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The Truth of Santa « The Thinking Housewife
The Thinking Housewife
 

The Truth of Santa

December 18, 2016

 

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THE story of Santa, cheapened every day in a thousand and one ways by a materialistic culture, is like all beautiful stories. It is both true and false. We pretend it’s true for children so that they know that it is true — in other senses but the literal one.

As G.K. Chesterton wrote:

Father Christmas is not an allegory of snow and holly; he is not merely the stuff called snow afterwards artificially given a human form, like a snow man. He is something that gives a new meaning to the white world and the evergreens, so that the snow itself seems to be warm rather than cold. The test -therefore is purely imaginative. But imaginative does not mean imaginary. It does not follow that it is all what the moderns call subjective, when they mean false. I Every true artist does feel, consciously or unconsciously, that he is touching transcendental truths; that his images are shadows of things seen through the veil. In other words, the natural mystic does know that there is something there; something behind the clouds or within the trees; but he believes that the pursuit of beauty is the way to find it; that imagination is a sort of incantation that can call it up.

[G.K. Chesterton, The Everlasting Man; Dodd, Mead and Company, 1925; Ignatius Press edition, p. 105]

See more on telling children about Santa in this previous discussion here. 

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