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Worthy Causes
King Features Syndicate, Inc. ^ | 12-29-03 | Reese, Charley

Posted on 12/29/2003 6:25:38 AM PST by Theodore R.

Worthy Causes

I grew up in a Protestant church that believed in a literal interpretation of the King James Bible. Since there is no mention in the Bible of Dec. 25, the church refused to make Christmas a religious observance. Baldwin pianos and Hammond organs were verboten for the same reason.

In that they are probably right, since Christmas was adapted to a pagan festival. There is no written record of when the Christ child was born. Nevertheless, that didn't stop my family from observing Christmas, since, like most families with small children, Christmas was more about Santa Claus than Jesus. The fact that the preacher kept saying we don't know when Jesus was born never stopped me from enjoying beautiful Christmas music, the delights of the Christmas tree, a big dinner and, of course, the gifts.

Holidays are what we make them, and getting together with family members and exchanging gifts is a good thing, whatever the excuse. Charles Dickens' immortal story about Scrooge makes no mention of religion, but it certainly involves the conversion of an old, lonely and bitter man into a man who discovers the joy of giving. The joy of giving was certainly something supported by the preacher, and we were given two chances to experience it every Sunday — three, if you count Sunday school.

That old pagan genius, Aristotle, arrived at the same point as Dickens, but with, of course, much more elaborate analysis, classifications and categories and subcategories. But after all of that, Aristotle decided that the end goal of man was happiness. Our own Revolution was fought for the goals of life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. Happiness can be defined in different ways by different folks, but most of us can agree that happiness is the goal we all seek.

My own limited observation is that happiness is in inverse proportion to self-centeredness. I have never known self-centered people who were happy, whether they were the paranoids who imagined themselves to be so important that everyone else was talking about them, or the simple, chronic complainers. You know the type. If you say, "My, what a beautiful day," they will reply, "It's probably going to rain tomorrow."

Most of the happy people I have known are people involved in things outside of themselves — family, religion, various causes, even politics and sports. I spent a week in a small Georgia town, and as a stranger and alone — and especially as someone trained in journalism — I eavesdropped on conversations wherever I happened to be. Nearly all of these conversations were happy talk about family, friends, church and sports. On the way back to Florida, I stopped at a rest area where a group of old ladies from South Florida were getting back on their tour bus. Their conversation consisted of complaints about their arthritis, their gallbladders, etc., and so forth. I almost turned around and went back to Georgia.

Let us resolve, therefore, in this season of good cheer and in the coming new year to avoid grumps. Let us resolve to find things other than our own physical bodies with which to occupy our minds. It really is true that making someone else happy feels good and that making someone else sad feels bad. I don't hate much in this world, but one of the things I do hate is the sound of a child crying. There is a cause worth pursuing: finding ways to help children laugh instead of cry.

Another worthy cause is adding beauty to this world. In Lake Wales, Fla., there is a park free to the public that contains the Bok Tower. It was built and presented to the American public as a gift by a grateful immigrant, Edward Bok, a pioneer in magazine journalism who never forgot the admonition of his mother to add beauty to the world. Planting flowers and picking up trash are good and worthy activities.

I have strayed far from Christianity in this piece, but the main and most difficult message Jesus brought to this world was to love people. Some people are easy to love, but some are not. Learning to love those who are not easy is probably task enough for the lifetime of a Christian. It is so difficult a task that you have to wonder why some Christians spend so much time with vituperation and political invective. The last time I checked, God was not a Republican.

© 2003 by King Features Syndicate, Inc.


TOPICS: Culture/Society
KEYWORDS: aristotle; boktower; charley; charleyreese; christ; christmas; dickens; edwardbok; fl; ga; generosity; happiness; lakewales; reese; santaclaus; scooge; selfcenteredness

1 posted on 12/29/2003 6:25:38 AM PST by Theodore R.
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To: Theodore R.
"but the main and most difficult message Jesus brought to this world was to love people"

While this is true, this statement is almost universally misunderstood today. Jesus also said that he came to divide (Luke 12:51). He did not come to bring peace or to unite, or to celebrate diversity, or to excuse alternative lifestyles.

He came to live a flawless and sinless life, and die and rise again for sinners like me, deserving of hell, but spared from it by God's grace and nothing else.

Accordingly, our responsibility is to preach the truth. In love, yes, at all times. But I think statements like "Jesus just wants us to love one another" in an era of cheap sentimentality, tolerance [a form of indifference, incidentally] and moral relativism, statements like that should be used sparingly and only with great care.

In Brothers Karamaszov, Dostoyevsky has a great line: "love in action is a harsh and dreadful thing compared to love in dreams". That is how I think of the love of Christ. It's not as pleasant as we like to think.

2 posted on 12/29/2003 6:36:15 AM PST by ConservativeDude
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To: Theodore R.
The last time I checked, God was not a Republican.

Is this intended to imply that God would be comfortable as a Dimocrat?

I can just see Clinton and God sitting around, puffing on cigars and talking about their own greatness...

3 posted on 12/29/2003 6:37:52 AM PST by Onelifetogive
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To: Onelifetogive
I can just see Clinton and God sitting around, puffing on cigars and talking about their own greatness...

I think 'toon would be hanging with the other guy...

4 posted on 12/29/2003 6:42:03 AM PST by Tijeras_Slim (Death before dhimmi.)
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To: ConservativeDude
"but the main and most difficult message Jesus brought to this world was to love people"

Reese is no theologian. I would imagine that he got the preceding line from the part of Scripture where it speaks of a "man laying down his life for his friends."
5 posted on 12/29/2003 6:43:46 AM PST by Theodore R. (When will they ever learn?)
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To: Theodore R.
Christmas is a time when many people turn their thoughts toward Jesus and celebrate his birth. We don't know when Jesus was born but we know that he was born and find that reason to celebrate. The fact that many people find this a time of giving and search out people in need to help is probably the best way of all to celebrate the birth of one who came to do the same.
6 posted on 12/29/2003 6:49:24 AM PST by helen crump
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To: Tijeras_Slim
I think 'toon would be hanging with the other guy...

Come to think of it...I've never seen the 'toon and "the other guy" together...Are we sure they are not one-in-the-same???

Oh...wait...I have seen them together. Only the "other guy" is not necessarily a "guy."

7 posted on 12/29/2003 6:59:22 AM PST by Onelifetogive
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To: Theodore R.
" The last time I checked, God was not a Republican." ...And the last time I checked, Charley Reese was NOT an officlal spokesman for G_d.
8 posted on 12/29/2003 8:05:38 AM PST by MainFrame65
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To: Theodore R.
When is the last time you checked - prior to 1972 I assume?
9 posted on 12/29/2003 8:10:02 AM PST by reed_inthe_wind (That Hillary really knows how to internationalize my MOJO.)
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To: Theodore R.
I grew up in a Protestant church that believed in a literal interpretation of the King James Bible. Since there is no mention in the Bible of Dec. 25, the church refused to make Christmas a religious observance. Baldwin pianos and Hammond organs were verboten for the same reason.

I grew up in a church like this. My family did not celebrate Christmas at all. When I grew up, I learned that the preacher did, in secret. He had a Christmas tree in a back bedroom, so it would not be visible from the street.

10 posted on 12/29/2003 8:12:57 AM PST by knuthom
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