The Eric Metaxas Show - Fun Facts Friday - Christmas
Episode Date: January 2, 2023This Fun Facts Friday is the Christmas special was recorded way back in 2017 -- tune in and "have some fun, just for the fun of it" as you learn true (and untrue?) facts about songs and traditions pop...ular at this festive time of year. (Encore Presentation)
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Folks, welcome to the Eric Mataxis show, sponsored by Legacy Precious Metals.
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Visit legacy p.m.investments.com. That's legacy p.m. Investments.com.
And gentlemen, buckle your seatbelts and keep your arms and legs inside the car at all times.
Here comes Mr. Thrill Ride himself, Eric Mattaxas.
What do you say?
Is that really you, Eric Mattaxas?
Eric.
Listen, this is, how is it not a TV program suddenly?
I don't know.
First of all, I didn't know you look like that, but it's kind of cool.
That's really funny you say that because I didn't used to look like this.
Why didn't you?
I was much younger.
Okay, so this is like freaking me out.
That's a camera.
Yes.
We are now on, the radio program is on camera.
So today's Fun Facts Friday.
It's a special Christmas edition.
But do not forget that we're going to air this.
all through the Christmas season.
Yes.
And this is like the beta version of the Eric Metaxus show, Super.
Yeah.
So if you sign up for Metaxus Super, you get slide whistles, you get visuals and stuff, and you can watch it.
You know, I want to be clear, folks, this is going to be the program from here on in.
That's the way it is.
We're doing the program. We've got to dress up a little bit.
We've got to dress up a little bit.
Put some pants on there, sir.
And we've got to drink out of our Eric Mataxis show.
Mug.
Got them right here.
And all that kind of stuff.
We've got to turn off the sounds on our computer.
That's right.
Turn everything off, okay?
Make sure the hair has combed if I have some.
I'm going to take my hat off at this point.
I know we're pushing these hats a little bit because of, I guess, okay, so today's
Fun Facts Friday.
Now we've got to do the show.
We're going to do the show now, so please.
Okay.
Get ready.
Get ready.
Oh, you know what I haven't done yet?
No.
Oh, relief factor.
Okay.
First time, visual.
Eric, really, I see in the past, I've actually watched it.
I've watched you do this, and now you're going to do it.
I take two packs.
Two packs.
You want to have some Christmas fun?
There you go.
How about get rid of the aches and pains for Christmas?
And don't drop the pills on the floor.
Don't drop the pills on the floor.
Okay.
Okay, ready?
Okay, down the hatch, they say.
Three, two, one.
There you go.
It's all gone.
Okay, let's look.
Okay, look under your tongue.
Okay, kids.
Okay.
Very good.
Oh, my gosh.
What?
You know, I had a hump on my back.
I can feel it disappearing.
Wow.
I'm just sitting up straight.
That takes care of it.
Albin, this is Fun Facts Friday.
Now, before we get into the fun,
we got serious stuff to do for Christmas,
we're trying to raise money for CSI.
Right.
CSI's Christian Solidarity International.
So I want people to go to the website.
Now, by the way, what website?
It's Metaxistalks.com, and it's right?
There it is.
There's a visual.
It's right there behind me.
Right there.
That's what it looks like.
So if you're listening to this program and you're not seeing the visuals, you can't see the websites literally behind me.
So people are just going to be aching to get this $2.99 a month video TV program for their friends.
I hope so.
I hope so.
So the key is to check the website for everything.
And the website is metaxis talk.com.
That's right.
That's the website right behind me if you're watching this on video.
And if you're not watching this on video, you can watch it on video by going.
to the website, mettaxistock.com, and clicking on, there's going to be a button.
There will be a button.
By the time this airs, there should be a button.
By the time you watch this or listen to this, if you go to Metaxistock.com, there should be a button that says sign up for Metaxas super.
And while we're able to do it, it's going to be $2.99 a month for the year.
Soon it will go up to $5.99 a month.
That's the normal price.
But we want as many people to sign up as possible.
we want you to sign your friends up or give it as a Christmas gift or New Year's gift, whatever it is for the year.
At this point, maybe a Groundhogs Day gift.
No, we can't wait that long.
We want this to be as soon as possible.
