The commercial culture may have...
Illustration
The commercial culture may have kidnapped the baby Jesus (or at least it may seem that
way). It may have converted the angels' song into advertising jingles. It may have
plastered the image of three kings across hundreds of thousands of greeting cards -- but at
least there's one person in the Christmas story who remains untouched by
commercialism: John the Baptist!
Can you imagine watching the Macy's Thanksgiving Day parade, and seeing -- between the giant Garfield balloon and some marching band from the midwest -- John the Baptist's float go by? There he'd be, shaggy-haired, wild-eyed, clad in his camel's-hair coat, a wireless microphone in his dirty hand, shouting, "Repent!" (It's highly unlikely he would be lip-synching.)
Can you picture what John the Baptist's line of Christmas cards might look like? "From our house to yours this holiday season: Merry Christmas ... you brood of vipers!" "Season's greetings to you, from across the miles ... who warned you to flee from the wrath to come?" "Let's all pass the wassail cup and gather round the Yule log ... to watch it burn with unquenchable fire!" Not exactly a Hallmark moment, is it?
Can you imagine watching the Macy's Thanksgiving Day parade, and seeing -- between the giant Garfield balloon and some marching band from the midwest -- John the Baptist's float go by? There he'd be, shaggy-haired, wild-eyed, clad in his camel's-hair coat, a wireless microphone in his dirty hand, shouting, "Repent!" (It's highly unlikely he would be lip-synching.)
Can you picture what John the Baptist's line of Christmas cards might look like? "From our house to yours this holiday season: Merry Christmas ... you brood of vipers!" "Season's greetings to you, from across the miles ... who warned you to flee from the wrath to come?" "Let's all pass the wassail cup and gather round the Yule log ... to watch it burn with unquenchable fire!" Not exactly a Hallmark moment, is it?
