This time of year, Christians frequently declare, “Keep ‘Christ’ in ‘Christmas’!” It’s a good motto to follow. But just as important for Catholics is to remember to “Keep ‘Mass’ in ‘Christmas’!”
Similar to the oft repeated phrase, “You can’t spell ‘C-h-r-i-s-t-m-a-s’ without Christ,” you also can’t spell it without “mas” – i.e. “Mass.”
According to TheWordOrigin.com, the word “Christmas” is derived from the Old English “Cristes mæsse.” This means “Christ’s Mass.” The Catholic Church began celebrating the birth of Jesus Christ in the 4th Century, but it wasn’t until the 11th Century that they named this celebration, “Christ’s Mass.”
Christmas certainly should revolve around Christ’s Mass. After all, the Catholic Mass is an incredibly important part of the Catholic faith. We attend Mass so we can come together with fellow Catholics for a variety of reasons, such as:
- to recall that the Divine chose to become one of us;
- to remember the sacrifice of God’s Son;
- to pray for one another and for other petitions;
- to receive Jesus in the Holy Sacrament and to receive God’s graces.
The Reason for the Season
Unfortunately, the reason for originating the holy day of Christmas is getting more and more difficult to understand this time of year. Society has removed religious significance from the event. Too many kids – and adults – are “preached to” by the legacy media and secular society. They end up learning more in December about Santa and Rudolph than about the Incarnation and the Nativity.
Knowing that their sons and daughters will not be picking up Christ-based knowledge of the true meaning Christmas from the culture, Catholic parents need to be counter-cultural. They do this by working attentively at keeping their family’s focus on the historical arrival of Jesus and the future anticipation of Him coming again.
It is fine and natural for kids to have visions of toys, trees, and nutcrackers dancing in their heads this time of year. But parents would do well to make sure there are moments spent on contemplating and celebrating the miracle of Jesus’s birth. He became man for one reason only, so that He could save us by sacrificing His life for us.
Counter-Cultural Ideas for the Christmas Season
Moms and dads might want to employ some of the following suggestions in December and continuing throughout the New Year:
- Kneel as a family in front of your church’s Nativity scene before or after each Mass during Advent and on Christmas Eve/Day. Continue doing so on the succeeding Sundays of Christmas-time, which stretch until early January with the Feast of the Baptism of the Lord. As you ponder the Nativity scene, pray in thanksgiving for God becoming a man in the form of Jesus via the Incarnation.
- Listen as a family to famous Christmas hymns and point out the significant lines. For example, the expressive lyrics to “We Three Kings” have these meaningful words that most kids might have never understood and most adults might have never meditated on: “Born a babe on Bethlehem’s plain; Gold we bring to crown Him again; King forever, ceasing never, Over us all to reign.”
- Gather your children around your computer and show them this famous portion of “A Charlie Brown Christmas.” Listen as little Linus explains what Christmas is all about.
- Make it a point to naturally and enthusiastically say, “Merry Christmas!” in return to all the store clerks and people you meet in December. And do so especially to those who are so intent on being politically-correct that they only greet you with a “Happy Holidays!” Let your counter-cultural actions help spread the Good News to them while witnessing for your children how proud you are to be a Christ-follower.
And there is one more suggestion for families to start incorporating. Make weekly Mass attendance a priority for the family. Do not settle for going to church only on “Christ’s Mass” and possibly again on Easter.
Catholics-In-Name-Only Do Not Attend Mass
God commands the faithful to keep His day holy. The Catholic Church echoes this by requiring Catholics to go to Mass on Sundays (or Saturday evenings). The first precept of the Church – You shall attend Mass on Sundays and on holy days of obligation – is very similar to the Third Commandment – “Remember to keep holy the Sabbath day.”
Many families call themselves “Catholic.” But as famously spoken in the movie, The Princess Bride, “You keep using that word; I do not think it means what you think it means.” Catholics-In-Name-Only like to pick and choose the Church doctrines, moral teachings, and Catholic precepts that suit them. Sometimes they even intentionally interpret them differently than they were intended.
The majority of Catholics have reworded the first precept and third Commandment to make them more palatable to their ears. They hear, “Remember to keep holy the Sabbath Day…when it is convenient.”
The majority of self-identified Catholics do not attend Mass on a weekly basis. Depending on which survey you look at, approximately 23%, 24%, or 29% of U.S. Catholics go to Church every weekend.
Whereas I am confident everyone reading this will attend Mass on Christmas Eve or Christmas Day, how many will attend on the Sunday immediately following Christmas? And how many will attend on the Sunday after that, and the Sunday after that?
Stand Firm and Do the Right Thing
It can be difficult for busy families in today’s hectic world to go to Mass on a weekly basis. When selecting what to do on Saturday evening or Sunday morning, most families give priority to sporting events, family projects, or simply sleeping-in.
Likewise, it’s understandable that many mothers and fathers will say they are just too tired to battle with their children in making them attend Mass. But good parents stick to their guns and do not give in out of exhaustion or lethargy.
Consider, for example, how often you say “no” to your kids when they keep pestering you about something they want. You stand firm when your daughter constantly asks if she can buy low-cut shirts and when your son whines about wanting to buy rated “M” (for Mature) video games. Parents must devote this same level of earnestness to keeping their kids going to Mass as a family every Sunday or Saturday evening.
This means not going only on Christmas and Easter or not going only when it’s convenient and doesn’t interfere with weekend activities. It means making “Christ’s Mass” the number one thing for the family to participate in every weekend.
Saint Paul wrote about the difficulties of being a Christian. He was persecuted, struck down, shipwrecked, imprisoned, slandered, whipped, stoned, and delivered to death. In the same light, no one said parenting was going to be easy.
Moms and dads might never get shipwrecked or whipped, but they certainly have to face other difficulties – from persistent whining from their kids to ostracizing from fellow parents who think being counter-cultural is strange. Christian parents should stick to doing what they know is right despite the difficulties, just like St. Paul did.
For the Christmas season, being counter-cultural entails keeping “Christ” in Christmas and keeping the “Mass” on Christmas and on every weekend after Christmas. When it is time to make your New Year’s resolution, consider resolving to uphold the Third Commandment. Make Sunday (or Saturday evening) Mass attendance the most important thing your family does together each week. And do so for 52 weeks each and every year and on every Holy Day of Obligation.
3 thoughts on “Keep the “Mass” in “Christmas””
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I would add DAILY MASS at least once in a while into the mix too because they might actually find it a great way to start the day and it’s often only about 30 minutes or so. Hardly a hardship right 😉
I go to daily everyday too and cannot imagine not going now and I recently came down with a bad cold and couldn’t attend mainly because I didn’t want to spread this to anyone else (I could have pushed through it myself) and truly missed it but made up by reading the day’s readings, watching ewtn for the homily to see their insight and reading some meditations with Scripture plus praying a Rosary.
…same for Adoration….once you start going frequently it is life changing little by little…
Super additions! Thanks!