Merry Christmas, Chreasters

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WASHINGTON - Christmas remains wondrous, but it arrives at a difficult moment for Christianity in the United States.

We still see Christmas trees strapped to the tops of cars, neighbors lighting up their homes and kids getting as excited as ever. And the churches will be unusually full. This last point is revealing: A relative decline of religious observance has brought forth the "Chreasters," Christians who attend services only on Christmas and Easter.

The Chreasters' participation on special days is often written off as little more than a gush of sentiment inspired by warm childhood memories or an affection for the Christmas story and the songs and ceremonies we have developed around it.

But these twice-a-year visitors deserve our attention and, I'd argue, our respect. While they do teach us a good deal about Christianity's challenges in our time, their semiannual presence is also testimony to the enduring hunger for the experience of the sacred.

Organized Christianity's problems are obvious. Consider that the most widely discussed and fastest-growing religious group in the country is not, strictly speaking, a religious group at all. The "nones" are the people who tell pollsters that they are not formally affiliated with any religious tradition. Dan Cox, a scholar who is writing a book on the nones, points to changes in family life, the prevalence of divorce and the rising number of religiously blended families as disrupting organized religion's traditional transmission lines.

All this culminates in the increasingly popular view that it is perfectly possible to live a rich spiritual life without becoming entangled in the complicated and compromised structures of churches and denominations.

What the theologian Gabriel Vahanian observed decades ago in his influential book "The Death of God" explains the larger context: "Christianity has long since ceased to be coextensive with our culture," he wrote, and "our age is post-Christian both theologically and culturally."

The Chreasters, with their thin attachments to religious tradition, might be fairly viewed as a product of this transformation. But if they have simply chucked the whole thing, why do they keep coming back?

The great sociologist of religion Peter Berger offers a clue in "A Rumor of Angels," his 1969 book about the persistence of faith in the face of rapid secularization. The Chreasters reflect the stubborn refusal of human beings to give up on the transcendent. As the Christian writer Joseph Bottum put it last week in the (sadly) final issue of The Weekly Standard, Christmas sketches "a picture of a cosmos capable of love." Even doubters and tepid believers would rather not abandon the possibility that this very large claim is true.

The biblical scholar and former Anglican Bishop N.T. Wright sees "the longing for justice, the quest for spirituality, the hunger for relationships and the delight in beauty" as human aspirations beyond the material that can be heard as "echoes of a voice" pointing toward God.

Of course, non-believers revere justice, relationships and beauty, too. But my hunch is that Chreasters show up twice a year because some part of them is in rebellion against a society defined solely by self-interest and calculation, by the visible, the measurable and the tangible. They have an intimation that the world is made up, in the words of the Nicene Creed, of both the "seen and unseen."

I am, perhaps, risking a sin, common among those who write columns, by overanalyzing the Chreasters. Maybe most do show up mainly for the music and the memories. But the regulars would do well to cut them some slack. In a reading often used at Christmas services, John's Gospel tells us that "the light shines in the darkness and the darkness has not overcome it." In seeking and celebrating that light, we should stand in solidarity.

E.J. Dionne writes about politics in a twice-weekly column for The Washington Post. He is a government professor at Georgetown University, a senior fellow in governance studies at the Brookings Institution and a frequent commentator on politics for National Public Radio and MSNBC.

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