Christmas is a time of excitement.
In my late teens, I felt rather ashamed to be so excited about Christmas. I thought It was time to grow up, to become blasé about a season that was really meant for kids, after all.
Thankfully, I'm long past that. I realize now that the excitement of Christmas always went deeper than Santa Claus and gifts and holidays.
Excitement seems to be intrinsic to the season. The very air seems shivery and tingly. The glow of lights against the darkness seem to be announcing something, promising something.
The world honours Advent even without using the name. This is a time of anticipation, of joyful waiting, of vigil.
I've known sad and lonely Christmases-- or, at least, Christmases where I felt sad and lonely. This sense of excitement is still there. It's something outside ourselves and our particular situation in any given year.
This sense is most palpable in Advent, but I think it's always there in human life-- that it underlies the human condition itself.
Human beings seem to be oriented towards something wonderful, something beyond wonderful. I think this is at the root of all utopianism and all revolutionary ardour. It is a misdirection of a cosmic longing towards the realm of the merely political.
Tennyson wrote of: "That far-off, divine event to which the whole creation moves". I'm not sure this sense has ever been better described.
Pope Benedict wrote: "Man was created for greatness—for God himself; he was created to be
filled by God. But his heart is too small for the greatness to which it
is destined. It must be stretched…"
Perhaps C.S. Lewis had the greatest success in trying to convey this excitement, especially in his celebrated homily "The Weight of Glory". Elsewhere, Lewis evoked it thus: "The longing for that unnameable something, the desire for which pierces
us like a rapier at the smell of a bonfire, the sound of wild ducks
flying overhead, the title of, The Well at the World’s End, the opening lines of Kubla Khan, the morning cobwebs in late summer, or the noise of falling waves."
We find a refraction of this yearning in romantic love, and the desire for romantic love. Don't most people yearn to give themselves utterly to some other human being? But, even when we attain this, we realize it is beckoning us on to something even greater.
We find it in art, and patriotism, and our life's work, and in a multitude of other things. But always it seems to be pointing onwards, ever onwards.
The Old Testament is a book full of breathless excitement and extravagant imagery, especially in the readings from Isaiah that we hear at Advent. It all ends in the Nativity scene-- a climax that seems disappointing, in human terms, but that actually exceeds all that was promised by the prophets.
And here, too, the excitement is not once-for-all but expanding, deepening, promising ever more.
Thank you for this. Such truth in these words. A 'cosmic longing' it is indeed.
ReplyDeleteThank you, Dominic!
DeleteI'm not sure what to think of the popularity of Advent calendars in the commercial sector (Cadbury's,Squiggle and L'Occitane are among those marketing). Is it keeping tradition or further materialising,if your giving one as a gift you have to present it a month before Christmas!
ReplyDeleteWell, this year I'm using an Advent calendar I got in 2013, so not necessarily! In all seriousness, I don't think there's anything wrong with this-- at least it's acknowledging Advent!
DeleteApologies for mention of Smiggle(an Australian stationery company). Somehow I'd imagined it was an Asian international company at the time.
DeleteI remember Advent calendars when I was young- I think we made them at school once- but it didn't really involve getting gifts every day,just opening meaningful images to the 24th.
One retailer here sent me messages this week for a "Twelve Days of Christmas Sale". That's definitely an erroneous interpretation,I'm sure they should have known that the Twelve Days were always Christmas Day to Epiphany,not the shopping days before hand.
I was impressed with a travel column in yesterday's paper featuring Berlin. They give the impression that no shops open there on Sundays and instead market stalls take over the city. This is in an economic powerhouse nation as concerned with industrial growth as any other
That's good to hear all right! Good for Berlin, if true!
DeleteA Polish friend told me the other day that their new right wing party ("Law and Justice") have closed shops on Sundays, one Sunday a month open as a compromise.
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