Wednesday, December 1, 2010

All is Calm?

"Silent night, holy night, all is calm..." Really? Calm? Have you ever seen a woman in labour? And I can't help but think that adding a bunch of stinky shepherds to the mix is going to help anything. "How silently, how silently the wondrous gift is giv'n..." Wondrous, yes. Silent, not likely!

"It came upon the midnight clear..." Well, I suppose it could have; it just doesn't say. All Matthew has to say is "Now after Jesus was born in Bethlehem..." (Mt. 2:1) and Luke simply states that "while they were there, the time came for her to give birth" (Lk. 2:6). Yes, the angels appeared to the shepherds at night (Lk. 2:8) but that's the closest time-frame we've got... I guess, in all fairness, the song is talking mostly about the shepherds and the angels... but then what's the point of the song? If it's not about Jesus, why bother singing it?

It doesn't take much to find some Carols that have inaccuracies, poor theology, or just silly statements. So should we scrap them?

Just this morning I ran across this quote which attempts to answer that question:

Should we get rid of Christmas Carols?
Only with great care. For thousands, carols will be their only link with a church. At the same time, sentimentality is perhaps the single most dangerous feature of our Church and culture—and the sentimental air is never thicker than at Christmas. The Incarnation is messy, dirty, and resonates with the crucifixion. We need a new wave of carol writing that can gradually swill out the nonsense and catch the piercing, joy-through-pain refrains of the New Testament.” - Jeremy Begbie, professor of theology, Duke Divinity School

What do you make of that?
What carols are worth keeping?
Which carols are worth ditching?
Do you know of any new Christmas/Advent songs that are worth singing?

3 comments:

officehourthoughts said...

Away in a Manger: "No crying he made." hmmm... I wish my baby wouldn't cry :D

Timothy Braun said...

So true, so true...

LISA Sawatzky said...

Oh, I love Christmas songs! But I mostly just like the season and advent and the story of the birth of Jesus and all sorts of things. I really, REALLY wish someone would come up with new, theologically correct, relevant Christmas songs. Then I could even enjoy the words and not just the cool beat and added bells that we don't normally get the rest of the year.