Christmas the Year Around

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By Ashlie Miller

“Bah, humbug” may be the most familiar quote from Ebenezer Scrooge in A Christmas Carol, but another quote captures who the man becomes by the end of the book: “I will honor Christmas in my heart, and try to keep it all the year. I will live in the Past, the Present, and the Future.”

“Keeping Christmas” is not quite the same as prolonging it. You may already have your Christmas tree on the curb and most of your seasonal decor packed away. Perhaps you wait until the New Year to remove festal decorations. Some of us will wait until the end of the 12 Days of Christmas (Epiphany), while others will have lights or door wreaths that need to be put away well into March. The delay in putting away or prolonging the nostalgia is not what is meant by “keeping Christmas.”

In case you need a refresher, Ebenezer Scrooge begins his journey like many good stories – life as usual with a glimpse into what the character needs or wants. It becomes painfully obvious that the “squeezing, wrenching, grasping, scraping, clutching, covetous old sinner” that is Scrooge needs a softened, generous, merciful heart. Three spirits agree and reveal to Scrooge who he was, who he is, and who he is on course to become. 

The hardened man we first meet was once a young boy escaping the tragedies of reality with a terrific imagination absorbed in his books. For the first time, Ebenezer faces the humanity of the poor, pitiful soul he once was. He sees the boy become a man who had much – not just in stacks of coins, but even in love – and loses the more important of the two due to his own fear of the world.

Next, we see his current state and how his lack of interaction and concern with his fellow man affects others. Confronted with who he is, he desires to become involved in the lives of those he knows. Looking into the course he is setting toward his future, denial becomes realization, leading to regret, remorse, and, ultimately, repentance. He is a changed man.

While our Christmas songs, movies, and adornments may get carefully stored for another year, we can and should strive to honor Christmas in our hearts throughout the year. It is good to look momentarily at our past, our failures, and even our hurts and recognize the Savior who came to heal us and make us anew. We must look to our present and see missed opportunities to engage and love those around us. Our future is both very distant and arriving sooner than we anticipate. It can be a future of hope and promise or a devastating one we know we deserve but do not want to face. A right look at the past, present, and future and making peace by knowing the Prince of Peace can ensure being able to “keep Christmas” by keeping Christ at the center of every day, not just one holiday. 

How about you? Want to join me in keeping Christmas all year and living in the past, present, and future?

Ashlie Miller extends her seasonal decor until Epiphany, not because she celebrates the day, but because she needs an acceptable excuse for slowly packing it all away.