The "Real" Christmas: Three Levels of Celebration
Posted by Dave Miller in Bible & Theology, News & Culture
Celebration of Christmas at the Miller house has begun this year. I may not have bought the first present (there’s still a week left – I am convictionally opposed to shopping before December 23) but we bought our tree and I have the lights on the tree. We’ve been so busy we haven’t hung the ornaments yet, but the tree is up and the lights are on, so Christmas has officially begun. I have watched one of the three obligatory Christmas movies, so there are still two left. Netflix had “A Christmas Carol” (the George C. Scott version – the only one that needs be watched) and we enjoyed it together. We are going to lament the troubles of George Bailey in the next few days, then will take some time during the TBS marathon to wish Ralphie gets his Red Ryder Rifle and does not shoot his eye out.
I love Christmas. I have to admit that since our three sons are out of the home and our daughter is nearing high school graduation, the celebration has shifted dramatically. Toys become more expensive. Planning family activities becomes more of a challenge. But I still love the Christmas season and all that goes into it.
But the celebration of Christmas in America has taken such a strange turn. I remember my grandmother speaking wistfully of the Christmas of her youth, when her only gifts were a peppermint stick and perhaps a hand-carved wooden toy her father made. She remembered the celebration of Christmas as a time of wonder and joy – without Black Friday, credit cards or online bargains.
Things have changed. Our culture has disregarded the birth of Christ and elevated the jolly old guy in the red suit to the status of a god. We have turned Christmas from the worship of the baby in the manger to the worship of Mammon, god of money. We spend thousands of dollars in homage to the power of materialism and greed. Christmas is a bacchanalia divorced from the meaning it once had.
Even our efforts to “keep Christ in Christmas” have become odd at best. A large Southern Baptist Church has sponsored the “Grinch Alert” to badger people into saying the words “Merry Christmas” whether they mean them or not. At that site, one person expressed how offended he was that Delta Airlines wished him “Happy Holidays.” Has our celebration of Christmas really been reduced to being offended when someone wishes us well but does not use the proper words to do so?
Even Christians often do not realize the theological roots of the celebration of Christmas. I am afraid that many, even in the church, have failed to understand the true meaning of Christmas and have not celebrated it in a way that honors God. We need to explore the theological underpinnings of Christmas – not just what was going on in Bethlehem, but what was going on in the mind and heart of God. When we understand that, we will see more clearly how to celebrate the birth of Christ.
Three Levels of Christmas
I love Christmas trees. It is my favorite part of the secular celebration of Christmas. When we were young and poor, we still overspent on a good Christmas tree every year. We get a Douglas or Frasier Fir tree every year (artificial trees are for artificial people – I don’t know why people get offended when I say that). Then, I become Clark Griswold, adding lights to the tree until it becomes a fire hazard. When power goes out in a four block radius, we hang some ornaments and we are ready to go!
A Christmas tree serves as a great illustration of the three levels of the celebration of Christmas. Millions never get beyond level 1. Many Christians get stuck at level 2. We need to move on to Level 3 and understand “the real meaning of Christmas.”
Level 1: The Ornament Level
The ornaments hang on the outside of the tree. They give it pizzazz. They are flashy and fun and beautiful. Sometimes they are garish and crass, as well. Many Americans never get beyond the Ornament Level in their celebration of Christmas. The ornament level involves trees and presents and eggnog and mistletoe – the fun, light side of Christmas. The Jolly Old Guy in the red suit is an ornament, as are Rudolph and Dasher and Dancer and Prancer and…well, you get the picture.
Christians are divided over how much of the Ornament Level of Christmas that we should celebrate. I enjoy the celebration of Christmas, but some Christians are offended by the secular side of things. Follow your own conscience on this one. What we need to realize is that while ornaments are fun, they are not all there is to the celebration of Christmas. We need to go deeper than simply enjoying the ornaments and decorations of Christmas.
Ornaments and lights do nothing if they are kept in the box. You need to have something to decorate, something to hang the ornaments on. You need a Christmas tree to display the ornaments.
Level 2: The Tree Level
Christmas is not just about myths and legends. It is a real story about the real birth of a real baby. The Tree Level is the structure on which the celebration hangs; the story of the birth of our Savior Jesus Christ, the historical foundation of the celebration of Christmas. Whatever kind of ornaments you like and however much of the Ornament Level you celebrate, it is crucial that we hang the ornaments on the tree.
