AT CHRISTMAS, who do we celebrate?..., to superman, to extraterrestrials, to Claus ("the elf dressed in red"), to Harry Potter, or to the Baby Jesus?
The Christians, somehow, always remembered the love of God and that wonder that made when he became man and was born in Bethlehem, of Mary, the Virgin.
The holiday of Christmas to remember that fact of the Gospel would happen to have a day to the year since the Christians in the Average Age began to construct nativity scenes to remember the day of Christmas. It is believed that were Saint Francisco and his friends who made the first nativity scenes. They wanted to remember each year the birth of Our Savior.
But in the last century (twentieth century), dreamy men, with very little respect for the Gospel, invented another "savior": an "alien god" from other planets called Superman.
Since then, the fantasy of the aliens has developed in such a way that even on Christmas days they don't stop putting movies and selling books of Superman and of aliens. In these stories, hardly there is any sign of Christianity in its fantastic scenes ...
AT CHRISTMAS, who do we expect ... to Claus ("the elf dressed in red"), or to the Baby Jesus?...
Also, in the first decades of the twentieth century, another fantastic story character would emerge: "a magical god", called "Claus" ("the elf dressed in red"), who flies across the sky with sleds and reindeer and brings toys for the children on Christmas Day.
This "god" from the fantastic world inhabited by gnomes, fairies and dwarfs of the forest, seems the only savior of the world at Christmas time. In the scenes of his books and films hardly any signs of Jesus Christ or of Christianity are seen. It is as if someone had invented this fantastic character to make that the children forget the Gospel of Jesus Christ and turn their attention to the tales of men.
It is true that in the first centuries of Christianity there was a missionary who dedicated himself to bringing food and toys to the poor children of the villages he passed through. His name was Nicolás de Bari. He had inherited a great fortune from his parents, and distributed it all among the poor.
Some want to see Claus reflected in that Christian character, but the truth is that St. Nicholas was a Christian, and his story does not speak of magic, gnomes, forest dwarfs or fairies, or any fantasy; It only tells us of his love for Jesus Christ.
The character "Claus" (the elf dressed in red), instead, presents and promotes fantasy..., and in the tales written about him, the story of Jesus Christ and the Christians does not appear..., and if it appears, it is very covertly. It is as if they want to make the world see that the teaching of love and peace does not come from the Gospel, but from the mysterious and magical world of the gnomes, the fairies and the dwarfs of the forest.
AT CHRISTMAS, who do we expect ..., to Harry Potter or the Baby Jesus?...
And what about Harry Potter, if almost everyone knows the tale?... This tale of magic and fantasy seems to also find a place on Christmas days to promote magic and fantasy and do that children forget the true meaning of Christmas.
All these tales, although they seem harmless fantasies, as some affirm, however to all these tales unites them to them a single purpose: to ignore completely Jesus Christ and all signal of the Christianity.
This world of fantasies fights against the idea that God became man, and was called Jesus Christ, and also against the idea that there was a Christian culture that existed at some time in our history.
If this were to continue in this way, according to the purpose of many men would disappear Christianity, the Gospel, and all sign of Christian culture, and the world would be completely invaded by the tales of the antichrist.; Of course, tales that never remember that there are poor people on earth and that God ordered to distribute all the goods among them.
This is one of the things preached by the Gospel: to distribute the goods among the poor... Will not be this the reason why many men full of greed want to destroy the memory of the Gospel?...
I think that this subject in these days is a very important topic for changing impressions among Christians and examining it.