What is the “reason for the season”? (2 of 2)
There was also a curious song with four female singers titled “Sending You A Little Christmas.” I say curious because it was about being far away from the one(s) you love… and it had some war footage playing on the big screens behind the singers! I think it’s nice to remember our armed forces out in the field during the holidays, and while I find the juxtaposition of bright red santa stockings and machine guns a trifle jarring, I understand that’s their lives… but I was rather startled at the shot of explosions going off around the soldiers diving desperately for cover! I’m not sure I entirely agree that’s suitable viewing material for small children, holidays or no.
I was also a bit uncomfortable when I realized the (hopefully unwitting) power dynamics revealed in the slideshow during this song. There were shots of the soldiers in the field, and there were also several shots of soldiers hugging their loved ones. Interestingly, all the male soldiers were standing and hugging their always-smaller wives, or holding their babies. The sole female soldier I spotted in this sequence, though… was kneeling on the ground between other folks’ legs as she hugged her toddler. I think that’s sweet, and I didn’t have any problem with the individual photos — but when every photo shows men in more powerful positions than women… well, after a while it gets both uncomfortable, and kind of aggravating. I know I don’t want to be pushed, however subtly, into someone else’s expectations of me, after all — especially when they’re nothing like what I want to be like!
The “Twelve Days of Christmas,” which followed, was quite cute, with each number being assigned to a different section of audience, which was encouraged to jump up and yell out their section of the song as loudly as possible. We were seated in “three French hens,” and my companion amusedly noted that next year, if we came, we needed to be sure to sit where either 11 or 12 was. He also noted the timing of the song: at an excellent point to let the restless kids work off a bit of energy!
After that was an interesting version of “Carol of the Bells,” with guitarists and people whacking PVC tubes of various lengths, kind of like a bell choir. It really was nicer than it sounds here — I don’t know how to describe it well. Soon after that, though, was something called “Creation’s Love” in the program. Four people (two women, two men) dressed all in black came out and started talking in turn. They were all smiling, calm, completely normal seeming as they started talked about how beautiful and intricate the world was… and then I realized with shock — they were actually promoting “intelligent design” — in a christmas show!
That, quite frankly, was the beginning of the downhill slide for me. The next song was “My Heart Belongs to You” which wasn’t christmassy at all — it was (I believe) intended to be addressed to Jesus. The fact that it was sung by two men who frequently were turned towards each other amused me; the standing ovation confused me. I didn’t think it was that marvelous a production; like the other parts of the show, the artists were over-produced amateurs. In fact, there wasn’t much christmassy music at all after that, which was a disappointment — there was a verse from “Oh Come, O Come Emmanuel,” and then it was all modern songs which emphasized the virgin birth mythos.
Interestingly, there were four dancers downstage for “Oh Come, O Come Emmanuel.” Each woman was behind a big, backlit rectangle scrim held by other folks, and the effect was a nicely mysterious seeming silhouette of the dancer. However, at some point having just a silhouette made me start noticing other things about the dancers, such as their (relatively skintight) outfits being subtly designed to not strongly accentuate their hips and thighs. Further, none of the different steps were at all… I don’t know what word to use… voluptuous? Sensual? I don’t know if this was a lack of skill on the part of the choreographer — entirely possible, considering it was simply a nice amateur effort — or more of the tired old christian shame/fear of women’s bodies, and the ensuing need to control their sexuality.
Right after that was the minister talking about Jesus being right there in our lives, not distant at all. This became rapidly rather surreal for me — since the people playing the parts of Mary, Joseph, and Jesus (an actual infant rather than a doll) were as far away from the crowd as they could physically get: high up above the stage and as far upstage as possible; in a raised, backlit nook with a scrim hanging between us and them.
Frankly, I was starting to get grumpy at about this point. I know, I had no excuse — it was a Protestant church, after all; of course they’d be pushing their beliefs. But still, I’d really hoped for more of the lovely, awe-inspiring old carols I was raised on as a child… instead of snippets of them taken out of context, along with modern songs which felt almost like they were attempting to guilt-trip me into “accepting Jesus into your life.” There was some almost-rap about Mary tamely acquiescing to the apparently male angel coming to her and saying she was going to be impregnated regardless of her wishes — no mention of the cuckolded husband, of course. There was “How Many Kings” about how only Jesus was a king who’d give up everything to be murdered for our sins. There was “You Ought To Know” — although by that point I wasn’t listening very closely, so whatever it was I ought to know, I don’t.
Perhaps most creepy of these songs was “A Baby Changes Everything,” which had me seriously worried they’d start spouting off about the supposed evils of abortion as well. Fortunately they didn’t, but as a result of that song, I found myself viewing the obligatory “birth of Jesus” panorama going on at the same time with an extremely jaundiced eye. Mary, of course, simply sat and stared with a disturbingly blank-eyed smile down at the baby in her arms, while Joseph bopped around happily welcoming and organizing all the shepherds and Kings around Jesus and Mary. The shepherds and kings, of course, were all male, and the angels (who were mostly out in the aisles and never got close to the baby at all) were all female. I found myself wondering a bit cynically if this church felt Jesus should have no women in his life at all, aside from his powerless and personality-free mother! As I quietly noted to my companion as well, that’s a heck of a resume piece: “played Jesus.”
