Monday, 24 December 2012

… and “we wish you a happy Christmas"


Three years ago I made a musical discovery.  I was introduced to Sufjan Stevens, a singer-songwriter from Detroit, Michigan, who is described as mixing ‘autobiography, religious fantasy, and regional history to create folk songs of grand proportions.’  Since 2001, Sufjan has recorded an annual EP of Christmas songs – although not the sort that you will hear on the radio.  Some are typically idiosyncratic versions of traditional carols; others are original works, often having a dig at the commercialization of Christmas with all its false hope and ideals.  One writer notes:

Armed with a Reader’s Digest Christmas Songbook (and a mug of hot cider) Sufjan & friends concocted a musical fruit cake year after year… What he discovered, for better or for worse, was a fascinating canon of Yuletide hits, some emotionally rewarding, some painfully cliché… What does it all add up to? A headache, a hangover, and sentimental ruminations of Baby Jesus, the Virgin Mary, and all those animals in the manger (http://music.sufjan.com/album/silver-gold).

Sufjan Steven’s music is interesting because it brings together the sentimental and the critical, the sacred and the profane, and the Holy and the human.  Yet, although it perhaps takes a patient ear to hear it, I wonder whether it communicates something of the challenge of the biblical Christmas story as it resounds through the ages and the reality of life in the 21st century.  In the Gospels we are bedazzled by the appearance of angels, the movement of the Holy Spirit, and the birth of Jesus, but at other times we read of the brutal awkwardness of the human situation – political oppression, tough government edicts and murderous power games. 

As 2012 draws to a close we are only too aware of human brutality and suffering.  Into this mix the Saviour of the world was born, our Lord Jesus Christ, offering us hope and a promise beyond the confusion and pain; grace sufficient for today and for all eternity.  We are bedazzled by the ‘Light of the World’.

Wishing you a Merry Christmas and Happy New Year.