Ear Biscuits with Rhett & Link - 267: How Our Christmas Traditions Have Changed Throughout The Years | Ear Biscuits Ep.267
Episode Date: December 7, 2020Christmas may look a little different for everyone this year, but for R&L, there have been 3 distinct phases (and one phase of Christmases yet to come)Â of how they've viewed and celebrated Christmas ...throughout their years. Listen to the guys discuss their Christmas traditions past, present, and future in this episode of Ear Biscuits! To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Welcome to Ear Biscuits, a podcast where two lifelong
friends talk about life for a long time.
I'm Link.
And I'm Rhett.
This week at the round table of dim lighting,
we're going to be talking about our relationship
to Christmas and how it has evolved over time
as we've evolved as people.
Yeah, it's an interesting touch point.
It's interesting for me, this is kind of an exercise
of looking through the lens of Christmas
and seeing my former self, maybe in different stages,
and then my current self.
Is that, that's how you see this going?
Yeah, I mean, you know.
This conversation, I mean.
Talking about, yeah, Lord, just life.
Yeah, I mean, I think I wanna talk about
the way that I used to think about Christmas
and then as I was sort of transitioning out of
personally considering myself a Christian,
like what that was like and then what it's like today
and how that continues to be in process.
Yeah, this is gonna be interesting.
Who knows where this is gonna go?
One quick thing before we move on though.
Is it a podcast, We're Two Lifelong Friends
or is it the podcast, We're Two Lifelong Friends?
I don't listen to any other ones with two lifelong friends talk about it the podcast were two lifelong friends? I don't listen to any other ones
with two lifelong friends talk about life for a long time.
Because I think I've been saying the,
but I could have sworn you said uh.
Oh, did I?
Okay.
I'd like to retract my uh and replace it with a the.
It was very quick.
You swallowed it a little bit.
It doesn't really know.
So I didn't, I mean, but you made me think,
hold on, is it a or the?
What have I been saying?
I think I've been saying the.
We'll have to go to the tape.
Do we want to say the?
Let's say the. The.
I might say the, I reserve the right to say the.
Back to Christmas.
I mean, this year in particular
and this approaching holiday season,
I mean, yes, we're gonna be talking about Christmas
and there's gonna be-
I'm sorry to interrupt you,
but you've said two phrases
that make me think of Christmas movies.
You said the lens of Christmas and I was like,
that would be a good Christmas movie.
Then you said back to Christmas.
And I was thinking about a future,
like a future, like a time travel movie.
Back to the future Christmas edition?
You have to go back to Christmas for something.
I really wanna make a Christmas movie, man.
We should make a Christmas movie. Well, the idea. I really wanna make a Christmas movie, man. We should make a Christmas movie.
Well, the idea we came up with for a Christmas movie,
it just didn't come together.
What was that idea?
It was called, it was about a gift.
It was about a gift that you,
it was a husband got a gift for his wife.
He wanted to get her the perfect gift.
It's called the perfect gift.
Yes.
And I still think we could update the idea
and still make it.
I don't think it was a horrible idea.
And we had a role for Jeff Goldblum.
Remember that?
Yeah, he was-
Not that he would have ever said yes.
Well, no, he was attached.
I wanna make a Christmas movie, man.
Cause even I was, you know, I gotta make a wreck later on
and I was like, I'm gonna wreck sort of like
a under the radar Christmas movie. I got a great recommendation for a Christmas movie, man, because even I was, you know, I got to make a wreck later on and I was like, I'm gonna wreck sort of like a under the radar Christmas movie.
I got a great recommendation for Christmas movie.
It's my favorite movie of all time.
Yeah, we know Elf.
And so I'm not gonna steal that,
but I'm not gonna recommend a Christmas movie
because there's just not, I mean,
it's hard to find the ones that are good.
When you end up going really quickly to Die Hard
as a Christmas movie, which is not a Christmas movie,
it just takes place at Christmas.
It just shows you,
there just haven't been enough good Christmas movies made.
We could give it another shot,
come up with something else or tweak that one.
And just another aside about Jeff Goldblum,
I think this was something that I just read on Reddit
as I was falling asleep.
Jeff Goldblum has this practice
whenever he meets somebody at a party.
Well, the way it was described was in a tweet
from somebody who was semi-famous, like a journalist
and who would mingle at parties
and he would know some people at parties,
but he was introduced to Jeff Goldblum for the first time.
And the guy was introduced to Jeff Goldblum.
Jeff Goldblum's first response was,
Oh my God, of course.
And it makes you feel important.
And he felt, and he was like, I just didn't know how,
but I guess Jeff Goldblum had read one of my articles
or something.
He seemed to know me, but then I happened to hear him
being introduced to other people at the party
and every time he would say, oh my God, of course.
You gotta love that, man.
I mean, it's a little manipulative,
but it makes you feel good.
It's smart. It makes you feel good.
People wanna be important.
And I thought about, maybe I should do that
or come up with my own version of that.
And then I'm like, you know what?
You have to be Jeff Goldblum.
Well, I just think you have to change it.
You have to be Jeff Goldblum.
Not only change it from what he says.
Oh my God, of course.
But you have to change it.
Maybe that was just that night.
Maybe when he's looking at himself in the mirror
before he goes out, he's like, what is it tonight?
Oh my God, of course.
And then he goes with it.
I think once you land on that one,
you realize it is the holy grail
of introduction and responses.
If you're Jeff Goldblum, I mean,
or someone else who everybody at a party wants to talk to.
Like, not even just because he's a celebrity,
because he's that, he's Jeff Goldblum.
What about yes, finally.
I mean that- Been waiting to meet you.
You know that has- No, that doesn't work
because if you've already met the person, doesn't work.
Oh my God, of course is the best,
but I'm just saying, you don't wanna overuse it.
Back to Christmas. Sorry, you were saying something.
Christmas this year, along with everything else this year
is strained and strange.
You know, it's just a lot of traditions
are having to be altered
because the holiday season is the time of tradition.
But everything's got to change.
At least for me and my household,
we will not be going home for Thanksgiving or Christmas.
I actually think by the time this comes out,
Thanksgiving has already happened.
Yeah, it has.
And I did not go home and I'm not going home
for the Christmas holidays or New Year's
or any of that stuff.
And it's sad.
So I'm mourning the ability to do that.
I am really relieved that my extended family understands
and actually even before we told them,
I kind of felt like, are we breaking the news to them
that we're not coming home?
So, but when we had the discussions, it was like,
oh yeah, we already knew that you guys
weren't gonna be able to come home.
It's just, you know, I don't wanna get into
what the COVID numbers are like now
versus in a couple of weeks from now.
Well, they'll be higher in a couple of weeks.
Oh gosh.
But it's, you know, it's- I mean, it's heading
in the wrong direction, right?
I've got loved ones that I wanna protect
and I just can't have, I can't be the one that increases their risk.
I just can't have that on my conscience.
I don't necessarily wanna go here, but I will go here
because I know people feel differently about this,
but it is just a fact, an indisputable fact
that some people this holiday season will get on a plane,
go across the country to be with their loved ones,
and someone will die because of that.
I'm not saying, I'm just saying that it's a fact,
that's gonna happen, you can do with that what you will.
And so for me, it's like-
I can't be on me.
I don't want to be a part of that.
I think next year is gonna be different.
I think we're gonna be through this.
I'm really- But I don't want the risk.
I'm just really glad that they were expecting it.
They were on the same page.
They were understanding.
I mean, that doesn't mean it's not gonna be sad
and it's gonna hurt when New Year's rolls around
and we still haven't seen anybody.
It's gonna hurt, but that's our plan.
The last two years, I actually think
this will be the third year, yeah.
So the last two years-
Because you've been going home for Thanksgiving.
We've been going home for Thanksgiving and not Christmas
because we, and I discussed this in this venue,
we had made a point that, you know what?
