Featured Writing for
December:
Turning Christmas
Rightside-up
       I’m sure you’ve heard of the latest rage for this Christmas season.  It’s the newest thing
everyone is talking about and everyone must have.  It is an upside-down Christmas tree.  I’m not
joking!  Hammacher Schlemmer was selling these trees for almost $500 but now they are sold out.  
The ad states, “this unique 7' pre-lit fir is inverted to ensure a smaller footprint for less-spacious
areas, and allowing more room for the accumulation of presents underneath”
       This is a very popular item and many people buy them either for the shock value or to display
ornament collections and I see no “evil” connection or anti-Christmas message.  Instead I see a
perfect symbol of how the culture has turned Christmas upside-down.
       Christmas is the celebration of the birth of Jesus of Nazareth who is not only God’s only
begotten Son but God Himself in the flesh.  Giving gifts during this celebration of Christ’s birth is
supposed to remind us of God’s generosity (see John 3:16) and encourage us to imitate our
heavenly Father (see Matthew 5:48).  During this season we often place a pine tree in our home
and call it a Christmas tree.  A Christmas tree is meant to remind us of Christ.  It is a symbol of
Christ.  It is evergreen to remind us of God’s endless love and the gift of eternal life.  Its shape
points toward heaven, our true home.  Since it is a symbol of Christ we place our gifts beneath the
tree asking for Him to bless them and accept them because the gifts we give to others are the gifts
we give to Him (see Matthew 25:40).
       
      The culture, however, sees Christmas not as a time of giving gifts in the name of Jesus Christ
to those we love and those in need but a time of getting.  It is a time of material gluttony.  It is a
time to reinforce and perpetuate the “one with the most toys wins” mentality.  Most retail stores
make approximately 80% of their annual income during this season.  This should tell us that without
Christ they would be broke and we obviously don’t need all of the “must haves” the remainder of
the year.
       So how do we truly practice what we preach and “keep Christ in Christmas”?  Pope Benedict
XVI recently suggested the simple practice of families placing a Nativity Scene in a prominent place
in the home.  I have three more suggestions to not only counteract this materialistic mentality but to
also make Christ the focus of Christmas once more.
       First, if you must buy gifts make sure they promote the faith.  We almost always buy gifts for
our godchildren and when we do we make sure that they are faith oriented, learning oriented or
both.  We try to buy Catholic Christian books, videos and games.
       Second, make your own gifts.  Everyone has some natural ability or talent that they can use
to create a gift.  It can be anything from a painting to a birdhouse or baked goods to quilts.  Last
year our family filled Christmas tins that we had collected over the years with homemade biscotti,
bourbon balls, Kentucky colonels, candied nuts and chocolate covered pretzels and gave them to
friends and family.  This year we will fill collected glass peanut butter jars with different flavors of
homemade hard candy and give those away along with a few bottles of my homebrewed wheat
beer.
       Third, give a gift that has eternal value.  On Thanksgiving we always draw names on both
sides of the family to choose who we will be giving our gifts to.  From that day forward we begin
gathering spiritual gifts for the person we have chosen.  We say extra prayers like the rosary.  We
go to Eucharistic adoration and pray for their intentions.  We offer to God special sacrifices like not
drinking coffee for the entire Advent season or fasting one day a week for the other person.  
Throughout Advent we keep that special person close to our hearts in prayer and continually offer
to God all our prayers, works, joys, sorrows, sufferings, and sacrifices for their intentions.  During
this time some of us keep a journal of our acts of love and on Christmas present the person we
chose with a letter or card explaining how we continually brought them, their intentions and well-
being before God.  
       
      This has practice has become everyone’s favorite gift every Christmas.  We cannot help but
recognize the power of intercessory prayers offered for us throughout Advent.  It is a powerful,
beautiful, gift that no material object could ever replace.  Our cards and letters fit wonderfully
beneath the tree but the gifts that those cards and letters symbolize couldn’t fit under any tree even
if it were upside-down!