Aldous Huxley, British novelist...
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Aldous Huxley, British novelist, essayist, and critic, in a little article titled, "New-Fashioned Christmas," tells how the Christmases of long ago, such as in A Christmas Carol by Charles Dickens, didn't make anyone much money. So, Christmas has been turned into an important economic event. Goodwill among Christians is now shown by people giving manufactured articles as gifts. Newspapers suggest that a good time can be enjoyed only by those who take what is offered to them by entertainment manufacturers. The idea of Christmas-at-home receives only perfunctory lip service from a press that draws a steady income from the catering and amusement trades. Homemade fun is gratuitous, and gratuitousness is something that an industrialized world cannot afford to tolerate.
How sad that so many miss the true meaning of Christmas. They do not see that a marvelous birth has occurred, that the Son of God, the Wonderful Counselor, the Mighty God, the Prince of Peace has brought the light of life to the world. It is this blessed event that makes Christmas special, when God's good will toward the world is evidenced, not in our gift-giving, but in God's gift of his own Son.
