It’s the most wonderful time of the year for watching Christmas classics on TV. / Shutterstock
CNA Staff, Dec 20, 2021 / 14:14 pm (CNA).
Christmastime is upon us. In the spirit of the holiday, the writers and editors of CNA would like to share some of their favorite Christmas movies — and where you can find them. Merry Christmas and happy viewing!
The Muppet Christmas Carol
Several serious-minded movie critics have spoken about this winsome 1992 adaptation of Charles Dickens’ timeless Christmas story in the same breath as “Casablanca” and “Citizen Kane.” To be clear, all of those critics happen to be members of my immediate family. But still. Academy Award-winner Michael Caine (Ebenezer Scrooge) deserved another Oscar for being such a good sport in allowing a bunch of adorable puppets to upstage him in every scene of this family-friendly movie. Gonzo (as Dickens, narrating the tale) and Rizzo the Rat (his sidekick) account for most of the best one-liners and sight gags (Rizzo: Boy, that’s scary stuff! Should we be worried about the kids in the audience? Gonzo: Nah, it’s all right. This is culture!) You’ll love the song-and-dance number, at turns spooky and hilarious, by Statler and Waldorf, as the ghosts of Scrooge’s former partners, Jacob and Robert Marley (Robert Marley: More gravy than of grave? Jacob Marley: What a terrible pun. Where do you get those jokes?) Available on Amazon Prime, Disney+. (Rated G)
— Shannon Mullen, Editor-in-Chief
Merry Christmas (originally Joyeux Noël)
This is a very moving account of the famous “Christmas Truce” of 1914 in the French-German trenches during World War I. The French movie was released in 2005, and it is a tearjerker, so bring your tissues. Available in English on Apple TV and Google Play.
— Alejandro Bermudez, Executive Director, ACI Prensa and CNA
Elf
No matter how many times you watch this fish-out-of-water comedy, it will still make you laugh. While the movie is not overtly religious, the eponymous character, Buddy (Will Ferrell), is a believer in an unbelieving world, suffering the trials and misadventures of someone who perceives a world beyond the everyday. Indeed, the plot culminates (spoiler alert) in a test of faith. When his sleigh crashes in Central Park, Santa explains to onlookers that his “Clausometer” is dangerously low and he needs a fresh supply of Christmas spirit to be airborne again. “Christmas spirit is about believing, not seeing,” he says, perhaps echoing St. Paul’s definition of faith in Hebrews 11:1. And just when Santa needs it most, a man of faith in yellow stockings and a pointy hat steps forward… Available on Amazon Prime Video, Google Play, YouTube, and Vudu. (Rated PG)
— Luke Coppen, Europe Editor
The Small One
A young boy must sell a cherished but aging donkey, named Small One, to support his poor family. Will he find a worthy owner for his four-legged friend in the rough streets of Nazareth? Or will Small One end up in the slaughterhouse? At only 26 minutes runtime, this is a kid-sized movie, but there’s enough action, comedy, and emotion to satisfy all ages. The movie’s title song is simple but inspirational, a worthy addition to any child’s repertoire. The lyrics and melody might even spare the ears of parents weary of recent kids’ movies. In the great Disney tradition, “The Small One” is visually beautiful. It’s from 1978, part of a decade that many Disney fans forget. Movie director Don Bluth would later win fame for his full-length animated movies like “The Secret of NIMH,” “An American Tail,” and “All Dogs Go to Heaven.” The story is drawn from a book of the same name by the children’s author Charles Tazewell. He wrote “The Littlest Angel,” a sentimental and popular, if theologically questionable, children’s book. This Christmastime donkey flick is far from asinine. Watch the whole thing for a Christmas surprise. Available on Disney+. (Rated G)
— Kevin J. Jones, Staff Writer
A Muppet Family Christmas
