that Clemo mentions in his poem.
The
Feast of the Nativity of Our Lord is a day we celebrate, for it is a
memorialization of that Event in history which is completely unimaginable
in human terms and that forever changed human history.
The
sin of Adam—Original Sin—affected all mankind and left descendants marked,
indelibly stained by that original fault.
Adam’s sin was a form of disobedience, but a disobedience so grave and
monumental against God’s Creation that only the Coming of the Messiah, the
Second Person of the Trinity of the Godhead, could repair it. And the Son of
God would be Incarnate in a woman who would be pure and herself immaculate,
untouched by the inheritance of sinfulness (by the merits of her Son). Only
such a pure womb would be fitting for the Incarnate God. And only the
Incarnation into one of His creatures would serve the purpose of demonstrating
that Our Blessed Saviour would come to us, not
only as God, but also in the form of Man—this was fitting because it was to Mankind that He was sent.
For
hundreds of years the People of Israel had awaited the coming of a Messiah to
lead them, to liberate them and, if you will, to repair Adam’s Fall. But this
vision—whether expressed in the revolts of the Maccabees or in later violent
episodes like the revolt of Simon bar Kokhba against the Romans (132
A.D.)—implied not just satisfaction for sinful ways, but increasingly the
establishment of an earthly and secular kingdom for and of the Hebrews.
And
although Our Lord and Saviour indeed came first
to the Jews, and offered them His reparative Grace and Salvation, it was by no
means to be limited to them. Indeed, His message was universal (as it had been
to Abraham). And those Hebrews who accepted the Messiah—and those Gentiles who
also joined them—became the Church, the “New” Israel, receptor of God’s
Grace and holder of His Promises and carrier of His Light unto all the world.
While
a majority of old Israel rejected Our Lord, demanding His Crucifixion before
Pilate, those who followed Him and believed in Him entered the New Covenant, a
New Testament. It is in this sense that the Christian church inherited the
promises of Israel and the Old Testament, and thus fulfilled those prophesies.
And that fulfillment continues.
St.
Paul in his Epistle to Titus [2:11-15] summarizes both the dazzling and
miraculous wonder of Our Saviour’s Grace amongst us and its inexhaustible power
to transform us: “The grace of God Our Saviour hath appeared to all men,
instructing us, that, denying ungodliness and worldly desires, we should live
soberly and justly and godly in this world, looking for the blessed hope and
coming of the glory of the great God and our Saviour Jesus Christ: Who gave
Himself for us, that He might redeem us from all iniquity, and might cleanse to
Himself a people acceptable, a pursuer of good works. These things speak and
exhort: in Christ Jesus our Lord.”
We—the
Christian church, those chosen out of Grace who accept God’s gifts—are in a
journey to that day when Our Lord will reign fully not only in Heaven but here
on earth as well. That is why we worship Him as Christ the King, for He must
rule not just in our hearts but over all Creation.
In the
year 800 A.D. as Charlemagne was crowned Emperor of the Holy Roman Empire in
Aachen, Germany, the choirs intoned the antiphon: “Christus vincit! Christus
regnat! Christus imperat!”—“Christ conquers! Christ reigns! Christ commands!”
These Imperial Acclamations indicated that Our Lord was recognized as both Lord
and Master, in Heaven and on Earth, and that our mission was not just to
be confirmed in the Faith, but to spread it to every corner of the globe,
and—very importantly in our day and time—to defeat its powerful foes.
And
for this task, by the love of Christ and through our Faith in Him we have been
given the invincible armament of Our Lord’s graces to support us and the gift
of the supernatural Virtue of Hope, that whenever we are tempted to despair,
pulls us back and redirects our vision. It is this solemn promise which
Christmas reminds us of.
It is fascinating to note that in 1659 the Puritans in control of
the Massachusetts Bay Colony actually
banned Christmas and the festivities surrounding it which they
considered, in their Iconoclastic and heretical way, to be an affront to God:
“For preventing disorders arising in several places within
this jurisdiction, by reason of some still observing such festivals as were
superstitiously kept in other countries, to the great dishonor of God and
offence of others, it is therefore ordered by this Court and the authority
thereof, that whosoever shall be found observing any such day as Christmas or
the like, either by forbearing of labor, feasting, or any other way, upon such
accountants as aforesaid, every person so offending shall pay of every such
offence five shillings, as a fine to the county.”
For those zealots, Christmas
was a distraction, a pagan celebration that smacked of the feared Catholic and
Anglican traditions. Too much celebration, too much joy took away from their
practical and stern Gnosticism. Indeed, by so doing they actually cut
themselves off completely from living Christian tradition and the inheritance
of 1600 years of Christian faith.
As various distinguished
historians and authors such as Perry Miller and Paul Conkin have detailed, the
Puritans of Massachusetts begat in third and fourth generations a degenerative
vision of humanity that maintained the same frenzied zealotry and framework of
the original Yankee Puritans, but had evolved into philosophical
Transcendentalism and religious Universalism, and later into such fanatical
aberrations as Abolitionism, Women’s Suffrage, and various hysterical “civil
rights” reform movements since then. Without the firm anchor and foundation of Sacred
Tradition, “faith” became little more than a social philosophy advocating for insane
change here on earth. For them “salvation” would be found in social reform and
perpetual (and destructive) revolution.
And we have seen in our own
time the continued expressions and the results of this philosophy. For today it
is the descendants of those same Puritans, now vested in all the gross finery
of radical Progressivist thought, who advance the latest causes for gender
equality, same sex marriage, transgenderism…the same descendants and their
allies who denounce anyone who challenges their new template on race as
“racist”…and the same apparatchiks who with unleashed passion demand that the
“new Gospel” of American-style secular democracy and equality be imposed on the
rest of the globe. There lies salvation for them. It is, in reality, a sure
path that leads directly to a hell on earth…and to Hell without the Redemption
of Our Lord.
So, as we begin to celebrate
the Feast of Christmas, by that very act we defy and denounce those Puritans
and their progeny. Like Clemo’s poem, we cling to the Citadel of Faith and
its forthright affirmation.
In the ancient liturgy for Christmas
night is sung:
“Laetentur coeli et exultet
terra ante faciem Domini, quoniam venit!” [Ps. 95: 11, 13]
“Let the heavens rejoice, and let the earth be glad before
the face of the Lord: because He cometh.”
Once more, then, I take this special opportunity to wish each of
you and your families a most joyous and blessed Feast of the Nativity of Our
Lord, 2023. May this Christmas Season be a source of Christ’s grace to you and confirm
you in the unshakeable Armor of Faith and the Hope that only He can give.
A blessed and joyous Christmas to you all and to your
families!