We wanna start forging our own swords,
traditions here in our home base
so that, you know, I've really started to look forward
to what when my kids are coming back home for the holidays
to me and Christy and then, you know, hopefully at one point
we got grandkids coming in.
It's like, you know, we want our home that we set up
and the traditions that we have to be the focal point
of this next layer of tradition, you know?
If you keep going home, it kind of stalls things out.
And that's kind of the decision we made.
So we give them Thanksgiving
and then we don't give them Christmas,
at least until we can establish something.
And that actually is part of the complexion
of this conversation, I think, is this being the third year,
we've got these COVID complications and limitations,
but still the Neal family, we're trying to forge
what Christmas looks like for us
in California because traditions and habits
and expectations aren't formed in just a year or two
and we're only in year three.
So we're still trying to figure all that out.
And then you factor in everything that, yeah,
you were talking about just in terms of like
where I'm at spiritually, that journey,
and how all of that really seems to come into sharp focus
around Christmas for obvious Jesus as a baby reasons.
Would you say that you hone in on those things?
Did I say hone?
No, I'm just saying that you said sharp focus.
Did I say home? No, I'm just saying that you said sharp focus.
You're really the verbiage police today.
No, you didn't say anything.
I'm just, it's just throwback.
It's a throwback to our conversation.
I thought I said.
You did not say home.
I thought I said either one.
Yeah, and this Christmas is gonna be especially interesting
because we're gonna spend it together,
which we have not done.
You're talking about us now, me and you.
As families, we will be spending,
you know, I'm not saying that we're necessarily
gonna get together on Christmas day, but-
We haven't made plans yet.
We don't know exactly what the ins and outs of this are,
but the family that my family is going to see
is your family, right?
And so, and we haven't done that before
because we typically do go home
to North Carolina for Christmas
and have the traditions that we do with my family
and then with Jesse's family.
They all kind of live really close to one another.
And they do, you know, obviously they want us to come back,
but they also probably know that given our disposition
when it comes to the pandemic that we will not be.
And yeah, so this is gonna, it's gonna be strange
because we haven't, we don't have these traditions
that we've done as a family on our own.
There's only been one Christmas in all of our time
in California where we didn't go home.
And you know, it's like Jesse's birthday is a week before Christmas.
And then what we typically would do,
we would celebrate her birthday
and then like that weekend before Christmas,
usually get on the plane, go to North Carolina.
So being here for the whole time.
And then also usually we tack on like a trip
for ourselves as a family,
after we get done with the Christmas and the New Year stuff,
like right at the beginning of the year,
and you've done this as well,
it might just be me and Jessie going somewhere together,
like for a few days, but none of that's gonna happen.
There's just gonna be a whole lot of being at home
through this whole time,
and I really don't know how to prepare for it.
We'll make the best of it.
At least we do have, you know, our families
that we're in this quarantine pod situation
and that helps.
And then our friend Mike and his family,
we're gearing up to make sure that like
we're in a safe situation to pod up with them.
I think I'm pretty sure they'll be here for the holidays.
And so it'll be like our three families.
Yeah, so I think it'll be a good time.
Being safe.
I'm looking forward to it.
Oh, it'll be a good time.
But we've got to kind of invent our,
I mean, first of all,
I'm very excited about the food, of course.
And I wanna play an integral part
in the preparation of the food.
I've got several ideas.
Oh yeah.
That I'll actually get into when I do my rec later on.
But I plan to feed you is what I'm saying ultimately.
And I could still contribute music on a playlist.
Yeah, you can have a playlist.
You had a great playlist the other night.
That worked, right? Yeah. You know, I was. Yeah, you can have a playlist. You had a great playlist the other night. That worked, right? Yeah.
You know, I was able to, you know,
whenever something needed to be said, important,
I stopped the music.
Yeah.
And then when it was over, I started the music back.
And then people were like, oh, I like this song.
You know, it's like, the music's a little too loud.
Can you turn it down? Oh, sure.
And while I was outside frying up that chicken
for the Nashville hot chicken sandwiches,
I was listening to the music outside as well.
I had it pumping outside.
So I was hearing the playlist just by myself.
And I was kind of moving a little bit.
You're kind of moving?
And Mike brought me a couple of drinks,
which made everything better.
Yeah, there you go.
You know, we all have our part to play.
Okay, well now I'm just thinking about that.
You know, might dress up like Santa.
Maybe could get, I don't know,
somebody could dress up like Santa.
Well, I kinda think.
We could do a nativity scene.
I feel like in our pod, you know, Mike is probably the.
He's got the whitest beard. He's got the whitest beard.
He's got the whitest beard.
We got this.
We'll talk about it.
Why don't you be an elf?
Last year when you guys weren't here-
That's what you like so much.
I'll do it.
With Mike and Mike's family and Jenny,
we got matching Christmas pajamas.
We all wore matching Christmas pajamas.
Well, is that happening again?
It should.
Do I have to buy the same pair that you already have
or are we going all new?
I'd like to just reuse what I have,
but I haven't thought about it.
You gotta see if you can acquire it.
I guess something that's a close approximation,
but a little bit better.
But is there gonna be a nativity scene?
Are we gonna have like a little baby Jesus?
Are we gonna have like goats and sheep?
You know, back home there was,
you drive by a church and they would have built this like
three-sided shack made out of like pallet wood.
And then there'd be people dressed up like Mary Joseph
and a baby and there'd be a freaking- Hold on, you've been a part of a live nativity with me. I've not been a part of a liveet would, and then there'd be people dressed up like Mary Joseph and a baby, and there'd be a freaking-
Hold on, you've been a part of a live nativity with me.
I've not been a part of a live nativity, like been in it.
As a youth group.
Very young.
Weren't you Joseph?
I could have sworn that you were Joseph
and I was a shepherd.
I may have been Joseph one year early on, yeah.
Yeah, it was cold, I just remember it was cold.
And I was like, man, I just got on like,
I don't remember. I don't have enough clothes on.
I thought it was inside.
See, I'm not even remembering this right.
There was a live nativity
of Buies Creek First Baptist Church,
that the youth did.
And Maria Matthews was Mary.
I think that was a play and it was inside.
There was like a Christmas cantata.
Okay, well, I could have sworn
there was a live nativity.
There was not a real baby though.
I haven't done it as an adult
because now I would be an amazing shepherd with my beard.
You're too tall.
No, no, no, I'm too tall for Joseph.
Let's get real here.
I'm too tall for Joseph, that would be a distraction,
but having one tall ass shepherd or one tall ass wise man.
I think you'd be a wise man
because they're walking from a long distance.
They're following that star.
I wanna be the one with the frankincense.
And if you wanna be right about it.
I wanna be the merman.
The wise man is not gonna show up for like years, right?
He didn't show up when the baby was born.
Well, now you're getting into some of the complex questions
around the historicity of the nativity story.
Let's come back to this.
Which we'll talk about in a second.
Let's come back to this.
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Okay, Christmas.
Christmas!
I sort of see this.
Christmas!
I kind of see this as, for me, and I think for you as well,
just because we've been on really similar journeys,
I mean, there's some different stages.
And of course the first stage is what Christmas is like
when you are a Christian.
Let's roll out, just go, if you have an idea of stages,
just roll out the stages just so I know where you're going.
Okay, stage one is Christmas when you're a Christian.
And when I say Christian, I mean a Bible believing,
in our case, evangelical Christian
that takes the Christmas story, 100% literal truth.
That's stage one.
Stage two is a Christian who is struggling with doubt,
engaging with Christmas.
Stage three is someone who would no longer call themselves
a Christian, engaging with Christmas.
And you might think, isn't that the all three stages?
I think for me, there's a fourth stage, which is-
Well, and you can maybe be suspenseful about that.
There's a fourth stage.
I'm not gonna say, yeah, I'm just gonna say
it's the way that I am hoping to engage with Christmas now.
Mm, I'm very- Which may be surprising.
I'm very interested in this.
