Christmas Is A Valuable Brand Name

December 16, 2012

Daily, we are inundated with brand names in practically every area of our lives. Brand names are so important that they are legally protected by trademark registration with our government. Corporations and individuals sue other individuals or corporations for infringement upon their product names and logos. Brand name owners take every aspect related to the name of their product seriously.

The Bible also tells us the importance of a name: “A good name is rather to be chosen than great riches” (Proverbs 22:1), and, “A good name is better than precious ointment” (Ecclesiastes 7:1). The importance of a name is vested in the name that is above all other names – the most famous name in the universe: “For there is none other name under heaven given among men whereby we must be saved – other than the name of Jesus”(Acts 4:12). Of all the names given to brands, there is no name nor brand “under the heavens” more important than the name of Jesus. The recognition of His miraculous arrival on earth is represented by the Nativity logo, and the celebration of the Nativity is the Christian cultural brand called Christmas. Jesus is the name, the Nativity the logo and Christmas the brand.

The Christmas brand is on products and activities that Christians have created over centuries, in carrying out their Christmas rituals. They are byproducts of Christian people practicing their Christmas culture. The list is long: Christmas trees, Christmas wreathes, Christmas ornaments, Christmas cookies, Christmas holly, Christmas candles, Christmas carols, Christmas charities, Christmas cookies, Christmas candy, Christmas cards, Christmas plays, Christmas concerts, Christmas shopping, Christmas presents,  Christmas dinner and so on. These are Christian creations that should be jealously guarded and vigorously protected, as integral to the workings of Christian culture. They are not byproducts of “holiday.”

There is no such thing as “a secular Christmas.” Christmas trees, holly, poinsettias and so forth are all created by or adopted by Christians for use in the cultural implementation of Christmas. Christians should assert cultural authority and not allow advertisers and media execs to hijack sacred Christmas music, customs, symbols and images in the name of so-called “inclusion,” nor allow them to profanely hawk their Christmas products by desecrating Christmas with profane, salacious imagery. Nor should Christians allow all things with the Christmas brand to be renamed “holiday.” These are Christian creations that should be jealously guarded and vigorously protected as integral to the workings of Christian culture and Christian rituals.

The western world, also known as Christendom, is saturated with the practice of regional Christmas Advent traditions. The countless products and services created and provided to meet the demands of Christians celebrating Christmas drives a huge economic engine that positively affects the economy of wherever it is enthusiastically observed. In 2009, for example, more than 2,500 Christmas markets opened across Germany, producing 188,000 jobs, with estimated generated revenues between 3 billion and 5 billion euros. Munich officials estimated that the city’s Marienplatz market has pumped 175 billion euros into their local economy.

America’s Christmas economy is an even bigger deal: 2007 Pre-Christmas sales: $566.3 billion (pre-recession); 2009 Pre-Christmas sales: $437 billion; 2010 Pre-Christmas sales: $584.3 billion. These numbers verify that Christmas is a critical component of the American economy. These numbers reveal that Christians are an incredibly powerful market that should demand that manufacturers, advertisers, retailers and service providers respect the sacred nature of Christmas Advent and restrain themselves from attempting to  turn it into an “inclusive” godless “holiday”,  salacious entertainment, or a retailer’s degrading sideshow.

As Christmas Day approaches, Christian families across the nation are embracing the exquisite beauty and awesome message that the celebration of the birth of Jesus Christ brings. We shall worship our Emmanuel – Our God With Us. As Christians, in a land bountifully blessed by our Lord. May the joy of the Lord shower down upon everyone this 2012 Christmas season. I, the Christian Christmas Lady, wish one and all the merriest Christmas possible and a prosperous New Year!



Brenda J. Verner is a nationally known media analyst a former talk, radio and cable television host and lecturer at scores of the nation’s most prestigious universities. She is the author of 101 Ways To Have A Christian Christmas.



We Need An Extra Large Dose of Christmas Cheer

November 30, 2012

   

As we open the 2012 Christmas season, Americans of every stripe are all but spiritually exhausted. Many are experiencing political fatigue, financial instability, grief for the victims of hurricane Sandy, and sadness at the specter of the continuing moral decline of the American public square, documented daily on American media outlets. A  sense of anxiety and foreboding has wafted across our great nation.

This Christmas season, We The People are in particular need of an extra large dose of Christmas cheer. We, the Christian majority, do indeed have reasons for optimism. We have reasons for merriment. Our traditional Christian winter rituals of Thanksgiving, Christmas Advent and the celebration of the New Year; are a string of festivals designed to annually spread happiness and joy. The highlight of which is the ushering in the Christmas Spirit – which is a holy aura that emanates from our collective heart-felt celebrations of the birth of Our Dear Lord, Jesus Christ.

“Joy to the World, the Lord Is Come!” If this Advent season each of us would be especially mindful to embrace the joy embodied in every act of Christmas, and to foster spreading the Spirit of Christmas, we will create the perfect antidote to our national doldrums. Every one of us should remind ourselves that we place our faith in the almighty, omnipotent, everlasting God and Creator of the Universe. He is the living God who is the author of our salvation, the source of our hope and the deliverer of our dreams. These contemplations will generate gratefulness in our hearts; and they will well up in each of us a reservoir of good-will and “glad tidings” that will inadvertently spill over into the lives of others. A Merry Christmas for all of us, resides within each of us.

For those of us who are mindful this Advent season, every “Merry Christmas” uttered in our presence will be particularly pleasing to our ears. Each “Merry Christmas” we personally utter will have added resonance and sincerity. This year, when we place a higher value on our Christmas experiences, our hearts will embrace and cherish the sights, sounds and familiar smells of our Christmas traditions:
the sounds of Christmas carols
the sweet sight of children acting out their Nativity plays
the wonderful smells of delicacies being prepared for Christmas gatherings
the sight of this year’s Christmas cards carefully displayed for all to see
the awesome hush of Christmas Eve church service
the excitement that wrapped Christmas presents give
the sounds of laughter that happy hearts make.

For those of us who turn away from “the troubles of the world,” and completely immerse ourselves in the splendor that this 2012 Holy Season offers, we will indeed receive the extra large dose of Christmas cheer we sorely need, and in the process become abundant dispensers of The Christmas Spirit, “…first at home, and then abroad.”

I, Brenda Verner – the Christian Christmas Lady, wish each and everyone a wonderful 2012 Advent, and encourage you to Christmas shop with Christian merchants.

Brenda J. Verner is a media analyst, a curator of popular culture artifacts, and a dynamic public speaker who has lectured at this nation’s most prestigious colleges and universities — Harvard, Princeton, Yale, Columbia, Brown, MIT and University of Virginia, among scores of other institutions. She is known as The Christian Christmas Lady, and is the author of the book 101 Ways To Have A Christian Christmas.