“Jesters, 
      Christmas, and Jesus” 
      
Fr. Tony’s Mid-week Message 
December 20, 2013 
The English tradition of having Mummers’ Plays or 
      Pantomimes as part of their Christmas celebrations comes from the idea 
      that making fun of our solemnities and normal social order is a key in 
      finding the liberation of the soul we seek in our mid-winter 
      festivals.  It is part of a 
      tradition that often includes the crowning a “Lord of Misrule” and turning 
      the social order on its head, if only for a single night of partying.  A very old form of the Christmas 
      Mummer’s Play tells the story of St. George fighting the Dragon in terms 
      that express our hope in darkest winter for the return of Light and 
      Warmth. “Like winter, I must die,” George says after being dealt a deadly 
      blow by the Dragon, “But rise again as Spring.”    We are going to try to put on a 
      short, impromptu version of St. George’s Play at coffee hour after the 10 
      a.m. Mass on Sunday.  
Sociologist Harvey Cox wrote, “Like the jester, Christ 
      defies custom and scorns crowned heads.  Like a wandering troubadour, he 
      has no place to lay his head.  
      Like a clown in the circus parade, he satirizes existing authority 
      by riding into town replete with regal pageantry when he had no earthly 
      power.  Like a minstrel, he 
      frequents dinners and parties.  
      At the end, he is consumed by his enemies in a mocking caricature 
      of royal paraphernalia.  He is 
      crucified amid snickers and taunts with a sign over his head that lampoons 
      his laughable claim.”   
      
Let us pray.  
       
“Lord, help us live so foolishly for you that we draw 
      onlookers and those who would deride us.  And while they watch and mock, 
      change all our hearts that we might learn to laugh at the foolishness this 
      world calls normal and run away from the circus that is ‘real life’.  Amen.”   
(Prayer from Common Prayer: A Liturgy for Ordinary 
      Radicals, p. 73) 


 
 

 
 
 
 
 
 

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