I think in anticipation of this conversation,
a number of thoughts come up for me,
some of which I don't wanna process here, honestly,
because I don't want this to be the first place
that I process this type of thing,
because it implies inviting people to weigh in
or help me figure things out for myself.
And I'm making the decision that I'm trying
to put some boundaries on what I'm processing publicly
and privately.
And so some of that's coming up here,
but I'm still very excited to talk about this.
And we tend to approach these type of things
and think about them in different ways.
If you look back at our deconstruction stories,
they're unique to each of us in the way
that we've grappled with our faith
and that we've moved forward in our journeys.
I take great comfort in the fact
that we are moving forward in our journeys and that take great comfort in the fact that we, that we are moving forward in our journeys
and that we have different approaches.
I really enjoy the fact that like,
like I haven't thought about these stages
that you just mentioned.
So I'm kind of, but I have my own thoughts
that I'll pepper in there and might choose
to keep my mouth shut at other times,
but we'll see how it plays out.
And I do, you know, anytime we talk about,
and we are, you know, we talk about spiritual things more freely
since breaking the seal with our conversation
earlier in the year about our spiritual deconstruction.
And these are sensitive topics
that mean a lot to a lot of people.
People hold these things very near and dear to their hearts
for obvious reasons.
And so just disclaimer, as we talk about these things,
I just wanna be very clear that nothing that I'm gonna say
or I'll speak for Link as well is meant to be prescriptive.
This isn't not advice.
This isn't how we think you should approach Christmas.
This isn't what we think is right for you.
This is our process.
This is just our personal story of what it was like
at those different stages.
We're pro you may relate to some of it.
You may not, you may disagree with some of the conclusions.
That's I'm not trying to get you to come
to a different conclusion.
It's just, this is a story.
That applies to every conversation we have here,
but with a sensitive topic like this,
I'm glad that you said it.
Yeah, I feel like I-
Because it's like, we're literally just processing
our lives in this venue.
Well, sometimes we do give prescriptive advice to people
if they ask for it.
Sometimes if they don't ask for it,
but it's usually about things that don't really matter.
Right, that's when we feel most comfortable.
If we can help it.
So we're gonna stay a little cagey.
But honest.
Okay, so again, for what is probably,
still remains to be the majority of the life
that I've lived so far, I was an evangelical Christian,
someone who believes that the Bible is the inerrant,
that means without error, word of God.
And so that means that the Christmas story itself,
of God taking the form of a baby human,
of a virgin becoming pregnant with that baby human,
and that baby human being God himself, and also God's son,
in the form of Jesus, coming to the earth to offer a pathway
of reconciling people to God.
That's what we thought.
And we thought that's what Christmas is
for an evangelical Christian.
It is the story of Jesus's birth.
And is it Jesus's or is it Jesus's birth?
I've heard pastors say it both ways.
Don't get hung up. I'm gonna say Jesus's just because you can tell? I've heard pastors say it both ways. Don't get hung up.
I'm gonna say Jesus's just because,
because you can tell that I'm saying that it's possessive.
The story of Jesus's birth.
And I think it's just an interesting thing
in our culture, in America,
I guess this happens in other places,
but you know, there's like this longstanding thing
that happens between like,
there's the Merry Christmas people and there's the Happy Holidays people and there's like this longstanding thing that happens between, like there's the Merry Christmas people
and there's the Happy Holidays people
and there's like this battle line that's drawn
and like people get mad at Starbucks
if they don't say Merry Christmas or whatever, right?
And this is a relatively recent sort of cultural battle,
but I remember what I can relate to about this
is I remember as a Christian, what I can relate to about this is,
I remember as a Christian, and listen, a Christian who was like working
for a Christian organization full-time,
like taking it very seriously,
I always thought that this little cultural infighting
about the whole Merry Christmas thing,
I was like, why are y'all getting so upset about this?
Yeah, I mean- I've never related to it.
I think another way that we might've put it was,
cause I agree that that was my assessment at the time,
is like, this is not a good look.
This is not the fight.
This is not the battle that we should be fighting.
What is your desired outcome from this battle?
That some atheist somewhere would say,
yes, you're right, Merry Christmas.
Is that what we're trying to accomplish?
It felt like a turf war, like protecting your turf.
And again, I was like very much on board
for Jesus is the reason for the season.
Cause it rhymes.
It looks great in a store window.
Yeah, a couple of months ago,
we were driving past this,
all my family was in the car and we drove past,
I guess it was October October and an automobile lot.
And you know, they got the showroom
with like the big glass windows
and they paint all their windshields with prices,
but they painted their showroom windows,
huge across all the windows.
Like if you had to really take the time to back up or really take in the whole thing,
across the whole thing it said,
"'Jesus is the reason for the season.'"
And then it was October, they had never taken it down.
So I'm like, well, kids, you know what?
It's fall.
Jesus is the reason for the season.
Jesus is the reason for fall.
And technically that's true.
I mean, from that perspective.
So yeah, so we didn't really get in on that bandwagon.
And to me it felt silly when I saw Christians
getting really concerned about that particular issue.
Even though for us personally,
Jesus was absolutely the center of Christmas,
which was the main holiday
that we were personally celebrating.
Yeah, and the way that I relate it to-
There are other holidays that are happening around then
that other people celebrate, you know?
So to say happy holidays, just to acknowledge
that other people are celebrating other holidays
is not a bad thing.
That's just called being considerate.
Right, it seems very Christian actually.
So I just never got that.
I'm glad.
I mean, there's lots of things I'm like,
I wish I would have done it differently,
but I never fought that fight.
Yeah.
But the thing that-
I never insisted that somebody else
celebrate something that I'm celebrating.
Right, right.
But the thing that I can relate to
when it comes to this maybe holding Christmas
in a precious way is the secular treatment
of Christmas just traditionally, right?
So you've got like, okay,
you've got Charles Dickens as an example, right?
So you've got a Christmas Carol
or really anything that centers around the spirit of Christmas
as it relates to anything other than Jesus.
So you've got Santa and gift giving and-
Well, gift giving, you could say that the tree,
some people say the tree is pagan,
some people say the tree is Christian,
some people say the gift giving-
You can commandeer all these things
for your individual purposes.
But what I'm saying is that like,
I'm not saying I wasn't one of these anti-Santa Christians
either and not in like a Santa is just Satan rearranged
in the same letters, right?
Like there are Christians who think that
and think that Santa is this secular distraction.
I didn't think that either.
But what I did think is when I would see a Christmas movie,
let's say Elf as an example, your favorite movie.
Best movie ever.
I could appreciate how awesome of a movie it is,
not necessarily my favorite or even in my top 10,
but a very solid Christmas movie.
I could appreciate it and appreciate all the good principles
that it kind of, that it reinforced
in the spirit of Christmas, but as a Christian, I would kind of, that it reinforced in the spirit of Christmas.
But as a Christian, I would kind of stand aside and say,
yeah, that's a real nice story,
but you guys do know that Jesus is the reason
for the season, that the whole point of this holiday
is to celebrate the fact that God became a human,
came down on our level and gave us a way
to be reconciled to him.
You do understand that's what's it about.
Well, and it's one thing to imply it
in all of the Hollywood Christmas movies,
but I mean, a lot of times it's blatantly stated
that the reason for the season,
or they may put it in different terms,
but they'll blatantly say that like,
the spirit of Christmas is family.
It's like good tidings.
Right. It's just,
you know, it's,
I'll be home for Christmas, it's getting together. It's just, it's that good tidings. Right. It's just, you know, it's, it's, I'll be home for Christmas.
It's getting together.
It's just, it's that type of stuff.
What was the last thing that filled you with wonder that took you away from your desk or your car in traffic?
Well, for us, and I'm going to guess for some of you, that thing is... Anime!
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Crunchyroll or on the Crunchyroll YouTube channel. And I didn't want people to change their movies. I wasn't thinking like, you know,
Elf would have been a whole lot better if like, you know,
if the, what's the Elf's name?
You should know this.
Will Ferrell.