Let's do it.
Let's do it.
So a few things.
Number one, go to Metaxistalk.com to give to CSI.
The banner is at the top of the page.
That's right.
Number two, go to Metaxestalk.com to sign up for this program on video.
In fact, if you go to Metaxistock.com, you can see this program on video.
You may be watching this now at mettaxashton.com.
See, we don't know that.
Which would be so meta.
It would be really meta.
It would be.
By the way, too, when you give to CSI, you do get, if you give the $156 pack, you get an official Eric Mataxis show hat, either in black, very stylish, or in khaki.
K-H-A-K-I.
Yeah, khaki.
Yeah.
So those are the gifts.
So for $156 you get Eric Mataxas show hat.
That's official.
For 500, you get two hats.
For $1,000, you get two hats, a signed book from you, sir.
Oh, you get one of these?
Yes, or if you can keep it, your paperback edition of if you can keep it.
So you get one of those, okay?
That's some heavy stuff.
For $1,000.
And then you get to come in here and sit in the studio and be on one of these cameras.
Now, suddenly it's TV.
Now, by the way, how much money do you have to give?
to get the Eric Mataxis show machete.
That is going to be over $10,000.
If you give her $10,000, we'll make a machete for you with their own hands.
Cardboard.
Okay.
Now, Albin, we're going to keep telling people about CSI through the program.
Yes.
I want to give out the phone number.
If you prefer to call, it's $1,800, 222-9-9-1-800-2-2-5909.
If you don't want to call, the number is still 1-800-2-2-2-5-9-0-0.
where you can go to Metaxus Talk.com.
Okay, we've got to get to the fun.
It's Christmas Fun Facts Friday.
It's Friday.
And the first thing we have to do, the very first thing is sing the official Fun Facts Friday song, right?
I don't have the lyrics, but I think I remember them.
Okay, you'll pick them up, right?
Because there's a lot of people they'll be singing along.
Okay, here we go.
Come on and have some fun just for the fun of it.
Tune into Eric's show, and you'll be.
in the know.
You may learn something new and something untrue to.
Fun facts.
Friday's here.
Oh, yeah.
That is some fine singing.
It's some fine, fine.
Eric Hanson is just aghast of what he's witnessed in here.
Eric Hanson, you might even be able to see him on TV.
You can see him reflected in my glasses.
That's beautiful.
That's beautiful.
You got those mirro glasses like in a cool hand loop, right?
Oh, my gosh.
All right.
Now, Alvin, people are saying this is a Fun Facts Friday Christmas edition.
Get to the fun and to the facts.
They haven't heard one fact or one fun thing.
All right.
I just want to run down some of the things we're going to cover on today's show.
Okay.
So just so you know, I've actually brought in some Christmas toys.
Oh, my gosh.
So I'm going to get to those.
Okay.
The toys, you know, like you open up the toys on Christmas Day, but we're going to get to the toys in a moment.
Okay.
I'm going to talk about something.
One of the fun facts I discovered in this book, The Forgotten Man of Christmas.
Now, we had Howard Eddington on the show.
Right.
Right.
We had him on.
In fact, if you want to go back to the podcast, you'll be able to see him on Wednesday, December 13th.
We had him in one of the hours there.
Right.
Great, great.
Recently.
That's very recent.
That's very recent.
I want to go over some stats.
An older gentleman, let's just put it this way.
He wanted to remain anonymous, sent some stats.
about why men are happier than women.
You know, it's one of these, it's kind of fun.
Oh, you mean a listener to the show?
Yeah.
Rode us.
And he said, when you do Fun Facts Friday, I'd like to share something.
Okay.
Yeah, yeah.
Now, you know, he filed it on the Internet, but it's a lot of fun.
I want to go over something that boils my potato.
Now, this is something that involves the subway.
And you and I...
You know, I'm literally sitting here across from you, and I'm already confused.
Is this intentional?
No, no, it's not intentional.
I'm just running down what we're going to go over today.
So this is what we're going to go over.
Yeah, this is all what we're going to.
You know what it is?
But why don't we just go over it?
We could, but I want to get people.
You know how I just want to get people enticed.
Like they'll be saying like, oh, I can't wait to see that.