There’s no Michael Caine in this one, but there’s a whole lot else: the original Muppets; the Sesame Street crew; Fraggles, and even Maureen the Mink. It’s truly not the Christmas season until I’ve watched a number of Muppets repeatedly slip and fall over an icy patch at Fozzie’s mom’s house. While this movie is often overshadowed by that other Muppet Christmas special, it is still a solid inclusion in the Christmas movie canon. The movie tells the tale of Fozzie’s good-intended (but ill-planned) attempt to surprise his mother for Christmas — and the ensuing hijinks that blew in with the worst blizzard in half a century. First released in 1987, “A Muppet Family Christmas” has aged like a fine wine, and still makes me chuckle in 2021. (Barometers are falling sharply!) At just under 48 minutes, it’s the perfect length movie for when you need a little Christmas, but don’t want to settle down for over an hour — or if you need something to do while cookies are in the oven. Available on YouTube. Look out for the icy patch! (Rated TV-PG)
— Christine Rousselle, Washington, D.C. Correspondent
It’s a Wonderful Life
Unappreciated when it first came out in the 1940s, but gaining status as one of the most perennially rewatched Christmas movies of all time, “It’s a Wonderful Life” really does live up to the descriptor in its title. If, somehow, you’ve managed to never see it, it’s the story of a smart and ambitious small town guy, George Bailey, who for a variety of reasons never manages to escape his provincial life and travel the world like he had always planned. When a seemingly insurmountable disaster besets George on Christmas Eve, he wishes he had never been born — a wish that, thanks to a friendly angel named Clarence, suddenly comes true. Try not to shed a tear during the final scene. I dare you. Available on Amazon Prime and YouTube. (Rated PG)
— Jonah McKeown, Producer/Writer
A Charlie Brown Christmas
When I was growing up, we watched this Peanuts classic every year to kick off the Christmas season. Now, as an adult, it’s part of my own Christmas traditions. The movie is a great reminder of the real meaning of Christmas, with the Nativity story embedded into the script. I find that each time I watch it, I’m invited to a deeper realization that Christmas is really about the coming of Christ, and not the material or commercial things we get wrapped up in (pun intended) this time of the year. Available on Apple TV+ for subscribers. (Not Rated)
— Autumn Jones, Staff Writer
The Polar Express
This 2004 animated film is about a group of young children who take a mystical train ride to the North Pole on Christmas Eve. The movie focuses on the struggle of two boys to believe in Santa Claus, because they have never seen him. But once they arrive at the North Pole, they are entrenched in an adventure like never before, culminating in (spoilers!) meeting the big man himself. The movie, which features the voice of Tom Hanks, was nominated for three Academy Awards. Available on HBO, Amazon Prime Video, Hulu, and Netflix. (Rated G)
— Joe Bukuras, Staff Writer
Home Alone
This 1990 classic tells a Christmas story that the whole family can enjoy: What happens when an 8-year-old is left to his own devices to protect his home, alone, against a pair of burglars? Kevin McCallister’s family accidentally leaves him behind in Chicago as they venture on a family vacation abroad. Kevin (played by Macaulay Culkin) takes charge and rigs his home with booby traps. On Christmas Eve, he treks through the snow and comes to a halt as he spies an outdoor nativity scene and hears strains of “O Holy Night” escaping the nearby church. He enters and encounters two saviors: Jesus, and an elderly man he learns not to judge. Home Alone is a story about family, friendship, and the difference that one person — even a small one — can make. Available on Amazon Prime, Disney+, Google Play, iTunes, Vudu, and YouTube. (Rated PG)
— Katie Yoder, Washington, D.C. Correspondent
[…]
What’s the point?
Bergoglio regularly issues high-handed edicts that reshape the Church and her teachings.
As far as he’s concerned, it’s synod schnynod. He’s going to do what he wants, regardless.
It’s a shame but I trust nothing that comes out if the Vatican during these dark days in Rome.
The Pontiff Francis and his fellow-ideologues are subverted and subversive people, who live as parasites feeding on The Body of Christ.
They are fit to be prayed for and opposed…because they are enemies of Our Lord.
As coda, I pray for the intercession of St. Charles Lwanga against the “Synod-of-the-Subverted.”
God’s will be done.
Ah, witness the real Synodaling…
Admittedly, I am a bit miffed to be excluded. Closed door theology – it’s as if they are trying to hide from the Holy Spirit!