Well, what's his name in the movie?
Buddy.
If Buddy would have become a Christian during the movie.
I'm not talking about like,
I'm not saying I want to have like
Kirk Cameron type movies.
Yeah, I wasn't into that either.
No, no, no, we hated those.
We hated those. We hated those movies.
We hated movies that were explicitly Christian and had,
but, but.
Because they weren't artful.
Yeah, most, most all of them.
Because again, it felt like it was for the audience.
But anyway, or it was preaching to the choir, whatever.
But I still had this sort of judgment in my mind
that was like, yeah, you guys almost get it,
but you don't really get it.
You've created all this holiday accoutrement
around Christmas in order to make it seem meaningful,
but you've missed the heart of it,
which is, this is about Jesus, y'all.
And so it's all pointless.
Ultimately, if you're gonna miss the heart of it,
then all this stuff around it
really doesn't mean anything.
I was very sensitive to putting my values
and expectations onto other people
that I didn't think I had any realistic expectation
that they would be interested in that.
But I'll tell you what I did do.
Yeah, I mean, as a kid,
our evangelical upbringing was like
the center point of our identity.
I mean, and then,
I think for me, there had to be like
a looking down my nose at other people
or maybe feeling sorry for people who are just missing
like the real point of what needs to be celebrated
at Christmas and what I'm experiencing is celebrating.
It was more of a bless their hearts kind of thing.
Yeah, there was a depth in the experience
that I was having that I felt like by comparison,
like from my evangelical perspective,
looking at other people, just thinking,
okay, it's just a bit shallow.
Yeah, I mean, like family and love and service
and all these good things, they're very meaningful things,
but they're not as meaningful as God coming to earth,
humbling himself as a baby.
Like that's tremendously inspirational
and a lot of other things.
And then when Christi and I got married
and we started having kids, it's like, okay,
now is my opportunity to, you know,
I'm in charge of creating new traditions
and finding the ways that we're gonna keep Jesus
at the center of our focus.
So one of the things we did is we would,
we made up our mind that we were gonna always tell our kids
that, and maybe we need to put a spoiler alert on this,
but you know what I'm about to say,
if there's somebody listening that you don't wanna know
certain things that-
About the man, the secular man of Christmas?
Yeah.
We're gonna reveal the truth
about the secular man of Christmas.
So if you have little ones who are listening in
on this conversation and you want the miracle of Christmas
to remain alive, tune out right now.
This, what's happening right here was never a problem
for me because I decided.
I think this was a link decision.
It's like, you know what?
Our kids are always gonna know that Santa is just, is fake.
But we're still gonna have,
we're still gonna surprise them with presents
on Christmas morning that weren't wrapped in under the tree.
There's gonna be some unwrapped stuff
that's gonna be there when they run down the stairs.
And I still wanna have that scene
because it's so exciting
and I don't wanna take that away entirely.
But when the weatherman is like,
"'We've spotted Santa on the radar,"
you're like, kids, that's BS.
When Lily's five years old, she never thought,
there was never a point where she thought
and she knew that she wasn't supposed to tell other kids.
And unlike you who told me way too late in my experience
that Santa Claus was fake,
she did not do that to her friends at a young age.
The funny thing about this is that I never made a decision
one way or the other.
I always, you know me, I like making things up
and making my kids believe things that aren't true
just for my own personal entertainment.
And so Santa, it fits the bill there, right?
And so we would-
Your Santa probably was real crazy.
Well, the thing is, is that-
He's got three eyes, but one of them has an eye patch.
But think about my kids though.
My kids are just like me.
And I didn't, you know,
the reason I didn't think Santa was real when I was a kid
wasn't because an adult told me, it was because-
You're saying you were smarter than me as a kid?
Well, no, I just think about things in a different way.
Let's just say that.
I was like, this can't be real.
I embrace the wonder of and joy of life.
And so- And I don't question it.
My kids did the exact same thing.
There was never a moment where I had to break a truth
to them.
It was more just like, at some point in our early age,
they were just like, I know Santa's not real.
I know you're giving me these gifts.
I had made it- But it's fun to play along.
I had made a decision to actually proactively tell them
and like burst the bubble before it would hurt too bad.
And the reason why I actually felt really good
about saying this is a protection from,
even for my kids at their youngest age,
I'm removing some of the temptation
to focus on the wrong thing.
It's like, remember, we're focusing on Jesus here.
We can have the presence and we're,
you know, the reason why we have the presence
is because presence were brought to Jesus
because people knew that he was God incarnate
and they came to worship him as a king
and they gave him gifts.
And so, you just try to couch everything
through the lens of Jesus, right?
That's a Christmas movie for Kirk Cameron.
Right, through the lens of Jesus. right? That's a Christmas movie for Kirk Cameron. Right, through the lens of Jesus.
And I felt good about that.
Now, you know, I don't feel bad about it now,
but I just, you know, I was kind of a stickler,
but I remember feeling like this is something tangible
that I've done that impacts my family's ability
to focus on what matters most. Well, and some people- And I think that that impacts my family's ability to focus on what matters most.
Well, and some people-
And I think that that was my role.
And some people might say,
just another reason if this is your perspective,
another reason to clarify the fact
that Santa is a made up thing
is because you don't want it to be like,
all right, there's two things that are true, child.
Jesus is God's son and God in the flesh,
this Christmas story.
But also there's this dude named St. Nicholas
who comes and flies around hauled by reindeer
and gives you presents.
Flying reindeer and comes down your chimney.
And at some point, I'm gonna break the news to you
that one of these two things is not real.
And the way I'm gonna do it is by saying,
one of these is not real, you choose.
Right, yeah.
No, but you don't.
Yeah, and so I think for some Christians,
it's like, hey, let's just,
let's tell our kids the truth.
And again, this is the truth according to a Christian
that this story is real and this story
is sort of the secular cultural story that we tell ourselves
with a fairy tale like the tooth fairy, whatever, Easter bunny, you know.
They never believed the Easter bunny
or the tooth fairy really either
for kind of the same reason.
Easter bunny is a- I had this principle thing
that was like, you know what?
I don't wanna have to break it to my kids
that I was lying to them.
But I don't know that that's how kids process it.
I never went there
because a lot of my kids all the time,
but the Easter bunny is the worst holiday mascot
because what does the Easter Bunny do?
I mean, the Tooth Fairy has a very specific thing.
It's a transactional relationship.
You know, you give him the tooth, he gives you money.
I understand how that works.
I know when it happens.
Are you picturing the rock or something?
I'm saying he.
Well, I'm saying he because I played the tooth fairy
in a video I'm very proud of.
Do you remember that video that we made?
I can't remember what it's called.
Spot the Differences. Spot the Differences, whatever.
But the Easter Bunny, no one says,
hey, let's go outside and find the eggs
that the Easter Bunny hid.
We do away with that mirage.
We say, no, the parents are going outside.
What is the role of the Easter bunny?
I think to be eaten as chocolate.
I don't know.
Yeah, it's a weak ass,
weak ass holiday mascot.
I will say there was another factor
in saying that Santa Claus wasn't real,
but they still got the gifts
is because then I could take full credit
for all of the gifts.
I understand that.
I think that was an ulterior motive on my behalf.
But yeah, there was this, I mean, I was,
we had so many family to visit
that we didn't go to the Christmas Eve service.
We didn't actually have a lot of like
Christmas time traditions,
but we did have some, like we would read like from the children's Bible,
like the Christmas story from a young age.
I've got this video of Lily,
before she could read,
we had read it to her so much
that she had memorized the Christmas story based on this children's picture book.
And it's the cutest thing
because she would act like she's reading,
but she just memorized everything that we said per page.
And it felt good to know that one of the first things
she memorized was the story of Jesus humbling himself
was the story of Jesus humbling himself
and coming to earth in order to be her savior. And you know, I just felt like I was, okay,
I was like, this is my job as dad.