What boils his potato today, that kind of thing.
You know, okay.
So, and then we're going to go, like I said, we've got some toys.
And we've got some fun facts that are not so true about Christmas.
And we get some real facts about Christmas.
So if we have some time before we go to a commercial, do we have some time?
Yeah, we do.
Okay. I want to read something. This is an actual fact. I did not know this until I...
We don't have a lot of time. Go ahead. Go ahead. Yeah.
The Forgotten Man of Christmas, okay?
By Howard Eddington.
By Howard Eddington. It's all about Joseph. Go ahead.
He talks about why we celebrate on December 25th.
Okay. It's because of the Romans. They used to celebrate their God, who was the God of the Son.
They used to call them, it was the Feast of the Invincible Son, S-U-N.
And they celebrated it on December 25th.
Right.
Because they thought that was the winter solstice, which it was winter solstice.
which is winter solstice, as we know, it's actually the 21st.
So they got that wrong.
But the Christians picked up on that and said,
we're going to celebrate the feast of God's invincible son, S-O-N.
And that's why...
But you know what?
That doesn't make any sense.
You surped it.
It doesn't make any sense.
What do you mean?
Because that's in the English language.
The pun only works in English.
And English was not invented until about, you know, 1,200 AD.
Now, you have to take this out.
We're going to be right back.
Holy cow.
It's Fun Facts Friday.
Christmas edition.
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Hey, that's Shirley Jones, stepmother of David Cassidy.
Incredible.
Folks, it's Fun Facts Friday.
You're listening to The Eric Mataxis show.
The Eric Mataxis show in case you're watching us on video, you already know, because
we've got, we've got a lot of logos everywhere you look, Eric Mataxis show.
And I brought some toys in.
And if you're listening on the radio, then you really need to go to the website, which
is metaxis talk.com. So you can watch this on video because if you could say the way we're dressed
up, we look absolutely preposterous. I'm wearing vampire, plastic vampire fangs, and Albin has a
carrot for a nose. It just doesn't make any sense. I'm like a snowman. It's kind of warm here in the
studio. So metaxis talk.com is the website. And if you were watching this, you could see that right
behind me is the website. But if you're not watching this, it's just an abstraction. What good is
that? What good is it indeed? Now, we went to a break and you kind of pointed out something that your
friend, Howard Eddington, wrote in his book about the use of the word son, S-U-N, and the use of the son,
S-O-N, and that was done in English. This was, by the way, when the Christians took that
over, it was a couple hundred years after words that they took it from the Romans. I don't
know if the English was a round, noter. But Albin, speaking as an English major. Well, there you go.
And a writer, I can tell you that the pun, S-U-N and S-O-N, did not exist until the English language was invented, which was a long time.
I mean, Chaucer is 1,300, okay?
So the pun might have existed around Chaucer's time.
It certainly didn't exist at 500 AD.
Well, they didn't have Cups and Chaucer's back then.
Okay, now here, now, we know that the song that we sing in the beginning says, you know,
going to learn something new and something untrue too.
So I'm going to throw that into...
You mean the Fun Facts Friday?
Theme song. Yeah. So that would be something that, you know, if you look it up, you say, like,
look, I'm an English major, like our friend over here.
Yeah.
And I found out that son and son, you know, that's a little bit off.
Okay.
But here is something that is true on a religious or a belief sort of thing.
This is what I really like.
Okay.
Now, Howard Editing did some research for the book, and he said that Joseph was not
not so much an artisan of his day.
You know, when he was a carpenter, we think of people that are carpenters today.
They have beautiful chairs and table sets and all that.
They work with wood.
They do, but they work, you know, we usually see them as artists, right?
Well, he was a day laborer, a frightfully ordinary man for the extraordinary responsibility God was assigning to him to be the...
I mean, I'll go a step farther.
from what I have read in recent years,
it seems that in fact,
Joseph and Jesus were not carpenters.
They were builders.
Okay, right.
Well, he did in this time.
He worked with stone and wood.
So it seems that Jesus,
I mean, this is actually kind of big news, right?
That Jesus was not a carpenter,
but was a builder.
And if anything, he worked with stone and not with wood.
No, no.
