IN DEFENSE OF
THE CHRISTMAS TREE
Several
years ago during the Christmas season, a religious program on
television caught my attention. The program featured a discussion on
the dangers of cults, especially to young people. I found myself
agreeing with the panelists as they warned young people about the
hazards of dabbling in the demonic. Given the many "New Age" movements,
the warning seemed timely.
During the interview, however, one participant made a statement that
shocked me. " ... and the Christmas tree is pagan too ...," he
asserted. The Christmas Tree? Pagan? Could it be that something most of
us enjoy so much might be actually pagan in origin? Despite its growing
commercialization, the Christmas tree is still associated with the
fondest memories of our early childhood. Who does not remember
approaching the tree on Christmas morning? Today people are so
captivated by it that some even put it up in November! It finds a place
in the homes of believers and unbelievers alike.
Most people are aware that the Christmas tree came to America with
immigrants from Germany, but just where did the Christmas tree
originate? Are its origins to be found in paganism, as the speaker
suggested?
The Christmas tree does not date from early Germanic times. Its origins
are to be found in a tradition that has virtually disappeared from
Christianity, the Liturgical Drama. In the Middle Ages liturgical plays
or dramas were presented during or sometimes immediately after the
services in the churches of Western Europe. The earliest of these plays
were associated with the Mysteries of Holy Week and Easter. Initially
they were dramatizations of theliturgical texts. The earliest recorded
is the Quem
quaeritis ("Whom do
you seek?") play of the Easter season. These plays later developed into
the Miracle and Morality plays. Some were associated with events in the
lives of well-known saints. The plays were presented on the porches of
large churches. Although these liturgical dramas have now virtually
disappeared, the Passion Play of Oberamergau, Germany is a recent
revival of this dramatic form.
One special mystery play was presented on Christmas Eve, the day which
also commemorated the feast of Adam and Eve in the Western Church. The
"Paradise Play" told the well-known story of Adam and Eve in the Garden
of Paradise. The central "prop" in the play was the Paradise Tree, or
Tree of Knowledge. During the play this tree was brought in laden with
apples.
The Paradise Tree became very popular with the German people. They soon
began the practice of setting up a fir tree in their homes. Originally,
the trees were decorated with bread wafers commemorating the Eucharist.
Later, these were replaced with various kinds of sweets. Our Christmas
tree is derived, not from the pagan yule tree, but from the paradise
tree adorned with apples on December 24 in honor of Adam and Eve. The
Christmas tree is completely biblical in origin.
The first Christmas tree dates from 1605 in Strasbourg. By the 1700s
the custom of the Christmas tree was widespread among the German
people. It was brought to America by early German immigrants, and it
became popular in England through the influence of Prince Albert, the
German husband of Queen Victoria.
The use of evergreens at Christmas may date from St. Boniface of the
eighth century, who dedicated the fir tree to the Holy Child in order
to replace the sacred oak tree of Odin; but the Christmas tree as we
know it today does not appear to be so ancient a custom. It appears
first in the Christian Mystery play commemorating the biblical story of
Adam and Eve.
How legitimate is it to use a fir tree in the celebration of Christmas?
From the very earliest days of the Church, Christians brought many
things of God's material creation into their life of faith and worship,
e.g., water, bread, wine, oil, candles and incense. All these things
are part of God's creation. They are part of the world that Christ came
to save. Man cannot reject the material creation without rejecting his
own humanity. In Genesis man was given dominion over the material world.
Christmas celebrates the great mystery of the Incarnation. In that
mystery God the Word became man. In order to redeem us, God became one
of us. He became part of His own creation. The Incarnation affirms the
importance of both man and the whole of creation. "For God so loved the
world ..."
A faith which would seek to divorce itself from all elements of the
material world in search for an absolutely spiritual religion overlooks
this most central mystery of Christmas, the mystery of God becoming
man, the Incarnation. "The Word became flesh and dwelt among us." Enjoy
your Christmas tree.
(This article is by Fr. Daniel Daly, and appears on page 5 of the
December 2002 issue of "The Word" magazine. The Very Rev. Daniel Daly
is pastor of St. Nicholas Orthodox Church, Grand Rapids, MI.)