December 21, 2002
America’s Stake In Christmas
By Paul Craig Roberts
Christmas is a time of traditions. If you have found
time in the rush before Christmas to decorate a tree,
you are sharing in a relatively new tradition. Although
the Christmas tree has ancient roots, at the beginning
of the 20th century only 1 in 5 American families put up
a tree. It was 1920 before the Christmas tree became the
hallmark of the season.
Calvin Coolidge was the first President to light a
national Christmas tree on the White House lawn.
Gifts are another shared custom. This tradition comes
from the
wise men or three kings who brought
gifts to baby Jesus. When I was a kid, gifts were
more modest than they are now, but even then people
were complaining about the commercialization of
Christmas. We have grown accustomed to the
commercialization. Christmas sales are the backbone of
many businesses. Gift giving causes us to remember
others and to take time from our harried lives to give
them thought.
The decorations and gifts of Christmas are one of our
connections to a Christian culture that has held Western
civilization together for 2,000 years.
In our culture the
individual counts. This permits an individual person
to put his or her foot down, to take a
stand on principle, to become a
reformer and to take on
injustice.
This empowerment of the individual is unique to
Western civilization. It has made the individual a
citizen equal in rights to all other citizens, protected
from tyrannical government by the rule of law and free
speech. These achievements are the products of centuries
of struggle, but they all flow from the teaching that
God so values the individual’s soul that he sent his son
to die so we might live. By so elevating the individual,
Christianity gave him a voice.
Formerly only those with
power had a voice. But in Western civilization,
people with integrity have a voice. So do people with a
sense of justice, of honor, of duty, of fair play.
Reformers can reform, investors can invest, and
entrepreneurs can create commercial enterprises, new
products and new occupations.
The result was a land of opportunity. The United
States attracted
immigrants who shared our values and reflected them
in their own lives. Our culture was absorbed by a
diverse people who became one.
In recent decades we have begun losing sight of the
historic achievement that empowered the individual. The
religious, legal and political roots of this great
achievement are no longer reverently taught in high
schools, colleges and universities. The voices that
reach us through the millennia and connect us to our
culture are being silenced by
"political correctness." Prayer has been driven from
schools and religious symbols from public life.
Georgetown University, a
Jesuit institution, is too fearful of offending
diversity to
display the crucifix.
There is plenty of room for cultural diversity in the
world, but not within a single country. A Tower of Babel
has no culture. A person cannot be a Christian one day,
a pagan the next and a Muslim the day after. A
hodgepodge of cultural and religious values provides no
basis for law—except the raw power of the pre-Christian
past.
All Americans have a huge stake in Christianity.
Whether or not we are individually believers in Christ,
we are beneficiaries of the moral doctrine that has
curbed power and protected the weak.
Power is the horse ridden by evil. In the 20th
century the horse was ridden hard. One hundred million
people were exterminated by National Socialists in
Germany and by
Soviet and
Chinese communists simply because they were members
of a race or class that had been demonized by
intellectuals and political authority.
Power that is secularized and cut free of civilizing
traditions is not limited by moral and religious
scruples. V.I. Lenin made this clear when he defined the
meaning of his
dictatorship as "unlimited power, resting directly
on force, not limited by anything."
Christianity’s emphasis on the worth of the
individual makes such power as Lenin claimed
unthinkable. Be we religious or be we not, our
celebration of Christ’s birthday celebrates a religion
that made us masters of our souls and of our political
life on Earth.
Such a religion as this is worth holding on to even
by atheists.
Paul
Craig Roberts is the author with Lawrence M. Stratton of
The Tyranny of Good Intentions : How Prosecutors and
Bureaucrats Are Trampling the Constitution in the Name
of Justice. Click
here for Peter
Brimelow’s Forbes
Magazine interview with Roberts about the recent
epidemic of prosecutorial misconduct.
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