A very good reading and reminder to all of us.

Let us celebrate Christmas not equated with the nice and expensive gifts and
the profits that we get from exploitation of  lowly workers and deceitful
acts to lure wealth but with what we can share, give to the needy and the
powerless most of all the love and forgiveness that we have towards our
brethren.

HAVE A BLESSED AND MEANINGFUL CHRISTMAS TO ALL.

Dick Orense




---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: leng <[email protected]>
Date: Fri, Dec 26, 2008 at 5:25 AM
Subject: Christmas Commercialism
To: [email protected]


  http://perryscope.org/?p=728 JESUS CHRIST AND CHRISTMAS
COMMERCIALISM<http://perryscope.org/?p=728>

Published by Perry <http://perryscope.org/?author=1> at 12:11 p under
Opinion <http://perryscope.org/?cat=6>


<http://perryscope.org/?cat=6>

*JESUS CHRIST AND CHRISTMAS COMMERCIALISM
by Cheryl L. Daytec
on Thursday, December 25, 2008*

"Jesus is the reason for the Christmas season," says a message circulating
in cyberspace.

December 25 is the presumed birthday of Jesus Christ. This is debatable
because when he  was born, shepherds were out watching their flocks at
night. In those days, flock-watching in the fields was possible from spring
to autumn. During winter, the sheep were sheltered  in the shepherds' homes.
Israel's temperature can drop to   really low levels   in winter. It must
have been lower in the old days when global warming was unimaginable. The
biting cold posed an insurmountable  obstacle to shepherds attending to
their flocks at night.

Moreover, when  Jesus'  birth  was drawing nigh, Augustus Caesar ordered a
census in the Roman Empire and everyone was mandated  to be counted. In
Jesus' place and time, you did not wait for census officers to knock on your
door.  You had to register in the  town of your lineage. Which was why the
young couple, Joseph and the very pregnant Mary,  hit the road to
Bethlehem, the town of King David who was Joseph's  ancestor.  An important
undertaking like a census could not have been scheduled in winter when the
weather was harsh for travel.

Historians say that December 25 was deliberately chosen as it was also the
day Pagans honored the sun god Mithras. The celebrations were synchronized
to accelerate  the acquiescence  by  pagans  to Christianity when it was
declared as  the Roman Empire's official religion. In other words, choosing
December 25 was a calculated political move.

That aside, it remains that Christmas has always been traditionally  about
Jesus Christ. And yet, it is not about him  at all. The crass commercialism
characterizing the season goes against everything he  advocated.

Jesus  is one of the leading figures in human history. Christians believe
that he came as God. There are not a few skeptics who doubt this.  But no
one can deny that he came as a man. In a world of misery and greed such as
the one we have today, it is worth looking into his  life, at least as  a
man. He had more than a  mouthful to say against greed and oppression.

He lived a life of purpose. "I came,"  he said, "that they might have life,
and that they might have it abundantly." By they, he was referring to the
poor and the oppressed. To propagate his ideology, he chose members of the
working class  as assistants.  He and his disciples walked the  streets and
went to all corners their sandaled feet could take them to preach about
loving one's neighbors as loving oneself and doing unto others what one
wanted done unto oneself.  He exhorted everyone to feed the hungry, clothe
the naked, help the sick, share  resources. He put the welfare of others
above his personal comfort. The issues of the poor and the powerless  found
a champion in him.

A recurring theme in his speeches was socialism or something akin to it. He
said that one cannot serve both  God and wealth. Once, he delivered a sermon
and, at midday,  commanded that the loaves and fishes in a boy's lunch
basket be shared by everyone. At another time,  a rich man  asked him what
he needed to do to have eternal life. Jesus recited the Ten Commandments.
The young man said, "I have done all of that. What do I need to do further?"
Jesus told him, "Sell your possessions, give to the poor."  The man of
immense wealth left with a heavy heart for he could not do as Jesus asked.
"It is easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle than for a rich
man to enter  heaven," Jesus remarked sadly.

The booty capitalists of our days are worse than the rich man Jesus
encountered.  Not only do they refuse to share their wealth (unless sharing
means tax deductions for them), they also exploit the  working class'
labor   to expand their capital. They have resorted to all schemes
imaginable to steal the actual pecuniary  cost of the proletariat's  sweat.
Mining companies are raking in billions of pesos  from the muckers' labor.
Everyday, the workers risk their lives as they descend into the bowels of
the earth to look for gold. And the mining companies boast, "We pay the
miners more than the minimum wage." Hah! The minimum wage  is not
necessarily decent wage. What is legal is not necessarily moral. I bet my
life that the Philippine minimum wage law would  not impress Jesus
especially as it was crafted by an institution protective of  booty
capitalism's interest.

Jesus disdained profiteers.  When he went to a temple, there were so many
merchants - money changers and people selling doves.  In those days, doves
were sacrificed in the temple by the poor who could not afford sheep and
goats. Enraged, Jesus  turned the tables upside down, cracked a whip he made
and drove out the merchants while denouncing them for converting the temple
into a den of thieves. The merchants must have been reaping more profit than
what reason permitted. Why else did the reasonable Jesus call them thieves?

The profiteering in those days is nothing compared to today's.  For
instance, the oil companies keep raising prices to intolerable levels using
the fluctuation in the world market as excuse. Then they reduce the price
but do not go back to the previous level. And consumers feel grateful for
the reduction,  not realizing they had been had.

The Philippine landlords  just sit around waiting for profit from the
peasants' harvests. The latter  have become prisoners of the earth owned by
the former. In spite of its deficiencies, the Comprehensive Agrarian Reform
Program (CARP) could have helped  break, by a little stretch,  the chains of
the peasants' bondage were it not for  lackadaisical if not insincere
implementation. Worse,  it  was to end this month. Farmers, with bishops and
priests,  went  on hunger strike  to pressure Congress to extend the CARP
and reform  the Comprehensive Agrarian Reform Law. But the "Honorables"
were  bent on ignoring the call, giving a token extension of only six
months.  Many of them are landowners themselves who are too greedy to  even
consider parting with a square meter of their hundreds of hectares of land.
They are more interested in concocting ways to extend the Arroyo Regime
which fiercely protects their  interests.  This regime does not serve the
masses made up of workers and peasants. It serves  the profiteering
oligarchy and    their wealth.

Christmas is no longer an occasion to celebrate the life of a man who turned
the tables of profiteers upside down. It is the Feast of  Capitalism as we
are   pressured to do a lot of spending, even beyond our means. The real
winners of the season are the booty capitalists who, through multimillion
advertisements make us feel guilty when we do not hit their malls to shop
until we drop.  Christmas insults Jesus' teachings.

Che Guevara, a man born to  privilege, chose to spend his life promoting
socialism and dismantling structures of capitalism. The profiteers hated
him. After his death, they  raked in enormous revenues  selling his image.

Like Che Guevara,  Jesus Christ, the man who disdained  flagrant
commercialism,  is its biggest victim on his birthday.
–
Cheryl L. Daytec
Associate Professor
St. Louis University
http://smorgasbordandothers.blogspot.com
http://beautybeyondbeauty.blogspot.com

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