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Catholic Gift Giving A Catholic Approach to
Holiday Gift-Giving
by Marcellino D'Ambrosio
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Catholic Gift Giving A Catholic Approach to
Holiday Gift-Giving
by Marcellino D'Ambrosio
“Actions speak louder than words.” “One picture is worth a thousand
words.” “Talk is cheap.” We have lots of different sayings that generally
express the same thing–words alone are inadequate to express lots of
things, especially personal messages like “I love you.”
So human beings in every culture have developed rituals to express the
value they place on people and special events. Take, for example, Turkey
on the dining room table at Thanksgiving or presents under the tree at
Christmas. And then there are birthdays. Even if all party-goers are tone
deaf on the Atkins diet, we must sing the silly song and blow out the
candles on that carb-laden cake!
The problem with human beings is that we have a stubborn tendency to allow
rituals to become merely mechanical, forgetting their real meaning (one of
the effects of original sin). The puritanical response to this is to
abolish the offending feast. In the originally Puritan state of
Massachusetts, for example, Christmas was not an official holiday until
the 1890's! And to this day, Jehovah’s Witnesses forbid birthday
celebrations.
The Catholic approach has always been different. We accept the
celebrations with their occasional excesses and their traditional
trappings (even those of pagan origins such as the Christmas tree). The
goal is to revive the original meaning of the rituals or invest them with
a new, Christian meaning. In the pagan Roman world of the fourth century
AD, everyone felt relief as the days once again started getting longer
following the depressing darkness of the winter solstice. So they observed
Dec 25 as “the birthday of the unconquerable Sun.” “What a great time to
celebrate the birthday of the truly unconquerable Son!” thought the early
Christians. So they successfully co-opted the day. Christmas was born.
So what do we do with America’s gift-giving extravaganza at Christmas?
It’s Jesus’ birthday, but the presents under the tree are the real focus,
especially for the kids. The first is unwrapped and then another and
another, faster and faster. It resembles a school of sharks going into a
feeding frenzy. Almost instantly the thrill is gone and the room is filled
with crumpled wrapping paper (but it took so long to wrap them all!).
Rather than following the Grinch and eliminating the gifts, we set rules
to make them more meaningful. First, we try to select at least some gifts
or stocking-stuffers that will help people develop their relationship with
Jesus: books, CD’s, videos, rosaries, etc. Then, on Christmas morning,
before we go to the tree, we gather at the manger, sing a carol, read a
brief scripture, and thank God for Jesus, the greatest gift of all. Then
we open one gift at a time, with everyone paying attention to what others
get (this teaches patience!). And we don’t open everything on the 25th.
Rather, we leave some presents wrapped and under the tree for the other 11
days of Christmas (another lesson in patience!). We get more prayers,
readings and carols around the manger this way.
On birthdays, yes, we do the cake and candles and song and gifts. But we
usually forego the noisy, expensive affairs at Chuck E. Cheese and Game
Works in favor of home celebrations with just family and maybe a few
friends. And we add a few things. First, at the birthday dinner, we go
around the table and everyone shares something they particularly
appreciate about the birthday boy or girl. Next, we make it a point to
celebrate the baptismal birthday which usually follows a month or so
later. We don’t do gifts again but sometimes have a cake, or at least
dessert (can’t have a celebration without dessert!). At the end of the
meal, we light the baptismal candle, pull out some holy water, and
baptismal vows are renewed by all with Dad asking “Do you believe in . .
.” and all answering with a resounding “I do.” Incidentally, the Church
thinks so highly of this custom that it recommends it in the Handbook of
Indulgences and offers a plenary indulgence to those who do it.
So we have three options on gift-giving: a) just acquiesce to the
society’s way: b) say “bah-humbug!” with Scrooge and the Puritans; or c)
take the traditional Catholic approach and press the custom into the
service of the Gospel. I say Catholics have more fun.
This article originally
appeared in the January 2004 syndicated column “Faith Alive” from the
Catholic New Service and is reproduced here by permission of the author.
For additional articles by Dr, Marcellino D'Ambrosio visit his website at
www.crossroadsinitiative.com
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