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Merry Christmas

by Nicholas Barnard on December 25th, 2003

As this holiday season has approached, I’ve been debating and attempting to understand the meanings and core of this holiday. It is no longer the fun filled morning that it was when I was a little youngin in Binghamton, New York.

I’ve been discouraged by the commercialism that proliferates this holiday, and people’s willingness to be persuaded into showing their emotions by buying.

As someone who could no longer honestly can profess to be a Christian this search has taken on new meaning and urgency. I am inspired by the fact that many religions and cultures hold a celebration of lights during the winter months, and value them as a time to come together and celebrate the bonds we’ve formed as family and friends. While we take this one day to stop and acknowledge the bonds that make us family, friends and human beings, it should only be a reminder of those precious bonds and the value that they are to us in our lives. Nothing exists within a vacuum, and neither can we humans exist without the connections of family and friends. They are what makes us human and what makes life the precious thing that it is.

In that tradition I bring you little snippet about the Jewish celebration of Hanukkah.

With best wishes for a great year!

Nick


Holidays for All Ages: The Hanukkah Story

The Rev. W.U. Saunders

The Christian Festival of Christmas nearly coincides with the Jewish Festival of Hanukkah. Hanukkah is a Festival of Lights. It is the Jewish celebration of religious freedom. In 165 B.C., Judah the Maccabee overcame the Greco-Syrian armies under the leadership of Antiochus IV, who were occupying Palestine. One of the Maccabees’ first acts after reconquering Palestine was to rededicate the Temple, particularly the new altar. Their feast of dedication lasted eight days. On the first day, only one candle was lit; on the second, two. On the eighth day, eight candles were lit.

This morning we shall light all eight, and, as in the Jewish custom, we light each candle with a special thought.

  1. The first we light in memory of the dedication and the courage of the Maccabees who gave their lives for freedom.
  2. The second we light conscious of the precious gift of family.
  3. The third we light to rededicate ourselves to the study of our traditions, knowing that learning and understanding secures our freedom.
  4. The fourth we light remembering that only through hope is our life illumined and made creative.
  5. The fifth we light with the pledge to share our wealth with those in this world who are starving, who are oppressed, who are sick, who are afflicted by prejudice.
  6. The sixth we light in rededication to the ancient task of securing religious freedom in our world.
  7. The seventh we light in the cause of respect for our fellow human beings in all corners of the globe, in the cause of brotherhood and sisterhood.
  8. The eighth we light in rededication to the search for meaning and the quest for a full life. We trust that throughout the coming year, we may constantly strive for the ideals of freedom, charity, family, study, hope, and fellowship.

Taken from a selection from Celebrating Christmas, edited by Carl Seaburg.

From REACH 1996 – http://www.uua.org/re/reach/families/holiday.html

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