And I remain astounded that no invitation has arrived for the all-inclusive Roman boondoggle called the Synod on Synodaling II. Who wants to bet that bad boy Bishop Stowe gets a golden ticket? It’s not fair…
About the “secret” meeting of the “expert” study groups, recalling the ten themes disclosed earlier, now from the back bleachers: what about these not-so “rigid, bigoted, and fixistic” questions:
1.About the East, how to restore credibility with the now estranged Eastern Orthodox Churches, kicked out of bed (so to speak) by Fiducia Supplicans—like all of the Church in Africa et al as just another culturally defective “special case”?
2. About the “cry of the poor,” how to excluding those who are impoverished spiritually and culturally (Centesimus Annus, n. 57)? “The Church’s Pastors have the duty to act in conformity with their apostolic mission, insisting that the right of the faithful [italics] to receive Catholic doctrine in its purity and integrity must always be respected” (Veritatis Splendor, n. 113).
3. About the digital environment, how to preserve analogue reality—like the Reality of the incarnate Jesus Christ—over a Nominalist digital cosmos and even amoral/immoral AI (the looming threat of lab-guided human evolution)?
4. About a “missionary perspective,” how to not displace the received/missionary Deposit of Faith with plebiscite sociology?
5. About “ministerial forms,” how to respect the “hierarchical communion” (Lumen Gentium) and not split apart sacramental ordination (as already signaled by ministerial/informal half-blessings under Fiducia Supplicans)? Teeing up the ball for non-ordained female diaconate as a stepping stone toward an Anglican-style (c)hurch—just as civil unions were really a stepping stone toward the oxymoron “gay marriage”…
6. About “ecclesial organizations,” how to not dilute the institutional and personal accountability (both) of each Successor of the Apostles, within/versus multilevel townhall meetings—diocesan, national, continental, and expertly synodal!—a relationship already clarified in Apostolos Suos (May 21, 1998)?
7. On the selection, judicial role and meaning of ad limina visits for bishops, how to transcend zeitgeist intrusions into the particular Churches—not lapsing into an elitist and polyhedral Church devoid of its catholic unity and center?
8. On papal representatives in a missionary synodal perspective, how to conform a missionary “style” (now a “perspective”?) of “listening” to the inborn natural law about which the Church is neither the “author” nor the “arbiter,” (Veritatis Splendor, n. 95)? And specifically, how to avoid a domineering class structure of papal representatives as under Cupich, McElroy, Tobin, Gregory, et al?
9. About theological criteria (etc.), how to outlive the obvious criterion (!) of self-anointed theologians, themselves, apparently intent on severing an actively deadly (c)hurch from the living Magisterium?
10.About the ecumenical journey/ecclesial practices, how to not undefine/mutilate the Mystical Body of Christ, or the “hierarchical communion” gifted in the Holy Spirit (Lumen Gentium)?
SUMMARY, if the “backwardists” turned the lights on, would they discover a “forwardist” cult with a secret handshake? …or real Dialogue?
Okay, let us look at how the popes use commissions (1) to give people hope that meaningful changes will be made to end the church’s behindedness, and (2) to maintain the church’s behindedness.
It is well known that popes stack study commissions in order to obtain a result they desire. A famous example happened with Pope Paul VI and the birth control commission (not its official name). Well along in the commission’s work, commission members were overwhelmingly in favor of removing the church’s prohibition on artificial contraception. At one point, the nineteen theologians on the commission took a separate vote and were 12 to 7 in favor of changing the church’s stance. That caused Paul VI to demote the members of the commission to “advisors,” and he brought in sixteen bishops who would then constitute the commission and issue a final report.
Before the final vote of the new bishops, a decision was made to only issue one report, i.e., to not send any minority report. Of the sixteen people brought in to issue the final report, they voted 9 to 3 to change the church’s stance. There were three abstentions, and one of the sixteen bishops didn’t vote. After the vote, a report which had been prepared in advance by Cardinal Ottaviani and Father Ford was sent along and misrepresented as a minority report from the Commission. However, it was NOT an official minority report; the commission sent only ONE official report. Paul VI later said he could not accept the vote of the commission because it had come to him with a minority report. (Votes on Vatican II’s decrees were not unanimous either, but he did not invalidate those.) In all, Paul VI ignored the recommendations (by their final votes) of nine of twelve bishops, fifteen of nineteen theologians, and thirty of thirty-five nonepiscopal members of the Commission. (Information from Papal Sins: Structures of Deceit, by Garry Wills)
Now, we have a sad chronology on the subject of women deacons that covers more than eight years:
• May 12, 2016 – Francis promises a Women Deacons Commission to some women religious during questioning at an audience. (https://www.ncronline.org/news/vatican/francis-create-commission-study-female-deacons-catholic-church)
• August 2, 2016 – Francis appoints his first Women Deacons Commission (not its official name). It is of course headed by a male priest. Articles about it emphasize that it has six women members and six men members, suggesting, though it is a non-sequitur, that the even gender split guarantees fairness. The commission has its first meeting in November 2016. A long period of silence follows.
