| Dear Rev. Know-It-All,
Our youngest boy, Tim, will be turning
twenty three soon and we are worried that he may ask us whether or not
there really is a Santa Claus. As Catholics, what do we say? We are
disturbed by the increasing materialism of the Christmas season and worry
on the one hand that our little boy will be swept up in current attitudes,
the “Holiday Spirit,” so called.
On the other hand, we worry that our baby
will be disillusioned if we tell him that there is no Santa Claus.
He still cherishes the hope that he will Santa Claus coming down the chimney
on Christmas night and waits by the fireplace every December 24th with
a baseball bat and a pair of handcuffs. It’s so cute to find him asleep
their in his jammies on Christmas morning.
What should we do?
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Cratchet

Dear Mr. and Mrs. Crachet,
Not to worry, there is a third alternative.
Somewhere between breaking the little tyke’s heart and having him continue
in a deluded state of ignorant innocence, there is another alternative.
There is a certain danger in allowing him to believe in a large red-suited
home invader who should have died years ago from clogged arteries. Eventually
he will discover that he has been duped all along, and that goes for the
Tooth Fairy, the Easter Bunny, the Appendix Elf and that whole crowd. At
that point he will probably make the leap to “If my parents have been
lying to me all these years about someone as important as Santa Claus,
perhaps they have been lying to me about God!" The loss of innocence and
parental trust can be a bit unsettling, especially for one of such tender
years as is your son.
I am of the opinion that parents should
never lie to their children. There are a few options. I love the story
that Cory ten Boom tells in her magnificent book, “The Hiding Place.”
When she was a little girl, perhaps 4 or 5, her father would often take
her with him when he went to the big city to buy supplies for his watch
repair business. One day, as the train rolled through the Dutch countryside,
little Cory, having heard older girls talking on the playground at school,
asked her father, “Papa, what is sex?” Kaspar ten Boom, looked at little
Cory and silently turned to stare out the window again, leaving his daughter’s
question unanswered. When the train pulled into the station, Kaspar asked
Cory to pick up his tool bag. She did her best but couldn’t budge
the bag. Kaspar then said to her, “Cory, there are some things too heavy
for you to carry right now. When you are old enough, I will tell you what
sex is. 'Til then, trust me.” We can always tell our children that
some things are too heavy to carry now and we will tell them later. Santa
Claus is not one these things, despite his girth.
As I said, I am of the opinion that parents
should never lie to their children. If little Timmy asks, “Is there is
a Santa Claus,” this is what I would tell him. “Yes, Timmy, there
is a Santa Claus, but his real name is St. Nicholas and he doesn’t live
at the North Pole, he lives in heaven with God. He doesn’t actually bring
all the toys and those wonderful new pairs of sweat sox, but he was a very
kind and generous bishop a long time ago, who gave gifts and helped little
children. He inspires Mommy and Daddy to give gifts, and Jesus gives Mommy
and Daddy the ability to give the gifts. All that stuff about elves and
the North Pole is make believe, but make believe is all right and a lot
of fun, if you know the truth, so you can just keep waiting for Santa by
the chimney if you want to. It’s great fun”
We tell our children the dandiest things
like the Tooth Fairy, the Easter Bunny and the boogey man in order to get
them to do what we want. No wonder psychiatrists make a decent living.
However, St. Nicholas and God are real. Perhaps you are among those who
think that God is just an imaginary friend for grown-ups. I beg to differ.
Jesus lived. We have more documentation about Jesus than we do for people
like Julius Caesar and no one doubts that
Caesar existed. Further despite our
modern pseudo scientific skepticism, God who is unseen leaves His fingerprints
everywhere. I just got a fascinating video on the latest new about
the Shroud of Turin. I can here you scientific types beginning to giggle
and guffaw. Look at the issue scientifically. A flawed carbon test made
on a medieval patch has convinced people who wanted to be convinced that
this amazing relic is a fake. Well, read the latest. It is interesting
to note that every time there is a new imaging technology, it seems that
it is already built into the cloth. When Secundo Pia took a picture of
the Shroud in 1898 using that relatively new fangled technology of photography,
lo and behold, the Shroud turned out to be a photographic negative. Then
someone invented the VP-8 Image analyzer to interpret radio waves
bouncing off distant objects. Lo and behold, when given a picture, any
picture, of the Shroud, it produced a three dimensional image, something
no photograph or painting had ever done. So the Shroud was shown to contain
three dimensional information. Now, Dr. Petrus Soons and Dame
Isabel Piczek — a Hungarian trained particle physicist, have shown that
the Shroud contains holographic information. Dame Piczek says the
image can only be compared to a singularity, an event horizon like a black
hole!?! To believe that the thing is a medieval fraud or just an accident
makes believing in Santa’s elves seems reasonable. Or how about the appearance
of the Blessed Mother in Zeitoun, Egypt?. Apparently she and a few angels
stood on the roof of a Church in suburban Cairo a few nights a week for
about three years in the 1960's. thousands came to gawk, even Egypt’s
president Gamal Abdul Nasser. (Just go to your computer and do a web search
using the word “Zeitoun” Some of the websites start with the idea that
such things are impossible and try to explain them away. I know people
from Egypt whose families were present at the event. How about... I could
go on and on. God who is bigger than the universe may be impossible to
see, but He is certainly able to be known because 2000 years ago the invisible
God became visible in the person of Jesus, the Jewish Messiah, and Mary
who may well have wrapped Him in the Shroud when he died also wrapped Him
in swaddling clothes and laid him in a manger. He remains visible in so
many, many ways. He certainly lived and lives still.
As for your little gem by the fire place,
I see no harm in his waiting by the fireplace to deck Santa with a baseball
bat. Perhaps, by some miracle of grace, the Lord will allow the real St.
Nicholas to descend from heaven and to appear in your living room. Timmy
should watch out however. There is a legend that St. Nicholas punched Arius
the heretic at Council of Nicea. I doubt that it’s true, but these days
one can’t be too careful.
Merry Christmas, and God bless us everyone!
Rev.
Know-It-All

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