Now, I've read this.
that in a few places. I can't say that's for sure, but that's what I've heard. And Howard points out
some of that. But of course, I'm just reading little snippets here. But this is the key point.
This is what I love about him, because he was like an ordinary man. He was an ordinary laborer,
as it were, right? But here's the thing that, you know, Joseph was spoken to in dreams throughout
the Bible. There are four dreams that Howard brings out here. And Joseph never actually speaks
in the gospels. You never hear a word from Joseph, but he takes the orders from the dreams.
and he moves on and he does all the things.
Well, just the fact that there are four dreams, this is one of the things in this book that I was astounded by.
I thought, how did I miss that there were four dreams, not two, but like four?
Yes.
I know.
I missed that too.
And the title of the book, to be clear, again, it's the forgotten man of Christmas by our friend Howard Eddington.
Okay, go ahead.
Right.
And he talked about how, of course, Mary was an ordinary woman.
She was probably about 14, 15 years old.
And Joseph was only about like maybe 1920.
He was a young guy, right?
We mostly see him as a bald guy with a long beard.
That's mostly how you see him picture.
Right.
But this is the point of all that, the two of them being ordinary.
This is a great fun fact for the Christmas season, okay, the reason for the season.
The most important thing in the world can happen to the least important people in the world,
that the King of Kings and Lord of Lords can take up residence in the most ordinary of lives
and that the greatest somebody who ever lived can come to nobodies like Joseph, like Mary, like you, and like me.
Amen.
I love that.
I have to say that, you know, the one thing that Luther, Martin Luther, talked about over and over and over again, was this issue, was the idea that we would think that Jesus would come on a golden cloud that he'd be, you know, wearing a.
a tiara, a crown, and holding a scepter and an orb, and it would be jewel-encrusted.
And the reality is no.
The God of the Bible is a God who came into the world in a dirty place.
He came to the lowest of the low to show us his nature, his real nature, is to love us and to reach us wherever we are.
As high and mighty as he is, he reached down, down, down, as far.
as necessary to reach any one of us wherever we are.
I mean, it's kind of an amazing theological point.
And by the way, Luther's right here in the studio.
There he goes.
You see?
Now, by the way, if you're listening to this as radio or as a podcast, you cannot see that
Luther is with me in the studio.
Now, if you go to the website, metaxis talk.com, you can see that Luther is right here.
He's here.
Why would I make it up?
I know.
Why would I make it up?
Here he is.
I'm pointing to him.
If you're looking on camera, you can see him.
and even our engineer, Eric Hansen.
Eric, am I lying?
Is Luther right here?
He's here.
You know, that's the other thing.
You know, radio is so yesterday, right?
So you want to get to what they call television, okay?
It's like two words of vision and seeing, like, you know.
No, tell is far.
Okay.
That's like we get telescope.
Well, you're the English major.
You get telescope.
You get telisavallus.
It's a lot of Greek words.
Right.
So tele savalis looks better far away, so to speak.
That's right.
That's right.
Now, before we go out to commercial whenever that happens, okay.
No, we've got four minutes in this segment.
Oh, great.
Because I talked about a little bit about something that boiled my potato.
And I know we talked a little bit.
On Fun Fact Friday, we like to share things that really, man, it just boils my potato.
So, Albin, tell us what boils your potato?
Okay.
Now, people are going to say, well, why is this in a Christmas edition, right?
Well, because it's winter.
And some people, you know, going to celebrate the winter solstice.
Well, here's the problem in New York City on the subway.
It's usually crowded anyway, okay?
So I'm coming down to work, and I'm always jammed in there.
Now, of course, it's winter, and everybody's got those big puffy coats like, you know.
Michelin Man.
Yeah, that kind of thing.
They look like the Michelin Man.
But here's the worst part of all of this.
And I know you've contended with this as well.
So this is what boils your potato.
Because I want to be clear, in this segment, we're covering what boils Albans specific potato.
My potato, right.
is when people wear backpacks.
A lot of New Yorkers...
Oh, man. That gets my goat.
Right.
Wow, that just chaps my...
Hide?
Hide.
Now, they'll put on the backpack,
and they won't know it's there.
And it's really...
Some of these guys have these really huge backpacks.