Afterwards I went through the lobby — which reminded of me more of a nice little hotel than a church — on my way to the bathroom. I was waiting in line as two women were chatting about what a good show it had been. I was polite enough to restrain myself, but I wanted to indignantly ask them: did they really feel the birthday of the supposed Prince of Peace was the time to spout political propaganda? Had they missed the lopsided power structures, the disturbing conflation of church and state in the slide shows, the preponderance of white faces in the auditorium dedicated to a religion that states “There is neither… male nor female, for you are all one in Christ Jesus” [Galatians 3:28]; that we should “Render to Caesar the things that are Caesar’s, and to God the things that are God’s” [Mark 12:17, Matthew 22:21, Luke 20:25]; that “It is easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle than for a rich man to enter the kingdom of God” [Mark 10:25, Matthew 19:24, Luke 18:25]?
The answers should have been self-evident to me, of course; in retrospect I’m glad I didn’t say anything. If I believe I can choose my own origin story, and that it has nothing to do with nonsense about apples, talking snakes, and my gender being the source of all evil in the world… then who am I to tell anyone else what they must believe? We are the sum of the stories we tell ourselves; their stories are simply very different than mine. I was a guest in their house of worship; if I want my stories to be told and shared, I should do it in my own house.
So I guess that’s what it comes down to, for me: in the cold and dark of winter, we gather together in our various communities, and we share with each other. Is that not the most beautiful essence of humanity? We share our warmth and happiness at still being alive, still caring and loving for each other, and we express that joy through our rituals, through our shared beliefs and faiths. That’s the true reason for the season, I think: for us to be generously, deeply, unitedly human.
Indeed, I do.
“Clog up my blog”? Oh, nosers, interesting commentary — can we do that?! :)
Re Louisiana: wow. Glad you got out when you did! That sounds truly horrific. I’ll freely admit I do not believe people like that are religious or connected to the christian deity in any way. Frankly, I consider them totalitarian despots, and they’re the reason I eschew organized religion for individual spirituality.
I suppose at heart I’m a believer in personal gnosis over clerically-organized and -managed enlightenment. I just don’t trust anyone fallibly human with my soul that way. Heck, I’m not sure I know what to do with it myself, you know?
Not uncomfortable, just didn’t want to clog your blog. ;-) My first teaching gig out of grad school was at a small, Baptist college in Pineville, Louisiana. I had serious doubts about going there, but I thought maybe, if there were a ‘higher power’ that this might be some sort of sign. The first two years were OK. The school was less restrictive than I had feared, though we did choose our shows with caution. I had to run the lights and sound for the weekly chapel service, but they tended to be more singing and stuff, and less fire and brimstone. Plus I generally ignored what was going on and just made sure the equipment was operating properly. Then there was a power shift in the Louisiana Baptist Convention, which technically ran the school, and a fundamentalist coalition rose to power. At the same time the president of the school left, and a man who very few of the faculty wanted, but who was in the pocket of the LBC was pushed through by the Board of Directors. Whereas before I had seen lots of good ‘Christian’ discourse and attitudes, suddenly an atmosphere of ‘our way or the highway’ prevailed. More liberal teachers were being let go left and right, and the fundamentalist bullsh*t was piling up. And when I say liberal I mean people who make me seem positively satanic, but who don’t necessarily toe the Fundy propaganda line. Then it became known that all faculty and staff would have to sign an agreement to teach according to the LBC mission statement, which included creationist and young Earth dogma. That meant either stand on principal and get fired, or lie and pretend to be a good little drone. Fortunately a job opened up here in Tampa, and we high-tailed it out of there. I kept in touch with folks for a while, and it got real ugly fast. Lies, law suits, and some of the most horrific, non-Christ-like behavior was being rained down on anyone who refused to cow tow to the new overlords. If this was to be a sign for me, it was how screwed up religion is, and how little it has to do with any god. That was four years ago, and I still get steamed thinking about it.
On further thought, I’m surprised re the easter story needing “defense.” Most reputable biblical scholars today understand it’s as much christian mythology as the virgin birth and the garden of eden. I’d have been sorely tempted to just get up and leave — I know I was planning to get up and leave the christmas thingie I was at, if they’d actually started ranting nonsense about abortion as evil.
Now I’m curious: if you’re not too uncomfortable with my asking, what happened in Louisiana? :)
Yuck. I’m sorry you got stuck in such an unpleasant situation too. I firmly believe most clergy just shouldn’t try to teach science… and most scientists definitely shouldn’t try to teach religion either. :)
Regarding my experience… well, as I said, I did know I was walking into a church. We live in Silicon Valley, so it was a calculated risk — that I lost. I think my companion was quite relieved, though, when he asked me if we’d be returning, and I replied with a fervent, “Oh, hell no!” :)
My wife is a Southern Baptist, and for the first few years of our marriage I went to church with her on Sundays. After a very bad experience with the Baptist college I worked for in Louisiana(long story) when we returned to Florida I made it clear, with no objections from her, that while I would not get in her way of going, I was done with it. Then, two years ago, she asked me to attend the Easter Sunday service with her. I agreed since she had not asked me to go any other time, and I figured I could endure one service. It was nice enough at first, but then the pastor began a bullet point ‘refutation’ of some imagined scientific attacks on the Easter story that amounted to little more than a creationist screed. She hasn’t asked me to go back, and I’m not volunteering. I’m sorry your nice time was tainted by such claptrap.