And Christy's job as mom is to instill this knowledge
in her at a young age
to where she knows that God loves her and cares about her
and went to great lengths to not only demonstrate that,
but to make that relationship possible.
So it felt really good and it was validating that,
we've got this system,
I've got this belief system that I'm all in with
and I'm very,
every benefit associated with it.
Like I felt like I was,
at the time that I was only experiencing the benefits.
I think I've processed in my other story that like,
there's another side to it for me,
but at Christmas time, it felt good.
It's like, okay, we're not losing sight of the point.
Most of our touch points related to church.
We were very involved in our church.
You were very involved in your church as well,
but during Christmas, we were very involved in church,
including being involved in your church as well, but during Christmas, we were very involved in church, including like the, you know, being involved in the program
to the point where every year, Jesus,
Jessie, my wife would play Mary in this like play
where, and I think maybe for the first year she did it
or one year she did it that one, like Locke was Jesus,
but other years it was other people's babies,
like a real baby.
She would sing.
Huh?
Like, you know, she's like this one woman show as Mary.
And you'd light candles and it would be a big moment.
You know, and then there was that album, that dude,
what is his name?
Is it Andrew Peterson?
Is that his name?
I don't know if that's the-
I don't know.
I don't know if the, there's this guy, you know,
he, it's the Christian musician
who came out with the album that has become
all the songs that Christians play.
It's been like 15 years ago and it's just like,
it's not Mary, Did You Know?
That's the old school.
This is like, it's the one about like Mary in the,
the whole album is a Christmas album.
And it's the one where like all the things
that people sing at evangelical churches come from.
And I think the dude's name is Peterson.
And you know these songs for a hundred percent sure.
It's just, you were a music leader at your church.
You just didn't maybe make the connection to the album.
I wasn't that hip.
I assume they're still, I know they're still playing them
because when I went to a Christmas Eve service
at my old church like two years ago,
it's still playing the same song.
But what is your point?
I'm just saying that that was just a complete sidebar.
But my point is that all our touch points
were related to like the Christmas Eve service
and the things leading up to Christmas
that we did as a church.
And it was all very meaningful
and it was all very personal and impactful.
And we were involved as a family.
But let's move on to stage two, right?
Because as we've established,
that mentality and that approach did not continue.
For me, I struggled with doubt
pretty much my entire adult life
as it related to my Christian faith,
but probably about 15 years ago or so
was when the doubts began to get kind of crippling
to the point that engaging in like Bible reading,
as an example, would inflame my doubts, right?
So if I would go to the Bible to have my doubts addressed,
some of the other things that I had read
about these particular things would enter my mind
and it became this thing where the more sensational the story
the more difficult it was for me to believe.
And I feel like the Christmas story
kind of brings together a lot of different elements, right?
So you've got some things that are,
let's just be honest, difficult to believe.
Virgin birth, the idea that there's a star
that is settling over the town of Bethlehem,
that is leading the wise men to the town,
which seems to indicate that the authors
didn't really understand the nature of stars
and how far away they actually are
and how that's not how stars work.
Or maybe it was a special star
that was just happened for this.
Listen, everything that I'm gonna say right now,
which is sort of like my doubts that I have about the story,
I am well aware that there are plenty of evangelical
traditional Christian explanations for all these things.
I'm not discounting those.
I'm just saying that for me,
when I engage with the Christmas story
from a historical perspective
and some of the issues that there are there,
related to like the Herod and the governor of Syria,
Quirinius, or the census and these things that like,
you can kind of call into question
from a historical perspective in the way that they line up,
or the fact that the Christmas story,
the nativity story is kind of added to,
you know, Luke and Matthew,
but it's not in the earliest gospel, the book of Mark.
So it kind of lends itself to this idea
that the legend of Jesus was growing as time went by.
And so they were adding things like,
hey, let's add this story
that shows how he fulfilled prophecy.
Again, this is the secular view of these things.
And I began to see some of those answers
and some of those explanations to those difficult passages,
less as a good answer and more as what felt like
this seems more desperate, right?
This is not satisfying to me.
And so when I would engage with the story,
I would be thinking about all those things.
It's like, I'm thinking about the critical view
of this story, which is not a fun way to engage
with a story, right?
And so Christmas became a time
where I was kind of of two minds, right?
There was some serious cognitive dissonance going on
because there was a real appreciation
for the idea of Christmas
and the idea that God would become one of us
and would make that connection in a way
that I had not seen demonstrated
in any other faith system, right?
And there was all the stuff that went along with it.
And those songs that we sang from that album
that I can't remember, they were incredibly meaningful.
Even in the middle of my severe doubt about these things,
when I would read the story
and these doubts would be inflamed,
I could still move on to singing the song,
singing the hymns, thinking about Jesus,
and it would be very moving and very impactful.
But there was a good number of years there
where the doubts were so strong
that engaging with the story of Christmas
was a bit of a train wreck inside my mind.
Yeah, I can understand what you're saying.
I think in my process, Christmas didn't bring up as much,
but it didn't, you know, it wasn't as difficult
because there was more like the traditions that we had
and the amount of family we had to visit,
it was easier to get distracted.
And I felt like I tended to focus on the expectations
I'd placed on myself to make sure that like,
we were remembering that Jesus is the center of this
and we're doing some things and we do have some,
we have the Advent calendar and we have traditions
that we're doing with the kids.
But it was easy personally, I think,
as there were starting to be doubts
for me just to go into distraction mode
because there was so much else going on anyway,
in terms of gifts and family and food and everything else
that is the secular reasons for the season
that everybody falls back on.
Right.
I definitely remember you talking about albums.
At a certain point when I was, I mean,
our conversations were pretty constant.
And so my, you know, I was more resistant at first
cause I didn't wanna shake things up.
But as I started to come to grips with my own doubts
and my own experience, I remember at Christmas time,
I would listen to Sufjan Stevens Christmas albums.
Like for a couple of years, he would release one every year.
So there's like this four disc box set that as a family,
it's still very much a tradition for us to listen.
This is the album that's playing in our house constantly.
And I would recommend getting it
if you're a fan of Sufjan's earlier stuff.
His stuff now, it's like,
I don't know what you need to be under the influence of.
Well, it just went, it went, it's very electronic.
It went electronic and I'm just not into that.
So this like acoustic homemade,
it feels like four track in his own house,
like playing horns and having people who can't sing
start to sing along with him and like.
Yeah, it was awesome.
It's really awesome.
But I remember like thinking, okay,
if Sufjan, he's singing these Christmas songs
because he's got a Christian faith.
Like, I don't know his story,
but like he's got this faith in Jesus. And I don't know, I'm not gonna put a label on him. I don't know his story, but he's got this faith in Jesus.
And I don't know, I'm not gonna put a label on him.
I don't know what label he applies to himself, if any,
or how that's changed over the years.
But he made, he released meaningful Christmas music
that was meaningful to me.
And I thought this guy, he seems really progressive.
He's an artist, he's cool.
It's like, I think maybe this is my future.
This is maybe, maybe there's something in his relationship
with Christmas and with Jesus that like, I could be like,
I could take a cue from Sufjan Stevens.
It's interesting.
It's like, I'm not gonna read as many books as you.
I'm just gonna start listening to this guy
and start saying if he can.
Well, you know, the thing about music though,
I think this is an interesting point and I agree with it
and relate to it personally because music kind of transcends
the intellectual doubts that you might have, you know,
and you're dealing with this stuff that's kind of up here
in your head space and is this rational sort of battle
that's happening.
Your music connects with your soul in a different way.
And this is why I can still listen, even today,
don't consider myself a Christian,
I can listen to, you know, Be Thou My Vision,
one of my favorite hymns and tear, cry.
You know what I'm saying?
Like, so yeah, there's something that transcends
that mental barrier in music anyway.
So I think that was, and I think it keeps, honestly,
it keeps people around for longer.
You know, there's something about,
there's something about just singing together.
I mean, what other venue do you have in your life
where you go and you get together
with a bunch of like-minded people
and you sing songs that are just the most passionate things
you could possibly imagine?
