Well, I am within the 12 Days of Christmas, so I don’t consider this article late (by the way, don’t forget the Epiphany House Blessing!). My bride and I both spring from good ethnic stock–she, a Chicago Polack; I, a Cleveland Slovenian. But through the strange twists and turns of Providence (and decisions that I can only blame on her idiot husband), we have found ourselves living in the ever-frigid Twin Cities. But I digress.
As is our custom every Christmas (and Easter), we place calls to the old family-run Slovenian meat markets in Cleveland to provide us with our Christmas fare–klobase (kielbasa) and zelodec.
Why would I go through all the trouble to have sausage sent from the hometown? Why can’t I simply go to a number of the very fine meat markets here in town? As I have observed elsewhere, there is something special about feasting and one’s own home: we recall the smell of grandma’s cooking; we recall a good dinner with good wine and good conversation especially among family. This takes on an even more poignant and mystical meaning when we couple it to the liturgical calendar. Christmas is one of those feasts that recalls one to his roots. It is not the same, or fitting, unless one celebrates in the manner that his father and grandfather celebrated. This might mean a particular rhythm of the day, particular customs, and particular food. In my case it means particular Slovenian sausage made from Raddell’s on East 152nd Street and from Azman’s on St. Clair Avenue, both in Cleveland.
My colleague and friend, John B. Manos, has never tired of repeating the importance of the cultural expressions of the faith in this manner. Far from detracting from doctrine and practice, these traditions and customs support it and may be the very thing that brings back our straying friends and family to the bosom of Mother Church:
To be fair, most of these apologist-types are good folks wanting to spread the faith and do the right thing, but it is painfully obvious that they were deprived of a rich, traditional, expression of Catholicism which brought forth the mystical through the ordinary and which is maintained through memory–both cultural and personal. They were probably not reared on the rhythm of yearly ravioli dinners in honor of St. Anthony; and, more likely than not, they grew up eating bland and uniform Hillshire Farms “sausage” rather than enjoying the rich, traditional taste of old world klobase made by the time-honored and traditional methods practiced by Raddell or Azman.
Pope Benedict XVI spoke of memory and these liturgical feasts and holidays and their celebration:
These events, of such great significance for mankind, which are preserved and opened up by faith’s calendar, are intended to become personal memories of our own life history through the celebration of holy seasons by means of liturgy and custom. Our personal memories are nourished by mankind’s great memories; in turn, it is only by translating them into personal terms that these great memories are kept alive. (Pope Benedict XVI, Seek That Which is Above, Ignatius 2007, p 27.)
There is so much more to living the faith than the sterility put forth by the fun-killers, be they of the liberal or conservative variety. These traditions and customs are aids to practicing charity and hence, a mystery. Our personal memories of Christmas–the smells, the (jingle) bells, the tastes, the familiar carols, the klobase, the fact that an ordinary thing like a fireplace turns into an extraordinary entrance through which gifts come–and the continued maintenance and practice of these traditions, all contribute to a very personal relationship with the Child who was born in the middle of the night and the mystery of loving one another. Just as Love was born on this day, He is born anew every year in each of us. Indeed, “God became man that man might become God.”
May our children never stray from Christ, the love of Christmas. But if they do, please God, may the traditions we maintain and practice be a spur to their return to the Church. May the remembrance and taste for klobase and zelodec in the middle of the night, and the excitement of looking at the charred stones of the fireplace–seeing in them a mystical passageway to a joyful gift-giver, recall for them also Him who came silently into world over 2,000 years ago, who has never left, and is the greatest gift of all. Merry Christmas!
This article, Sausages, Fireplaces, and The Mystery of Christmas Traditions is a post from The Bellarmine Forum.
https://bellarmineforum.org/sausages-fireplaces-and-the-mystery-of-christmas-traditions/
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