Some of the backpacks are so big.
One backpack I saw was so big,
it was the size of a small tugboat.
Well...
That's hard to believe,
but if you've seen a very, very small tugboat,
which is the size of a backpack,
you'd know them right.
But it's more like...
This is the visual I get.
It's like one New Yorker is given a piggyback ride to another New Yorker, right?
And then when the door's closed, they're standing there facing you, right?
And the door's going, bang, bang, bang, big, hitting the back.
And the guy's standing there like, oh, somebody's holding up the train.
Somebody's holding up these thousands of people are being held up by this dude's gigantic backpack.
And you want to grab them like this.
See this on the visual?
You want to grab them like this by the straps of the knapsack and pull them in like that, right?
You want to pull them to safety.
But you know it's Christmas and you don't want to do that.
Well, I've got to tell you, I'm sure a lot of people listening to this all over the world can relate to these subway problems.
Well, okay, so it's Fun Facts Friday.
We've got to share some other Christmas fun facts.
Okay.
I want to share another one that's from why Santa Claus gives coal to children.
You know how it's been when a kid is bad, they actually get cold?
But that's in the old days when kids were considered bad.
Today, we all realize that if you call a kid bad, you could cripple him for.
forever. And so you just tell kids you're the most wonderful thing ever. Don't ever correct
the child because if you do that, it will cripple his soul. Well, and the other thing, all the
stockings are hung out by the mantle with care. They're all filled with the exact same thing because
you don't want to, Santa doesn't want to give everybody something different because that means
like you're a different kid and you're a different kid and you. But in the old days, when we
cared about, when we really cared about children, if they were bad, we'd put coal in their
stockings. Okay, so where does that come from?
Where does it come from? First of all,
how do you get your hands on coal?
But, you know, in New York City,
it's very hard to come by. But go ahead. This goes back to
like around the early 1800s.
Now, this is something that B.S. Bentley discovered,
okay. Oh, B.S. Bentley.
Yes. So.
Go ahead.
Oh, okay. Well,
what he did was that
back in the mid-1800s, they used to
fuel houses with coal, right?
So if you got coal in your
stocking as a kid, that meant you
actually good because Santa was giving you like free fuel fuel for the Christmas season.
Yes.
Oh, you are kidding me because it's from B.S. Bentley.
Yes, but there's a codicil to that and there's another like, yeah, we'll get to that.
A codicil?
Yeah, I don't know what that means.
An actual codicil?
You're the English major.
I think I'm probably misusing that word for.
There's an actual codicil.
I can't wait to see this codicil.
We're going to be right back.
It's Fun Facts Friday.
Starring Albans Sater.
It's the Erkman Texas show.
We'll be right back.
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Cassidy. Ladies and gentlemen, it's the Eric Mataxis show. Metaxistock.com is our website.
If you are watching this on video at metaxistalk.com, you would see that right behind me is a screen with
our website, metaxis talk.com.
That is correct. And you would explode because it would be
so meta. It's right behind me. Look, right
there. There it is. Okay. So this is
a fun fact Friday special edition. Albin Sater.
Yes. Lay it on me, man.
Now, we were in the middle. We were talking about the coal.
Oh, the coal. Okay. Coal. Very important. People, if you're bad,
they put coal in your stocking. Right. That's what today we think it's bad.
Now, I'll show you why there's a turnaround here. Because like in the May
1800s or so, if you got coal in your stocking, that helped fuel your house. So that
I mean, hey, I'm a good kid.
Look at all this coal free fuel.
Right.
And by the way, for those of you who are just tuning in, that is an untrue fact, courtesy of B.S. Bentley, just so you don't think that that's real.
Go ahead.
Let's keep going.
Let's keep going.
Shall we?
Then, then when houses change to electricity, okay, if a kid got coal in his stalking, the problem here was now, hey, listen, kid, you're living in the past, man.
Right.
Right.
Right.
I got you, man.
Now, there were also houses.
I'm down.
There were also houses that were fueled with gas.
We know that, right?
Yeah.
And so if you found a dead canary in your stocking, that meant there was a leak somewhere and you should just get out of the house.
I think the idea is for me to be confused, in which case, Bob's your uncle.