I mean, that doesn't happen.
Christian's got that one down pretty good.
You know, I mean, the closest thing that I can think of
is when we went to our friend's house
and we did the sing along last year, you know,
oh, you didn't even come to that.
You guys didn't come.
Oh, you totally missed out, man.
Thank you.
But like we just sang, it was like singing together.
I was like, man, singing-
That was a Thanksgiving thing, I think.
Singing together with other people,
it's just something that should happen in more places.
But anyway, I digress.
So there was that period
where there was that cognitive dissonance happening
and it was just like, I can't engage with this,
but I love my family and I still love God
and I'm trying to figure all this stuff out.
And then there was, again, I told the story,
I don't remember the exact year.
It was more, it was after we moved out here
when it became like official,
but still more than several years ago,
where I was like, okay, it's official.
I don't believe this anymore.
Like I cannot honestly call myself a Christian.
I'm not going to pursue this.
I'm not going to engage with this.
I'm not gonna go to church anymore.
You know, it wasn't that clean,
but there was a point in which
that was who I became.
But you still got Christmas rolling around
every single year, right?
And it's weird.
It's weird when you have like,
we've been doing this every year
and it's been just saturated in meaning.
It's been saturated in the most
sort of consequential and important meaning
that it could possibly have.
And now you're just gonna become one of those guys
that's just getting through the Christmas season
on some good tidings from the Christmas movies.
For somebody who's had a really deep spiritual experience,
those Christmas movies, again, Elf, great movie,
doesn't cut it.
If you've had that depth of experience.
Yeah, God is not a character.
Will Ferrell is awesome, but he is not God.
And so it's like, you come to that time
and there's this like, man, the depth of experience
and the depth that this had associated with it
that permeated my life personally,
but also permeated the lives of my wives and children.
Wives and children.
Watch out now.
My wife and children, our family,
that's an easier way to say it, it's not there.
Yeah, I think- How do you engage with that?
I think about the realization
that that children's book that we had,
it's like one year you pull down the Christmas decorations
and the Christmas books and like that book
that Lily memorized
that you read with Lincoln some when he was younger,
that like you realize that like,
you can't find it in the box anymore.
Or I don't remember ever deciding
to not pull it out of the box or not to read it to Lando,
but it's like, yeah, it's just kind of like you realize,
you know what, I, Lando never read this book.
Or, you know, and I remember,
I think I do remember Christy finding it
and reading it to Lando at a young age.
And it was like, it wasn't this communal experience
that it was before because we were
in this transitional time.
And again, it just, it kind of,
the Christmas season brought it into focus.
And, you know, part of it is,
well, you look at all the other,
there's still a lot to be distracted by
and we're still going home for Christmas and, you know,
there's a lot of logistics involved
and it was once we moved out here.
So it didn't feel like this painful moment.
It was just like, all of a sudden you realize
that book's not coming out of the box anymore.
And I do think for me and that still even now,
like I'm at a different phase than I was
that was like everything seemed to be changing
much more rapidly in terms of my worldview
and my belief paradigm
and my allegiance to the evangelical worldview.
You know that you get to a point
and it's like you come to grips with that's not me anymore.
And it's not changing as fast,
but there's still this residual in the back of my mind,
I think, I guess I would just call it,
there's an experience of guilt.
It's like, because there's this question.
It's like when you let, as you put it in your story,
you jump ship, you let go of something,
but you don't have anything specific to grasp onto.
It's like, I'm not, we're not now, you know,
ascribing to some other religious belief system.
Well, and I, And, but so I do think for me,
there is a bit of, yeah, it's like,
oh, did I make the right decision?
Did we as a family make the right decision?
You know, it's like, there's these little questions.
It's like, you know, I've tried my best
to embrace uncertainty
as a positive, but there's still moments of struggle.
And I think it happens more around the holidays
when you realize that like something
that was extremely meaningful and a practice
that you have with your first child
is not part of what happens with your third child and are they missing out?
Have we done them a disservice?
And then I kind of have to re-derive
what brought me to this point.
And also look at our children
and how tremendously fabulous they are
and how proud I am of them
and start to just have this reality check that like, okay,
these feelings of guilt or obligation,
sometimes I think I would describe it as
I'm feeling judged by my former self
because the position I'm in now
and the way that I interact with Christmas
is something that, again, I said earlier,
I would feel, I'd feel sorry for people
that they didn't have the depth of experience that I have.
And now I'm in that position.
Yeah, and I mean, I definitely relate to that.
I mean, I don't, guilt is not really my,
that's not my thing as much.
Oh, it's my thing.
But there is a, I think-
And I'm not blaming it all on evangelicalism either.
It's the link thing, not, it wasn't created by the church.
It was just how-
Exacerbated by it.
Yeah.
I think that the, really what you're getting at
is you're, one of the things you're doing
is you're highlighting the importance of religion, right?
You're highlighting the importance of a spiritual life.
And so, because if that meaning is to be had from something,
if you can find that meaning and that purpose in something,
well, that's one of the reasons that religion exists.
That's one of the really,
that's the main reason that people stick around for it,
even if they don't quite believe it in full, right?
If they have some doubts, they're like,
but the alternative is just, I don't believe anything?
And interesting that you bring up that quote
from my deconstruction story
where I talked about jumping ship
and it was a very dramatic line
and it has been played in many different videos
that critiqued our deconstruction stories.
There's one of my favorites is one,
speaking of Kirk Cameron by Mr. Ray Comfort
who works with Kirk.
And he kind of goes through and breaks down our story
and play some very sentimental music
and almost some like music that's sort of like
impending doom the whole time as we tell our stories
and many things are taken out of context.
It's very entertaining.
But one of the things is that line about,
I jumped ship and I took my wife and my children with me.
And it's just like that people quote, like,
it's so sad he took his wife and his children with me.
I think I regret saying,
it was a little bit of a dramatic thing to say.
I regret saying it because I think the better analogy
is I jumped out of a ship
and there's not another ship like that
that you're jumping into, right?
But it doesn't mean that you have no meaning,
you have no purpose and you have no principles in your life.
Those things are still intact.
It doesn't mean that you're drowning.
Yeah, the source and the philosophical foundation
of those things is coming from a different place
and it may be a place that you as a Christian philosopher
may say is illegitimate, I would disagree.
I'm just saying that like it isn't like I've been swimming
in this ocean of uncertainty and my family's going nuts.
It's like, but that's how it was interpreted.
But I do, I mean, I agree with what you're saying
in the sense that it's like, all right,
you approach this and the puzzle pieces are in place.
Like every time you come around to Christmas,
it's just like, we have a puzzle,
we know where the pieces go, we can tell our kids,
this is how it works.
And then all of a sudden you come to the holiday
and it's like the puzzle can't fit together
in a very satisfying way anymore.
And so you don't-
The central assertion was don't forget what matters most.
That was our experience in phase one.
And then in the doubting phase,
well, now we're talking about phase three now.
We're still in phase three.
Okay, phase three of, you know what?
I haven't replaced that matters most
with something else specifically,
but we're still, you know, we're just getting through this.
And honestly, I'm not suffering.
My family's not suffering.
We're not, it's not a horrible experience.
But you're hearing the echoes of the old link saying-
I'm hearing echoes, yes.
There is no meaning here.
This is pointless.
You know, the things that we would have thought
about people who weren't Christians
before when we were Christians.
And you find yourself in it and you're like,
man, you know, like, I still really love my wife.
I still really love my family.
We stand for very similar things.
We're not different people,
but we don't know how to reconcile this story
in the same way.
And so you find yourself becoming the secular person
that you felt sorry for and you're like,
I get- It's about the food,
the decorations. I'm getting through Christmas
on the accoutrement.
Service and family and love.
But in an effort to transition into stage four,
which is, which I don't like saying stage four
because it sounds like cancer, you know, phase four.
I actually personally, again, this is not prescriptive.
