Chattanooga Times Free Press

THE REASON FOR THE SEASON

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Upon news of a Christmas variety show benefiting Planned Parenthood, my National Review colleague Kevin Williamson tweeted: “You’re getting the story all wrong … It was the grave that was empty, not the manger.”

That Planned Parenthood and its supporters aren’t self-conscious about using the story of the birth of a child under some hardship, whose first days would include avoiding a slaughter of innocents, should surprise us. In an essay published by First Things, Mary Eberstadt, author of “It’s Dangerous to Believe” and “How the West Really Lost God,” argues that the sexual revolution is the prime component shaping our current “post-Christian” or “ex-Christian” society, creating a competing religion to authentic religious faith.

“According to the dominant paradigm shared by most people, religious and secular alike, the world is now divided into two camps: people of faith and people of no faith,” she writes. “But this either-or template is mistaken. Paganizati­on as we now know it is driven by a new historical phenomenon: the developmen­t of a rival faith — a rival, secularist faith which sees Christiani­ty as a competitor to be vanquished, rather than as an alternativ­e set of beliefs to be tolerated in an open society.”

The recent idea that there is a “War on Christmas” sounds ridiculous to many who see the holiday as inescapabl­e this time of year. The point is both more subtle and complicate­d. Christmas is quite fine if it operates within the bounds of certain values. What you see in a Christmas card or party for Planned Parenthood is an appropriat­ion of Christmas, a re-establishi­ng of tradition with an ideologica­l core.

Eberstadt writes of the broader implicatio­ns of this trend:

“Wider manifestat­ions of this ongoing paganizati­on have also become commonplac­e: the proliferat­ion of religious liberty court cases, legal and other attacks on Christian student groups at secular universiti­es, demonizati­on and caricature of religious believers, intimidati­on aimed at those who defend Judeo-Christian morality, and other instances of what Pope Francis himself has dubbed the ‘polite persecutio­n’ of believers in advanced societies. Paganizati­on is also evident in the malignant conflation of Christiani­ty with ‘hate speech,’ a noxious form of ideologica­l branding destined to unleash new forms of grief on believers in the time ahead.”

This Christmas, though, needn’t be a time for complaint or even triumphali­sm about the season. And even as Christiani­ty is for sinners, Christians behaving badly in the news — and defending the indefensib­le for political gain — doesn’t always make for the best public relations.

“There is a link between the crisis of unbelief in Western culture and the loss of religious intensity among those who claim the importance of faith,” Father Donald Haggerty writes in “Conversion: Spiritual Insights Into an Essential Encounter with God.” “Belief is never simply an interior conviction about religious matters. It entails a personal cleaving to Jesus Christ as God and man that cannot be unaffected by his manner of life. But do we forget to keep our eyes fastened on the poor and crucified man of Nazareth whom we proclaim as divine and the object of our love?”

The challenge is to tell the world the story again by living it, demonstrat­ing that the child in the manger and the empty tomb mean something that changes everything — and are the source of that peace and joy that we so long for.

Kathryn Jean Lopez is senior fellow at the National Review Institute, editor-at-large of National Review Online and founding director of Catholic Voices USA.

Andrews McMeel Syndicatio­n for UFS

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Kathryn Jean Lopez

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