• June 2018 – Nearly two years after appointment and after meeting in Rome four times, the commission sends its report to the pope. No statement is made and the public is left hanging. Eventually people are told that the commission had been unable to come to a consensus and therefore could not make a recommendation. Nearly a year after receiving the report, the pope gave a portion of the report to the UISG leadership at their May 2019 assembly. The report itself still (as of Nov. 29, 2023) has not been published despite many requests for it and despite church officials’ repeated claims to desire more “openness.”
• April 8, 2020 – One year and ten months after receiving the report of the first commission, Francis appoints his second Women Deacons Commission (not its official name). It is of course headed by a male, Cardinal Giuseppe Petrocchi. It appears stacked with members who are known to oppose having women deacons (https://www.ncronline.org/news/vatican/several-members-new-vatican-commission-appear-opposed-women-deacons).
• November 29, 2023 – Inquiring people are being told the second Women Deacons Commission has been meeting regularly, and that a report to the pope is expected sometime in 2024. They are given the boilerplate that the commission’s work is proceeding in a spirit of openness and transparency. Yet, as of today, the second commission hasn’t issued any statements. Vatican officials tell us that the commission’s findings will be important in helping to inform the pope’s decision on whether or not to ordain women as deacons.
• Pope Francis says in a CBS interview aired on May 20, 2024, that he is opposed to ordained women deacons and that a little girl growing up Catholic today will never have the opportunity to be a deacon and participate as a clergy member in the church.
We all had been encouraged to believe that Pope Francis was open to the possibility of ordaining women as deacons. Of course, we were also told that he wants to make a decision based on a careful study of the issue. In its efforts to be thorough, as the pope desires, the second women deacons commission, and now also one of the ten commissions from the synod work, are still said to be gathering information and insights from around the world and consulting with experts in theology, church history, and canon law. Why the continued work on it? He has already announced his decision; it is “No” to ordained women deacons.
My Opinion:
I strongly doubt that Pope Francis ever serious about considering a possibility of having women deacons despite his saying otherwise multiple times. I have reasons for thinking this, chief among them being these: (1) his incredibly slow pace on the issue, and (2) his stacking of the second women deacons commission with people known or thought to oppose having women deacons.
In my opinion, here are the only two questions needing to be answered in order to correctly decide whether women should be permitted to become deacons:
1. Are men who feel called permitted to become deacons?
2. Are the men’s exclusively male parts used to perform the functions of a deacon?
I think the answers to those two questions are already well known to most folks. All of the above chronology, covering more than eight years, only to “help inform” the pope regarding a question that perhaps a hundred million Catholics, and hundreds of millions of non-Catholics who are not misogynistic, could have decided correctly, i.e., in favor of having women deacons, in about one-tenth of a second.
Two opinions and some big picture stuff:
FIRST, men do not become deacons because they feel called, but only when they are then actually called by the bishop, or not. This clarity has something to do with the apostolic succession tracing back the incarnate Second Person of the Triune One. A unique situation, and a bit of a challenge for a more-or-less democratic mindset IN the world. Clearly not OF this world.
SECOND, about artificial birth control, in Pope Paul VI’s mind and the mind of the Church, the misfit is between the opinions of consulted commissions versus the universal and inborn natural law—that is, whether the intrinsic nature of the nuptial act can be mechanically or chemically divided into its unitive purpose versus its equally obvious procreative purpose. Morally, can an anti-conceptive act be averaged-in with others remaining intact (identified as “proportionalism” in Veritatis Splendor). Natural Family Planning is not contraceptive.
The CURRENT big picture?