I'm not saying this for anybody else.
This is for me.
I actually do find phase three
to be inadequate for me personally.
So the idea that Christmas is just about those things,
just about the giving and the receiving
and the good tidings and great joy, unrelated to Jesus, just the secular side of things,
just watching Elf or seeing Tim Allen be Santa again,
I do find those things to be inadequate.
Like I didn't want to be stuck at phase three.
In other words, I didn't want to become
a completely non-spiritual person
who was like, that's all just mumbo jumbo
and I'm gonna just build my life on rationality completely
and it's just a natural existence and that's it.
Now, lots of people have done that.
More power to you if that works for you.
For me, and by the way, people have converted
to other religions and then they have this,
so then they have new holidays that they don't have
to come to grips with Christmas on other terms,
they have other holidays that are in place of it
that have depth of meaning that are-
But they're not as good as Christmas.
I'm just kidding.
But you know, something interesting has happened to me.
And I think, I mean, it's been happening
over the past few years, this is not super new,
but when we broke the seal earlier this year,
boy, when we were telling those stories
about our deconstruction, we had no idea
what the hell 2020 was gonna bring.
We had no idea that people were gonna no longer care
about our deconstruction story
as soon as they found out about COVID-19.
Maybe it was a blessing.
I think it was a blessing.
From that perspective.
It's not a blessing for the world by any means.
But we had a really interesting,
I'm using the word interesting a lot
and I hate the word interesting, so I apologize.
We had a unique perspective on the way
that we would approach our past faith
for the bulk of our career, right?
We're kind of like a little bit embarrassment
about how serious we were and how far we went in
and the fact that we were missionaries.
I mean, not necessarily embarrassment,
but like this is gonna be difficult to explain
and I'm gonna have to say where I'm at now.
And so there was almost an avoidance, a secrecy.
I'm sure some of you who've been fans for a long time
could sense that, like, oh, they don't talk about their past.
And I think that it actually influenced the way
that I dealt with it personally.
It inhibited my own personal freedom
to explore spiritual things
because I had such a weird relationship with it
and I was this public figure that had this past
that I kind of couldn't explain
and didn't want to go into the details of,
but when we made the decision to tell the story
in its entirety without apology,
it broke a seal for me personally.
And what it did is it kind of,
it was like something within me got the okay to be like,
all right, you can move on now.
You don't have to be in this place
that's just a guy who used to be a Christian
and doesn't believe that stuff anymore,
and that's who you are.
You can actually move forward to whatever's next for you
from a spiritual perspective.
And one of the things that has happened,
and this is, I don't know where,
I don't know exactly where it's all going spiritually for me
but I said in, when I told my story,
that I had an openness and I did.
I have an openness, I did,
and I do currently have an openness towards spiritual things.
And one of the interesting things that, interesting again,
one of the things that has happened
is sort of a re-engaging with the person of Jesus
in a completely different way.
And that is, you know, I used to think about anything that,
if I go to the Bible and I would read something
that Jesus said, again, I was sort of overwhelmed with,
well, let's bring in the critical lens.
Let's bring in the perspective of the Jesus seminar
onto this text.
That's not a fun way to interact with Jesus, right?
Or a particularly useful way, personally,
when it comes to like your own personal edification.
There's been a couple of good books
that I've read this year that I'm not gonna go into,
but have sort of changed my perspective
on how I can engage with Jesus.
Not as someone who is the,
is God in the flesh,
that is the only way to be reconciled with a vengeful God
who has to punish somebody, you know.
I'm not holding on to any of the old stuff.
But just looking at what Jesus said and did
as a spiritual teacher and being like,
there's a lot there, right?
And even engaging in the story, the Christmas story,
not with a preoccupation about whether or not
it's historically true or based in fact,
but is there a truth there to be gleaned?
Is there something that you and your family
can actually get from interacting with it,
taking it at face value without getting into this game
of trying to figure out whether it's real or not,
which is a little bit ironic,
because if you think about the stories that Jesus,
I mean, first of all, Jesus taught in parable, right?
He taught in story, he told stories, he made analogies.
And the fact that no one is ever recorded in the Bible
as responding to one of the stories that he told with,
but did that really happen?
Okay, yeah.
No one was like, but hold on, hold on.
This thing with the Samaritan, did that really happen?
Did it happen last week?
Did you see it happen?
Because if you didn't see it happen, I don't believe it.
His point was is that truth is not, I think,
truth is not something that is just contained
in this factually historical verifiable vessel, right?
Truth comes in a lot of different forms. And I can listen to, I can watch a movie, right? Truth comes in a lot of different forms.
And I can listen to, I can watch a movie, right?
I can watch a movie that is from beginning to end fiction
and still find truth in it.
And I'm not, listen, I'm not saying, okay,
the only way I can engage with the Christmas story
is by just saying it's a fairy tale and that's it.
But I'm saying that if I quit,
if I turn that part of my brain off,
that is just constantly trying to judge
whether or not Jesus actually said this
or whether or not this actually happened,
whether or not somebody was a virgin and got pregnant.
And I'm just like, let's set those things aside
because I'm not gonna reconcile those things.
I mean, I have a very strong opinion
about some of those things and some very strong doubts,
but is there a story to be heard there?
Is there a lesson to be learned there?
Is there truth within this?
And I think that that is very freeing for me personally.
Does that translate into like something going in a stocking?
I mean, is there a practical application?
There doesn't have to be for like Christmas.
And maybe this is,
maybe my question is revealing about my own issue,
which I can get into, but so maybe it's not a fair question.
Do you even think about it that way?
No, that's not really what I'm.
Are you saying at Christmas time,
you're reflecting on the story,
but you're doing it in a way that it can be edifying to you,
your interaction with Jesus can be edifying for you
as opposed to it being something
that you're trying to judge or tear something down.
Yeah, that.
Because you're either not gonna interact with Jesus
at Christmas time, or you're gonna have
a negative interaction, or now you're trying to say,
I'm gonna have the positive interaction
that I'm able to have.
And I'm actually, I'm at a point where I can have that.
Right.
And that's what I'm gonna have.
Well, and I think some people would say,
guys, this is where the enlightenment screwed things up.
Because if you go back to pre-enlightenment
and pre sort of modern thinking about things
and pre-rational thought about things,
this is how people engaged with the stories of Jesus.
There was not a preoccupation
with whether or not these things happen or not.
It wasn't, there wasn't this tendency to want to verify
and completely wrap your mind around these things,
but there was a spiritual interaction with them.
And I believe that there are still many Christians
who would say, hey guys,
this is what my faith looks like right now.
Yeah.
I guess it's, my old mindset creeps in
because it's like, you know, the way I interacted with it
was God became human in order to save us from ourselves.
Even that, okay.
Right, so when we look at the story of Christmas
from a Christian perspective, you're right.
It's God emptying himself, becoming a baby.
Again, I don't know how this works.
I don't actually believe that's what was happening,
but according to the story, becomes a baby,
becomes sort of the complete 100% God, 100% human
that then is the only sacrifice that can be made
in order to reconcile everyone
who will call on the name of the Lord to God, right?
But isn't there a different way to,
isn't there something else to appreciate
without that having to be true?
For instance, because since you mentioned this exact thing,
because I was thinking about this earlier,
I don't know the nature of God.
I don't necessarily know anyone can understand, grasp,
or know, or talk about in a understandable way
the nature of God.
I think that there are, if there is a God,
there's probably an experience of that God
is somewhat ineffable, meaning you cannot communicate it
in a way that would make sense
because it's happening in a different place
on a different level in a different way
than human language can express.
But the idea that God would want to be so close
and so involved in so much a part of humanity
that he would become one of us is a beautiful concept
that makes me think about the nature of God
in an open and edifying way.
Does that make sense?
It doesn't have to have happened as described
for me to be like that.
In the way, I'm glad we talked about music.
I wasn't, I didn't know this was gonna happen,
but a song resonates with you.
