[An oldie, December 13, 2013]
Today, in Sweden, a traditionally
Lutheran country, most of the populace, I'm told, will go Christmas-crazy,
having fallen in love a few centuries ago with Saint Lucy. It's Saint Lucy's
Day in most of Scandanavia today, just as it is every December 13, a date
roughly aimed at winter solstice, which is, of course, a date worth a good
party if you're parked that far north in the hemisphere this very dark time of
year.
Even the name, Lucia, feels as if it is has something to do with
light etymologically, and when the people dress whichever young lady reigns
this year--as they will today in schools, churches, communities, and even
families, the Swedes outfit a garlanded crown beset with candles. Well, fire
marshalls carrying the weight they do today, more often than not, what's aflame
on all those blonde heads is created by batteries not open flames. But that
violation of code is quite recent.
Martin Luther was no Calvinist in his rage against papist monstrosities, but
that doesn't mean he held much regard for the museum of Roman Catholic saints.
So the Sicilian St. Lucy is something of an anomaly in Sweden and Norway and
Denmark and Finland, the only saint so lavishly celebrated way up north. Makes
no sense.
Even her origins are shrouded. One story traces her sainthood to the attention
she showed to the Christians in the catacombs. Her ceaseless efforts prompted
her to design headgear that could light the way, enabling her to use both hands
to minister to martyrs. Viola!--St. Lucy, the saint of light.
Others maintain that she coverted to Christ and swore allegiance to the poor
and to perfect sexual innocence, thereby incurring the wrath of her fiance, who
reported her forbidden chastity to Roman authorities.
When told she had to leave, or so the story goes, 50 oxen and 100 men couldn't
move her. Seriously.
Frustrated Roman authorities simply hauled in tree limbs and burned her right
there. Still, flames 'a'lappin', she wouldn't stop praising the Lord. In fact,
her unloving fiance took a sword to her throat to stanch the triumphant praise,
and that didn't stop her. She wouldn't stop until she was given last
rites--or so the story goes.
Still, how on earth did young Italian Roman Catholic saint get past Luther?
And how did she get to Sweden in the first place, Sicily not being right
next door?
There was, some say, a closet Catholic queen in Sweden; maybe she was the one
who wouldn't give Lucia up.
Yet another explanation involves those rugged sea-faring Vikings, who took her
story back to Scandanavia.
And still another explanation is that Santa Lucia simply fit in with
pre-existant pagan Yuletide rituals already being celebrated among the common
folk. It may come as a shock to Fox News, but people were giving presents,
eating and drinking too much, and celebrating holidays at the end of the year
long before anyone thought to rejoice in the birth of the boy-child savior.
There is, after all, nothing particularly Christian about a Christmas
tree either. It could well be our trees and St. Lucy's garland crown share an
origin in pagan rites.
There's more. Long ago, good old country pagans in Sweden were scared to
death of Lussi, a scary female being who punished naughty children on December
13. Because she did, people got together and partied 'till early morning to
keep her away, while in the barn, the animals spoke--really! The Lussi story, a
beloved tradition, morphed splendidly into St. Lucy's Day because, given all
the fun, even Luther himself couldn't steal it away from all those darling
Swedish kids. Hence, the holiday.
The Dutch have Sinter Klaas, of course, and his so very politically incorrect,
sooty-faced minions. And we've got Santa Claus, who turns his own tricks come
Christmas Eve, visiting every last home in the world by way of chimneys most
houses these days don't have.
Christians have Jesus, the baby, a God who somehow, some way, became a man--or
rather a baby and was born, this king of heaven and earth, in a lean-to barn.
You either belive or you don't, and I do.
But it's worth a smile or two to realize how human it is, right now--a couple
new inches of snow on the fields just outside my window, our furnace running us
bankrupt, the temps barely enough to move the mercury, darkness running halfway
through the morning--it's worth a smile or two to realize how human it is to
put up a live tree in the house, to party, to celebrate, to open one's arms and
heart to the warmth of hope and love amid all the cold darkness all around.
I believe in Jesus Christ, not Lussi or Swarte Piet, Sinter Klaas, or old St.
Nick. But I sure love our tree and the bright green promise it offers so
lavishly amid the dark of deep December.
In so many ways, I reach, as all of us do, for the Light of the World.
Have a nice St. Lucy's.
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