Linus' Small Action Make a Powerful Point in A Charlie Brown Christmas
Long time
readers may have noticed that I occasionally mention Charlie Brown in these
pages. I do so because I love Peanuts. Charlie Brown remains in my opinion the
hallmark of what makes a great comic strip. In fact, I have decorated my office with
several choice items of Christmas memorabilia.
What makes
Peanuts so special? I think that a lot could be said about why Peanuts is so
appealing to so many people. For one thing it really does capture the innocence
of youth – or, at least, the innocence that society formerly associated with
youth; back in the days before children decided that being cool trumped
learning to be an adult. The last I can recall, Charlie Brown, Lucy, Linus and
the gang never showed any real concern about being gunned down at school,
buying drugs or engaging in any number of other activities that seem to be
bogging down our youth. Charlie Brown was concerned about winning the baseball
game (which he finally did), kicking the football (which I cannot recall him
doing) and impressing (or, at least, meeting) the little red-haired girl.
Wouldn’t it be great if those were the things that today’s kids were
confronting?
Another thing
that makes Peanuts special is its charm. There is something about Snoopy and
the gang that just strikes a fancy in us. It is attractive. Millions of people
read the comic daily, even though new strips stopped being produced shortly
before Charles Schultz, the author, died several years ago. The new Peanuts movie has grossed $126 million dollars on the domestic market as of the writing
of this post, and that amount does not include money generated from the sales
of Peanuts related merchandise. When the movie is released on DVD, it will
undoubtedly up its profits tremendously. Why are people going to see this
movie? Largely because there is simply something likeable about the innocence
and cleanliness of the Peanuts world.
Another large
attraction about Peanuts is the Christian angle. For some, I know they will
object that the Christian element that is always below the surface of the
Peanuts strips (but which comes to the fore occasionally) should be attractive, but it is very definitely
part of the attraction of the strip to many, many people. One place that the
Peanuts commitment to a Christian worldview comes to the fore at this time of year
is, of course, Linus’ quotation of Luke 2 in A Charlie Brown Christmas (which
is celebrating its 50th Anniversary this year). For those of you sentimentalists out there,
you can re-live Linus’ charming (there’s that word again) recitation of Luke
2:8-14 here: Linus quoting Luke 2.
To some, Linus
quoting Luke is too much. When W.R. Castle Elementary School in Johnson County,
Kentucky decided to have the students do A Charlie Brown Christmas as their
school play, the school found the quoting of Luke 2:8-14 as being a little too
much for the students, and acted to remove the offending verses from the play.
Of course, this leaves one to wonder what they filled in for the missing
portion of the story. Recall, Linus responds to Charlie Brown’s plaintive cry
for someone to explain what Christmas is all about. Linus says, “I can tell you
what Christmas is about, Charlie Brown,” then recites Luke 2. Without the Luke
2 passage, the entire story becomes meaningless. (Interestingly, when the
children doing the play came to the lines from Luke, some members of the audience jumped in and recited the missing passages.)
Even
President Obama seems to have missed this portion of A Charlie Brown Christmas.
In the 50th Anniversary episode, President Obama proclaimed that the
special teaches that “tiny trees just need a little love, and on this holiday
we celebrate peace on earth, goodwill to all.” Well, that’s not quite what I get out of A Charlie
Brown Christmas, but then I suppose it is possible that President Obama may
have watched the W.R. Castle Elementary School version of the play which, by
omitting Luke 2, could lead someone to conclude that the special is, in fact,
about loving tiny trees.
This year,
however, Jason Soroski over at “The Way I See It” published a piece about A
Charlie Brown Christmas that made an observation that I had personally never
noticed. The blogpost, entitled “Just Drop the Blanket”, points out that during
the reading of the Luke 2 passage, Linus drops his blanket to complete the
recitation. Linus? Dropping his beloved security
blanket? Really? Yes, as the picture above, which is taken from the Christmas special, shows, Linus did indeed drop his blanket while telling Charlie Brown the true meaning of Christmas. Jason notes,
Looking
at it now, it is pretty clear what Charles Schulz was saying through this, and
it’s so simple it’s brilliant.
The
birth of Jesus separates us from our fears.
The
birth of Jesus frees us from the habits we are unable (or unwilling) to break
ourselves.
The
birth of Jesus allows us to simply drop the false security we have been
grasping so tightly, and learn to trust and cling to Him instead.
The
world of 2015 can be a scary place, and most of us find ourselves grasping to
something temporal for security, whatever that thing may be. Essentially, 2015
is a world in which it is very difficult for us to “fear not”.
But
in the midst of fear and insecurity, this simple cartoon image from 1965
continues to live on as an inspiration for us to seek true peace and true
security in the one place it has always been and can always still be found.
I am not as
convinced as Jason that Linus' dropping of his blanket was intentional given that Linus is shown to be
holding the blanket again near the end of the recitation (but then is also
shown picking up the blanket when he completes the passage). But regardless of
intent, the meaning that Jason derived from the gesture is true. Jesus came to take our burdens from us.
With Christmas, we need fear nothing because the worse that anyone can do is
kill us. What they cannot do is take away our eternal salvation that is brought
to us through the gift of God in the manger.
With Christ's coming in the flesh, we don’t need
a security blanket. We just need and cling to God. And that is another message
of A Charlie Brown Christmas that is just below the surface.
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