I'm as confused as can be.
Lay it on me.
Okay.
So, Albin, so now those are untrue facts.
Do we have any true facts to lay on the listeners at home?
Because there are people saying, you know what, man, I tune into the show to learn some fun real facts, some true facts.
Do we have any true facts to lay on the groovy listeners at home?
Okay.
I'm going to get to that right now.
Because these cats are hungry for knowledge.
Yeah.
Okay.
Here we go.
This is no full one.
There are probably three, three authors.
You're an author.
You can appreciate this.
I'm an author.
There you go.
I'm an author.
It's not like they say.
It's not like they say.
I'm an author.
I write.
I write books.
There you go.
Right there.
Right there.
But three authors that were really instrumental in making the images of Christmas that we have now.
Oh, I know who they are.
Can I guess?
Yeah, why don't you go?
Okay, Washington Irving.
You got it.
Charles Dickens.
You got that one.
The third one's a little...
Thomas Nast?
No.
Oh, wait a minute.
Don't tell me now.
Don't tell me.
Thomas Pinchin.
No.
John Updike?
No, I'm going to go with Clement Clark Moore.
Oh, of course.
He wrote...
Now, you know, it's interesting.
Two of these guys are New Yorkers.
Well, that's the other interesting thing.
Two-thirds of Christmas.
Christmas was invented in New York City where we are right now.
That's true.
But what's funny about the first guy on the list, because by age, around 1819, he went to England.
Wait a minute.
Who?
This is Washington Irving.
Went over to England.
And he experienced what he called an old-fashioned English Christmas.
And when he came back here, he started writing about it, like his experiences is England.
Yeah.
Okay.
So one of the things he talked about, but he added to it.
the gift giving and things like that was,
although it was actually gift giving to individuals was something that people did for Christmas,
but it was a Christmas Carol that actually made gift giving,
like we have the CSI campaign going on now because it's Christmas, right?
But the reason that we give to charities at Christmas was because of...
Charles Dickens says a Christmas Carol, the Scrooge story.
Exactly, because...
Now, hold on.
So you mean to tell me that gift-giving individuals already existed.
But somehow Charles Dickens' Christmas Carol, which was published in 1843, that began the idea that we think of Christmas as a charitable thing.
Right.
Expanding out to our fellow man.
That whole idea.
See, this kind of stuff, that's amazing to me.
I never thought of that.
And the neat thing about this, and you remember this, this is something you'll remember too.
A Christmas Carol was published for the first time.
on December 19th, like less than a week to go before Christmas, December 19th, 1843.
Right.
Okay.
And it had the original drawings and things like that.
And, of course, the first edition sold out immediately.
But it affected the public so much.
And, of course, it's a tale that's told every, every year.
Right.
It's always in print.
It's always being published.
But it affected people so much that the idea of workers getting a day off on Christmas.
Yeah.
That became like all the places.
They decided we're going to make this standard across the board.
And giving a gift to an employee like a turkey or something.
Because remember, in the story.
You know, I got to say, I'm amazed.
I didn't know this.
Yeah.
And to think that a book could have that power in a culture.
I mean, that Dickens was so popular and that that book was so popular that it changed the culture.
Yeah.
So that employers suddenly thought, oh, yeah, I should give my.
employee Christmas Day off.
First of all, the idea that that wasn't the case before that you kind of would think,
like, really, that you wouldn't get Christmas Day off?
Right.
Not everybody did that.
In fact, the Puritans thought that you actually should work more on Christmas Day.
This was another thing.
Yeah, this is something that Washington Irving found because it was kind of like, you know,
working and, you know, honoring God by doing, you know, by working, by being the person, you know,
building, that sort of thing.
That was a Puritan thing.
And it was like Washington Irving kind of wrote a, you know,
against that, like saying, like, you know, we're flipping that around.
Just to clear my mental palate, we're going to go to a little music.
Yeah, a little bit.
From David Cassidy and the Partridge family.
Folks, stick around.
It's the Eric McIntaxe Show Fun Facts Friday with Albin Seder.
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I'm telling you are coming to town.
He's coming to town.
He's coming, coming.
He's coming, coming.
