If you haven’t yet purchased a Hipster
Nativity Set, you might be too late—despite their $129.99 price tag, they are
flying off the shelves, even at a limit of three to a customer. The set includes the traditional figures, but
all in a distinctly hipster form. Joseph
has a man-bun and is taking a selfie.
Mary is holding a Starbucks latte in one hand, making a peace sign with
the other, and is making a duck-face.
(The selfie, when she sees it, will reveal that her sweater has slipped
off one shoulder, revealing the top of her bra.) The Magi are arriving on Segways with Amazon
gift boxes under their arms. The
shepherd is working his iPad. Even the
cow and sheep (edged out of the tiny manger-stall) are doing their bit: the sheep is wearing a hand-knitted sweater
and the cow, eating gluten-free feed, bears a “100% organic” seal. The figures are, appropriately, plastic
(sorry: make that “handpainted
polyresin”). A merry Hipster Christmas
to you!
Given
all this provokes the question, “What exactly is a hipster anyway?” Help from the oracles at Google reveal that “Hipsters are a subculture of men and women typically in their 20’s and
30’s that value independent thinking, counter-culture, progressive politics, an
appreciation of art and indie-rock, creativity, intelligence, and witty banter…‘hipsterism’
is really a state of mind, also often intertwined with distinct fashion
sensibilities.” Note please the last bit:
“fashion sensibilities”. That
about says it all. I would suggest that
hipsterism is all about self-absorption and a desperate desire to appear
cooler-than-thou. Like all fashions, it
is fleeting and quickly dated. History
textbooks will one day refer to them, if at all, in the same footnote as the
Hippies. But while they last, they
provide a large and easy target for satire—which is of course the whole point
of the Hipster Nativity Set. Nervous
Christians should not imagine that the Hipster Nativity Set is targeting them
or their faith. The real targets are the
hipsters and hipster Christians. If it
has any theological point to make (which is doubtful) it is that hipsterism
does not easily combine with Christianity and that a Hipster Christian might
even be a contradiction in terms.
Does
the Hipster Nativity Set offer any lessons to the Orthodox and to Christians of
a more traditional mindset? I think
there is one lesson to be learned from this odd faddish gift before it passes
into history—namely that holy things should not a co-opted for purposes of
satire. I appreciate the desire to
satirize the hipsters, and to generally let the air out of anything too
over-inflated with a sense of pretentious self-importance. But Christian symbols should not be dragooned
for this task, for the symbol is more significant and holier than the task it
is called to perform. Using a Nativity
Set to satirize a social movement would be like using a Bible as a door-stop, a
priestly vestment as an oil-rag, or an icon as a drink coaster. Door-stops, oil-rags and drink coasters are
perfectly wonderful and necessary, but holy things should be spared such tasks
and not put to uses which violate their holiness. The seasonal Nativity Set, though perhaps
humbler and less holy than the pages of Scripture and the colours of an icon,
are still nonetheless symbols of the Faith.
To an outsider at least, a Nativity Set represents the Christian
Christmas; it is a kind of three-dimensional icon. As such, it possesses its own kind of
holiness, and ought not to do service for something as ephemeral as social
satire.
For
that is the problem with the Hipster Nativity Set—what is satirized is
ephemeral and passing, (as is therefore the purpose of the satire), while
Christian symbols refer to things transcendent and everlasting. Those symbols cannot be used for lesser
purposes without diminishing them and offending their sanctity. Piety will instinctively recoil from the
Hipster Nativity Set, just as it will from the use of icons in political memes,
and for the same reason— something holy is being high-jacked in the service of
something secular. It is perfectly
acceptable to satirize the hipsters, or to poke fun at politicians, or at any
group badly needing a healthy dose of reality.
But Christian symbols should be above such uses. They refer and transport us to another realm
altogether, a place beyond passing fashions and passing politics. They
speak to us of a timeless Kingdom, and take us into a land where things
requiring satirization cannot enter. A
Nativity Set brings us from our world to Bethlehem, and from there gives us a
glimpse of the Kingdom of God. And with
that vision to nurture and inspire us, who needs satire?
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