--Jesus
Rumor has it that Santa has become a Calvinist! Realizing the gravity of 'inherent depravity' he's put us ALL on the 'naughty list!'
I am a fan of Tim Allen's "Santa" in The Santa Clause movies. There are several scenes when, upon returning to his "normal" self, he still has little children recognizing "Santa" and lining up to let him know they've been good!Most movies about the Jolly Old Elf have much to do with 'belief' and the point when a person abandons child-like faith in the goodness of a benevolent, gift-giving Being who tracks and encourages good behavior.
Rumor has it that Santa has become a Calvinist! Realizing the gravity of 'inherent depravity' he's put us ALL on the 'naughty list!'
Oh my!
I am a fan of Tim Allen's "Santa" in The Santa Clause movies. There are several scenes when, upon returning to his "normal" self, he still has little children recognizing "Santa" and lining up to let him know they've been good!Most movies about the Jolly Old Elf have much to do with 'belief' and the point when a person abandons child-like faith in the goodness of a benevolent, gift-giving Being who tracks and encourages good behavior.
The Santa Clause does a marvelous job of portraying the joy of restored faith!
Icon or Idol
Interestingly, I recall my own moment when, in the same year, about the age of eight, I learned the painful "truth" about both Santa and the Easter Bunny!
Then as a mature and serious parent I thought it my duty to speak the "truth" about Santa to my children, "protecting" them from a similar painful fate, hoping to avoid the possibility that they, when they got older, might feel violated by my lack of candor when they finally realize "Santa" is not real!
(To demonstrate how effective we were in conveying the "truth" about Santa, son Stevie, at the manly age of three, squashed the giddy excitement of a little girl in a doctor's office waiting room. As she excitedly chattered about the things Santa was going to bring her, he stoically reprimanded her declaring "Santa is not real!" Shocked, she ran crying into an angry mother's lap! Painful...)
Having grown up a practicing Protestant, I really have little understanding of "Icons" in religious symbolism. But I recently read an interesting insight by writer Rod Dreher, a former Methodist turned Catholic turned Eastern Orthodox, in his book "How Dante Can Save Your Life":
Jesus constantly repudiated the religious leaders of his day for their failure to recognize the truth of God in the things he said and did! And rather than offer himself up as some kind of imperfect icon hoping to nudge them toward truth, he made it perfectly clear that unless they recognized His divine God-ness, the very God they purported to represent would be unrecognizable to them!
So have fun with Santa, the Easter Bunny, Tooth Fairy, et al insofar as they give us an iconic view of the nature and character of God, and teach us and our children how to recognize Jesus in His grace and goodness!
Icon or Idol
Interestingly, I recall my own moment when, in the same year, about the age of eight, I learned the painful "truth" about both Santa and the Easter Bunny!
Then as a mature and serious parent I thought it my duty to speak the "truth" about Santa to my children, "protecting" them from a similar painful fate, hoping to avoid the possibility that they, when they got older, might feel violated by my lack of candor when they finally realize "Santa" is not real!
(To demonstrate how effective we were in conveying the "truth" about Santa, son Stevie, at the manly age of three, squashed the giddy excitement of a little girl in a doctor's office waiting room. As she excitedly chattered about the things Santa was going to bring her, he stoically reprimanded her declaring "Santa is not real!" Shocked, she ran crying into an angry mother's lap! Painful...)
Having grown up a practicing Protestant, I really have little understanding of "Icons" in religious symbolism. But I recently read an interesting insight by writer Rod Dreher, a former Methodist turned Catholic turned Eastern Orthodox, in his book "How Dante Can Save Your Life":
"An icon is an image for contemplating a reality that transcends the specific image; the image leads the mind, through the senses, to direct communion with the intelligibles...icons, damaged though they may be, [are vehicles] through which the light of God [shines]. They [are] not ends, but imperfect means to the perfect end: God...
[we ought to] judge all things by the degree to which the light of God shines through them, and to which they serve as a sign pointing toward God...The pilgrim’s movement toward unity with God is measured by his increasing ability to see things as they really are. Believing is seeing."Dreher makes the point that icons can become idols when, rather then seeing them as pointing us to higher Truth and toward God himself, we put our hope or trust in the icon itself.
Jesus constantly repudiated the religious leaders of his day for their failure to recognize the truth of God in the things he said and did! And rather than offer himself up as some kind of imperfect icon hoping to nudge them toward truth, he made it perfectly clear that unless they recognized His divine God-ness, the very God they purported to represent would be unrecognizable to them!
So have fun with Santa, the Easter Bunny, Tooth Fairy, et al insofar as they give us an iconic view of the nature and character of God, and teach us and our children how to recognize Jesus in His grace and goodness!