In terms of the Fundamental Option and “consequentialism” (both also addressed in Veritatis Splendor), some observers connect the dots and propose that a contraceptive culture is inseparable from our abortion culture, and the surge in illegitimate births and cohabitation and divorce, and the ubiquitous porn culture, and the scourge of sex trafficking of even children, and even the anti-binary indifference of “gender theory”.
The PAST big picture?
About this trendline (a seamless garment?) and the Anglican Lambeth Conference which first crossed the Rubicon, the defeated minority, as late as 1948, had this to say:
“It is, to say the least, suspicious that the age in which contraception has won its way is not one which has been conspicuously successful in managing its sexual life. Is it possible that, by claiming the right to manipulate his physical processes in this manner, man may, without knowing it, be stepping over the boundary between the world of Christian marriage and what one might call the world of Aphrodite, the world of sterile eroticism?” (Cited in Wright, “Reflections on the Third Anniversary of a Controverted Encyclical,” St. Louis: Central Bureau Press, 1971).
The FUTURE big picture?
Not sure, here, that the “non-synod” der Synodal Weg, or synodality’s Cardinal Hollerich, have this civilizational Rubicon figured out any better than any other transitory commission or whatever—by now endorsing anti-binary homosexuality, and by now proposing that sexual morality in general should be rejected—based on, what, sociological and cultural criteria!
As for Veritatis Splendor, it’s really not a Church imposition; instead, it’s the defense of our inborn and universal natural law: “The Church is no way the author or the arbiter of this norm” (n. 95). Perhaps we can at least agree that blessing the full range of “irregular” couples, as camouflage for blessing the LGBTQ religion one “couple” at a time, probably isn’t so bright a step in maturing the flock past the moral collapse of the past half century.
Based on what’s been produced so far, at the end of the SoS, the weakest possible tea would be the best possible outcome.
A secret meeting of 20 handpicked theologians at the Jesuit general curia almost sounds like a kids game we played on the Brooklyn streets. Suddenly the 20 rush out of the Jesuit curia shouting, Bet you can’t guess where we hid the Blessed Sacrament? Or perhaps, the deposit of faith. Only then it was a fun adventure of ingenuity. Now it’s a dreadful game of deceit.
A commentator wrote a very studied analysis of the latest Vatican outrage calmly asserting nothing to be found here as it stands, then at the end paused leaving the question of motivation open. Double entendres evoke feelings of intrigue. More Jesuitry, Fr Costa SJ is the special general secretary for the Synod. If this were the Jesuits of old one could be confident. Although I doubt that there will be any direct annulment of Catholic doctrine. Perhaps a reassurance to the faithful that Francis’ leadership is really benign. Although as has been the pattern we should expect double entendres that suggest the opposite direction and greater anguish.
Faith is now required of us, that trust in Christ that is confident of his love for us during this dark trial. I pray for him not simply because it’s my duty, rather that personally I perceive in him the qualities of what could have been most beneficial for the Body of Christ. A warm hearted, caring old man who has opened his heart to all leading us to greater compassion for the bereft. Instead his pattern has revealed someone whose voice is foreign to what we know interiorly is Christ.
Are these theologians and other experts been named?
About my #5, above, this isn’t rocket science. Let’s try a thought experiment…Synod 2024 proposes non-ordained deaconesses. Is this the Hegelian thesis-antithesis-synthesis?
Thesis: Fiducia Supplicans invents “non-ecclesial, informal, spontaneous” non-blessings of irregular “couples,” as couples.
Antithesis: a divided Church with corrective dissent from continental Africa, Ukraine, Poland, Hungary,
Kazakhstan, Peru, parts of Argentina, France, and Spain, and a distancing by other conferences of bishops.
Synthesis!: the non-blessing of “couples” is off-loaded from the ordained priesthood to non-ordained deaconesses…
…and private-meeting/photo-op Jeannine Gramick becomes de facto archdeaconess in a parallel church-within-a-Church! Ordination comes later….Maybe not yet a “polyhedral” church, but at least a transitional parallelogram! Ecclesial transgenderism.
This scenario is only hypothetical, of course. Just a non-theologian un-thought experiment, or whatever.
World-building is a meaningful challenge. Theologians are yet to do justice to their enormous potential in world-building.
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