The war on Christmas: Is Rudolph really the worst?
What's the root word of "Christmas?"
Can you whisper it to yourself?
Now that you've said it, do you know why we celebrate this holiday?
Webster's Dictionary says it's the "festival commemorating the birth of...(wait for it)
...Christ."
Because Christ is the root word of Christmas.
Can you imagine commemorating your father's birth, with a huge birthday bash where some people who show up refuse to even acknowledge it's your dad's birthday...and yet they still walk away with loads of gifts?
That'd be pretty lame. Party poopers!
But we have plenty folks like that in America today, those who not only refuse to acknowledge Christmas is the day we celebrate Christ's birth, but some who now even twist our favorite stories that don't even include the name of Christ.
Recently, the Huffington Post ran an anti-Rudolph The Red-Nosed Reindeer video campaign titled, "Just a Reminder: Everyone in Rudolph The Red-Nosed Reindeer was the worst."
This sounds like something our teenage daughters would say about their brothers. "You're the worst!" Or what you say when there's only one Christmas cookie left—now that is truly the worst.
But, according to the Huffpo video, everyone in Rudolph's story is the worst, and Rudolph is now a marginalized reindeer because:
Santa was a racist, homophobic prick (still scratching our heads on that one)
His dad was verbally abusive
The school coach encouraged bullying
Donnor was a chauvinist
Clarice's dad was a bigot
The lead elf was an #$$hole
And the great lesson to be learned from the HuffPo version of Rudolph is that "deviation from the norm will be punished unless it is exploitable."
Okay. Got it.
The major problem here is that HuffPo refused to acknowledge their part in the whole story—the Abominable Snowman! Hahaha
This Bumble, though loud, intimidating, and very angry, was really nothing to fear—because the only thing truly bothering him was a simple toothache. And thanks to Yukon Cornelius, the ol' Bumble got fixed right up and became part of the solution instead of part of the problem. (We imagine at some point this could be HuffPo's story too)
It's true Santa was rude, Donnor was mean, the coach was a bully, Clarice's dad was an idiot, and the lead elf was a jerk—but it's also true that Rudolph, when asked to guide Santa's sleigh, rose above all the hate and served with a joyful heart.
He didn't shout Santa down, hold a protest, take a knee, or raise a hoof—he simply stepped up and helped out...when he was needed the most.
And that's just it. The story of Rudolph is the essence of Christmas. It's the story of someone willing to overlook the painful past and press on toward a peaceful future. It's about a mess that became a masterpiece.
That is exactly what Christ did through His birth for all of us. He stepped into the messiness of our world and brought peace on earth, good will toward men.
Read more about Rudolph on The Christian Post.