The fearful calm before Black Friday. Photo: Flicker/by Mahat Tattva |
"Today’s economic mechanisms promote inordinate
consumption, yet it is evident that unbridled consumerism combined with
inequality proves doubly damaging to the social fabric." Pope Francis. Evangelii Gaudium, 60.
With those of us in the States recovering from or critiquing the often beastly shopping phenomenon called “Black Friday,” it's a good time to purge the Christmas gift-giving season from its gluttonous levels of eco- and soul-damaging consumption.
And so as an antidote to the modern madness of Christmas
shopping, here are seven ways we can check off our shopping lists and take back the meaning of Christmas.
Photo: Flicker/by Sam, W
|
7. Shop local. Some of the most unique and meaningful
gifts—and certainly the most helpful to your community's economy—come from local
artisans, shops, and farms. Whether you know them or not, your neighbors own these small businesses, and that often means they don’t need much gas to transport their goods to their shop. Sure,
not everything made in locally owned retail stores is made nearby, but often it is
and you should search it out. Rather than ordering gifts the impersonal way from an online
behemoth—who has to fly whatever it is to your door after it has probably
already made a trip from China—take some time to explore what’s happening in
nearby village centers and artist communities. Make a day of it. Get to know the
owners. Pet their dogs (local stores always seem to have a dog or cat somewhere by the register) and have a free cookie (small shops often give away cookies, too,
and if they don’t the really should). When you shop at local stores that sell local wares, you support your community and you ease up on the pollution that comes from far too much packaging,
shipping, and perhaps even less than ideal working conditions to justify those
advertised low, low prices at those big box stores.
[There is an exception here: If you have a Hobby Lobby in
your community, shop there, too. In fact, shop there often. The company is going toe-to-toe with the United States HHS mandate, the Obamacare provision
that requires Catholics to violate their conscience by providing health care
coverage that pays for abortions, artificial contraceptives, and the like. The
owners of Hobby Lobby are doing Christians a great service. They need our
support.]
6. Shop eco-friendly. Whether you’re shopping in family
owned stores, mega malls, or online, look for gifts that are either made from
recycled goods or that support and/or are made by eco-friendly companies. There
are a number of outlets that specialize in gifts that are organically made (here and here for
instance); made from recycled goods (here and here); or that help homeowners
live with the environment in mind (here and here). Now of course these links are not meant as endorsements for everything sold at the referenced sites, but they offer places to start your own searches. And if you find other eco-retailers
that you’re happy with, please add them to the comment section below.
5. Encourage learning. A similar option is books (from you local bookstore, of course). Three of my favorites about faith and nature are Charlie Camosay’s For Love of
Animals; Tobias Winright’s Green
Discipleship; and Jame
Schaefer’s Theological Foundations for Environmental Ethics: Reconstructing
Patristic and Medieval Concepts. A full array of additional ideas—from music to books to Catholic publications to resources on spiritual growth—are at RCSpiritualdirection.com. Kudos to Dan Burke who assembled this helpful list.
4. Buy from Bethlehem. Another option is to buy
from the artists in Bethlehem, who use fair trade practices and local scraps of
olive wood to make beautiful Nativity Scenes and other religious and artistic
goods. Yes, I know—there’s a bit of a carbon-loading issue when you factor in
the shipping. But many of the local artisans are Christians living in harsh
economic conditions. They truly need our support. Where to look? The Bethlehem Fair Trade Artisans are wonderful to work with and use eco-friendly
fair-trade practices. (Last year I gave small olive wood Nativity Scenes
from the BFTA to the volunteer teachers in my Confirmation program. They loved
them. So will the people you give them to.) You can also find similar goods on
eBay and Amazon.
3. Give the gift of time: Members of an incarnational
faith should naturally want to spend time with the people we love. Life makes
this difficult, for sure. That's what makes the gift of time so special. So get some of your favorite Christmas cards (made from recycled paper, of course) and give a hand-written gift certificate for a movie
and dinner, or a trip to a museum exhibit coming this spring, or the
philharmonic, or a night for beer and jazz. You get the picture. And they’ll
get the best gift you could give: your time and attention, your listening and appreciation. When all is said and done, this sort of gift gives wonderful memories.
2. Pray together. Buck the gift-giving conventions and
have Masses said for deceased loved ones of the person you’re giving the gift
to. You’ll not only be offering a gift of infinite meaning—a Eucharistic
sacrifice for the souls of the dead—but you may also help someone return to
Mass. The pray-as-gift option comes in other forms, too: Books on prayer and
the lives of the saints make good options, as do Rosaries (locally made are a
nice touch). You might even give four of five or ten nights of homemade
dinners at your kitchen table that includes bible study—not to worry, if you’re not
comfortable leading a conversation on scripture, you can find someone qualified that can. You could also
alternate the subjects of conversation between the bible and teaching texts
from a few of the most influential pontiffs in the history of the Church—John
Paul II, Benedict XVI, and now Francis. After all, considering what we’re all
celebrating at Christmas, these last options seem to make the most sense—and
they use the least amount of our planet’s resources. This seems to me like a
combination that will certainly bring joy to the world.
Before we get to Number 1, please share other ideas in
the comments. We all need to rethink how we spend these precious weeks of
Advent and how we celebrate the great feast of Christmas. If we do, maybe
the wider world will watch joyful, eco-friendly Catholics give differently and
pray more. Perhaps what they see will encourage them to ask questions, pray, or attend a Mass for the
first time in years. In other words, all this could become a kind
of evangelization—and
that would be Number 1, the seventh idea and the greatest gift of all: offering God's grace and the Good News of Jesus Christ.
Thanks, Bill! I like the "Shop Local." Today I went to a village craft fair in the Northern Catskills, picked up a couple of gifts AND thereby supported the artisans who were selling there. Great feeling.
ReplyDelete