We need to be careful to focus on Joseph and Mary and the Baby (the biblical story, not the multitudinous myths that surround that story), the shepherds and angels and wise men. They remind us that God sent His Son into this sin-kissed world to demonstrate His love. It is a powerful story.
I love the story of Ebenezer Scrooge, of George Bailey, or of little Ralphie Parker and his Red Ryder air rifle. But there is no story more powerful than the story of Jesus Christ invading this world of darkness to shine the light of God’s love and we need to keep this story front and center during our celebration. It is the tree which supports the entire celebration of Christmas.
The problem is that some people believe that taking a little time to look at a Nativity scene or remembering the details of the Christmas story is the “real Christmas.” It is not. For Christmas to be real, it must go deeper.
You see, there is a problem with my tree. Right now it is fragrant and fresh. But in a couple of weeks there will come a day I call “The Day of Great Evil.” My wife (I refuse to participate in such wickedness) takes the lights off the tree, puts the ornaments in the boxes and then tells me its time to carry the tree out to the Christmas tree graveyard in a stand of pines, joining the rotting remains of the Trees of Christmas Past
The problem is that my tree has been severed from its roots. It only lasts a season because it has been cut off from the source of life. That is what happens when all we focus on is a cute little baby in a romanticized manger two millennia ago.
There has to be more than that. Good news – there is!
Level 3: The Root Level
Why can’t the celebration of Christmas last into January and February? Because we have cut it from its roots. We need to explore the roots of Christmas and reattach the celebration of the season with the deep truths of God’s sovereign purposes.
The Root Level of Christmas is the theological truth and purposes behind what happened in Bethlehem. At this level, we are not so concerned with what Joseph or Mary is doing, but what God is doing. The roots of Christmas are in Heaven, not in Bethlehem or Nazareth. When we understand the activity of God, the meaning of Christmas comes alive and we come to understand how to celebrate it rightly.
As we celebrate Christmas, we need to reattach it to its roots – the gracious activity of God in this world. What are those roots? I don’t have time to explore them, but let me mention a few I think are significant.
Christmas is WAR! It was D-day in the divine plan of redemption, as God came to confront sinful humanity, provide atonement for our sins and justification for sinners. What God planned from eternity was put into effect on Christmas. You must see the cradle in the shadow of the Cross.- Christmas is about forgiveness. God decided not to leave us in the darkness of our sins, but to shine the light of glory on us in Jesus Christ. Not only are we forgiven, but we must forgive. Want to celebrate Christmas? Forgive someone who has hurt, offended, abused or betrayed you!
- Christmas is about God’s mission. I love that we promote the Lottie Moon offering at Christmas. Jesus came on a mission. We are called to participate in God’s mission of redemption in this world – through Jesus Christ and the blood shed on the Cross.
There is so much more. But the challenge is to make sure that our celebration is not limited to the shallow engagement in “The War on Christmas” or a simple focus on the Nativity story. These have a place and are needed. But we must make sure that our celebration of Christmas is rooted in the activity of God.
When we do, the celebration never ends.



As we say in our Church, ‘Jesus is the Reason for the Season.’
http://video.search.yahoo.com/video/play?p=linus%20christmas%20recital%20peanuts%20youtube&tnr=21&vid=267593057405&l=78&turl=http%3A%2F%2Fts2.mm.bing.net%2Fvideos%2F
Here is a lighthearted approach to the nativity.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GkHNNPM7pJA
We are teaching our children about the birth of Christ a little each day as we move closer to Christmas. That way the true focus is always on their mind up to Christmas Eve. Then we go to sleep with hopes there is continued meditation of the incarnation of a Savior. I know that is tough for the kids to do because of their excitement. I would almost get sick on Christmas eve, as a child, from the anticipation of Christmas morning. Now days, I place my head on the pillow and turn on my Bible CD with Matthew 1:1 qued up and listen to the geneologies and never make it to the birth before I am waking up Christmas morning. I quickly say, Happy Birthday Jesus as I begin my short prayer and then move toward the room full of presents.
I like what you said and the way you said it. Thanks for the focus we so desparately need. Have a very Merry Christmas, Dave.
I would respectfully submit the Muppet version of A Christmas Carol. I’ve greatly enjoyed Michael Caine as Scrooge, and he plays well with puppets…
Doug…Doug…Doug…