It's there's something about-
On a soul level.
There's something about music that you connect with
and you wouldn't say that song is true
and that song is false, but you would be like,
this song, I feel like I begin to actually resonate
and synchronize with this music
because it connects with my soul and this doesn't.
I feel like that can happen with a story as well.
And so for me, there are elements of that idea
because I mean, if anything,
the concept of God being in everything
and God being available within someone
and the idea, you know, the universe,
the fabric of the universe being whatever you wanna call it,
that's something that's still very intriguing to me
that I wanna be open to and I wanna lean into.
And I feel like I can find that in the story of Christmas.
That's all I'm saying.
I think our former selves would be saying right now,
I mean, you just can't, you can't invent,
you can't just invent the terms
with which you interact with Jesus.
I mean, you're missing, you know, it's with Jesus. I mean, you're missing the point.
You're just inventing a new way to interact with Jesus
that is just picking and choosing what you want
that's gonna be inspirational for you.
I think that's what our former selves would have said.
Of course that's what I would have said.
But I don't think,
and it doesn't matter what anybody's saying.
I think for you, you're making a decision,
because I do think the decision has been,
is there gonna be any interaction with Jesus?
Or am I just gonna move on and say that was in my past?
Having, being spiritually open,
I think is, I hear, that's what I see
in what you're saying that like you're choosing
to approach Jesus in a way that you can.
And who is anybody to argue with that?
Even if they think you may be missing the point
or doing it wrong.
Well, think about close encounters of the third kind.
Let's keep going with this music thing.
I'm really glad you brought it up because,
I don't know if you've seen the movie.
Seen the movie?
I've heard about it.
I've seen images from it.
So the way that they communicate
with the alien beings is in the form of music, because music, again,
represents this ineffable thing that's happening
on a different level of consciousness,
that the language barrier between whatever they would speak
and whatever we would speak can't,
we find music and that's how we communicate, right?
I think that's a beautiful picture
because I do wanna address the criticism
that our former selves would make.
Of course, my former self would be like,
"'Dude, you're just a new age bullshitter
"'that just thinks whatever he wants to.'"
And there is absolutely nothing that I can say
to convince that person who thinks that, that that's not what's happening.
But what I would tell my former self is that I think
that there is a preoccupation with categorizing
and systematizing the deepest truths of the universe
in a way to make them understandable and applicable.
And there is some merit in that.
But what I'm trying to be open to is the idea
that whatever God is can be something that I can experience
without having to turn around and explain it and categorize it
and be able to recreate it and package it and write it down
and speak it to someone else.
And I think that,
ironically, I think that some of the things that Jesus said
when you kind of come to some of the things that he said
from a fresh perspective,
seemed to indicate that he was hinting
at some of those things,
along with a lot of other religious leaders
who've lived and said similar things, the Buddha being one.
Ultimately, what I'm saying is I have found it to be
especially freeing to take that post enlightenment,
human has to figure everything out hat off
and be like, what is it like to engage with God
in the way that I would engage with the ocean?
You know, I don't go into the ocean and ride a wave
and preoccupy myself with the physics of what's happening.
I just do it.
I just experience it, right?
And I think if there is a God,
that God is probably like that.
And so when I think about the Christmas story,
yes, it is something that somebody wrote down
2000 years ago.
Yes, it is something that somebody wrote down 2000 years ago. Yes, it is something that does get down
into some very particular truths about things.
But what is it like to read a story
that has that kind of significance
and that kind of staying power
and read it from a fresh perspective
with taking that hat off?
What kind of new things will you see?
Well, one thing you'll see is, you know, okay,
I'm looking at Mary and Joseph in a different way.
I'm thinking about the fact that this is a pregnant woman
who isn't married, who is seeking refuge.
How relevant is that in the world that we're in right now?
That draws out my empathy, not only for them,
but for people who might be currently in our world,
in our society, dealing with the same things.
And I don't have to just focus on the,
but is this the son of God, period?
Does that make sense?
Yeah. I can find new things in it.
Yeah, so I definitely see how,
as you described this phase for you,
that it's how you're practically approaching
the spiritual openness that we both talked about
at the end of our stories.
So I appreciate hearing it as it's food for thought for me,
as I continue to aim for spiritual openness myself,
because that is important to me.
I think when you describe your tendency
to wanna judge the Bible
and like going against that tendency
in order to move towards openness
and a spiritual experience.
For me, I think the task that I'm working with is,
it's judgment as well, but it's a judgment on myself.
And I, you know, I'm on a journey.
I think that's where I'm at in my journey.
I think a lot of it comes up at Christmas
that I've alluded to that like,
it's trying to move past self judgment
because that's how I, that was my interaction,
a lot of my interaction with how I came up, right?
So it's shedding that judgment
so that I can actually have an open
and honest spiritual pursuit.
And I'll leave it at that at this point,
but I think that that's where I'm at.
Again, I'm very grateful to be where I'm at.
I'm very, I'm happy to be on this journey. I'm very grateful to be where I'm at. I'm very, I'm happy to be on this journey.
I'm not, I don't feel that I'm flailing or struggling.
I don't have a tremendous amount of,
I'm not battling with doubt, you know,
just because those questions come up
around Christmas time again.
I would not characterize it that way.
But it's, you know, I'm constant,
I want to be answering the question
and continuing to make positive progress
in my spiritual journey.
And so part of that is shedding the self judgment
and understanding when that comes into play
and kind of putting that in its place.
Yeah, I mean, it's not easy.
I don't have the same exact hangups,
but it's not easy for me, right?
Because I feel like I stagnated for quite some time.
And it's weird that it took us talking about it
for me to be like,
hey, I can pick up a Richard Rohr book, you know,
and read it and know that, you know,
we don't exactly agree on everything,
but the way he talks about Jesus is, again, it resonates.
And if I remove that judgment that, okay, well,
but I gotta figure out how this lines up with this system.
No, I don't, I don't have to figure that out.
And who is God?
Who am I to think that God has to be categorized
or even understood?
And so, I don't know.
I don't, I can't,
I can't turn around and tell you what,
and you being anyone listening,
what you should do because I can't tell me what I should do.
It's a disposition, right?
It's a leaning in an openness more so than it is a,
this is the prescribed path.
And it just feels very different.
And I'm sorry if when I get into it,
the things I say don't make sense,
but I kind of feel like that's the point, right?
The closer I get to it, the more I can't talk about it.
Okay, well, and we don't have to talk about it anymore.
So, I mean, if that's the phase, that's it,
then we've gone through them.
Maybe there's another phase.
Who knows, man, phase five.
Okay, let us know what- You got a recommendation?
I do.
Before we wrap that conversation up though,
just let us know your experience
in whatever phase you're currently in.
Hashtag Ear Biscuits.
How you think about Christmas and the holidays.
I do have a rec,
and I may have talked about this at some point,
but the website that I use for a lot of my meat tips,
amazingribs.com.
It's not really a left term because it goes back to,
I really wanna do like a standing rib roast
because I think that's a great-
Amazingribs.com, that's Meathead.
It's Meathead.
Meathead Goldwyn, I guess is his name.
And this dude is just the authority
when it comes to barbecue.
And again, it's amazing ribs,
because he started, I guess,
with telling people how to make ribs,
but it runs the gamut.
You want to know how to smoke, bake, brine a turkey,
whatever, any kind of piece of meat,
you want to know exactly how you should do it
from a scientific standpoint.
I mean, he has like a chemist or somebody
that he consults, like a local professor
who goes into the details of like, this is a myth,
you don't need to do this, but you do need to do this,
and here's why you need to do it.
And so for someone who wants to appreciate
sort of the technical side of making Mary with meat,
it's a lifesaver and he has incredible recipes
and I'm hoping to follow at least one of them for Christmas
and you will be the receiver of that bounty.
Yes.
AmazingRibs.com. Happy holidays.
Merry Christmas. We'll speak at you next week.
Merry Christmas. Merry Christmas.