And now it's so funny because Santa Claus, his theology's messed up
because he's got a works righteousness mentality.
Like if you're bad, he punishes you, if you're good.
There's no grace.
There's no grace, man.
It's messed up in my new book.
You have a new book?
Yeah, I have a new book out called Martin Luther,
the man who rediscovered God and changed the world.
In that book, I talk about the issue of grace
and how when you have a works-based view of the world like Santa,
you're kind of getting it wrong.
Thank you.
You're welcome.
One thing I want to mention about is,
And by the way, some of these traditions, you know, getting a day off and all that was where they were around.
But it was like now everybody's doing it because it's almost like if you don't, you're a scrooge.
You see how that all played in?
You know, but it shows you, we did a breakpoint on this.
Now, people, maybe people listening to this program don't know that I do a radio commentary called breakpoint.
And you can go to breakpoint.org.
And at breakpoint.org, you can listen to these.
But I did one a couple of weeks ago or maybe it was a couple of days ago.
I can't remember when we aired it, but it's about the very issue of how art can transform culture.
And the idea that this novella, it's not a novel, it's a novella, a short story.
I mean, it's not a short story, but it's not quite a novel.
It's longer than a short story.
It's a novella called A Christmas Carol in 1843 so dramatically affected the world, especially the world of England, but of course it jumps over the Atlantic and affects us.
I find that fascinating, and it ought to move people.
particularly people of faith, to produce more art.
Yeah, yeah, to do something.
That one thing, if that was the only book he wrote,
he would be famous at infinitum, right?
And unfortunately, he wrote so many more books,
and that's why he's not famous.
Yeah, unfortunately.
Yeah, whoever heard of Charles Dickens.
Yeah, who's that?
It's so sad.
Reading, and it's fun to read the original from which all these movies are taken from, right?
Because there's McGoo's Christmas Carol in back in 62,
which is one of my favorite.
Wait a minute.
Wait a minute.
You know, you realize there are people listening.
They don't even know who Mr. Magoo is, but Mr. Magoo is a cartoon figure from our youth.
Yes.
And unfortunately, he passed away just a couple years ago.
He sure did.
Well, yeah, Jim Back is, sure, the voice.
But there's a scene in there.
Now, remember, Mr. the young Scrooge was dating and engaged to Bell, okay?
And in all the movies that I've seen anyway, I haven't seen, there's a scene in the book in the real Christmas Carol.
where you find out what happened to Bell, his sweetheart.
The girl that he was dating, right?
In the movies, they never follow up with Bell.
Right.
Or if they show her, she's like in a poor house and she's helping the poor.
Really?
I've never seen that.
My favorite, okay, but I was going to say my favorite Christmas Carol Scrooge movie is the 1970 Scrooge starring Albert Finney.
Alec Guinness plays Jacob Marley.
Oh, really?
Alex Guinness plays Jacob.
It's brilliant.
It's brilliant.
But if you haven't seen the Scrooge musical, the 1970 Scrooge musical, I rave about it every Christmas, and I have to rave about it now.
I didn't mean to interrupt you.
No, that's okay.
I rave about Alistair Sim, but there's a scene in the actual and the original Christmas car where you see what happened to Bell.
And what's interesting is Bell is actually married, has several kids.
She's happy with her husband.
And her husband says, this is all in this little scene.
He says, like, you know who I saw?
Well, today I was walking past his counting house today, and I saw him in there on Christmas
Eve, counting his money, looked like a sad, lonely old man.
And she was like, oh, you know, the way they laugh back.
That was beautiful.
Yeah.
Beautiful impression of Bell laughing in her old age.
It's kind of fun because it's almost like, you know, and he is seeing this.
Of course, Scrooge is with the ghost, and he's seeing this thinking like, that was the
woman.
Those could have been my kids.
Oh, yay.
Oh, you mean, oh, you mean Scrooge as the ghost of Christmas.
present when he's with the Ghost of Presidents of Presidents of the President, he actually goes to
see Bell at home.
Right.
He's standing off in the corner and he sees how her life turned out.
Like he's a miserable old Scrooge and she's a happy Bell, you know.
Right.
So I thought that was kind of interesting.
And speaking of...
Scrooge.
Great Marley.
That's the, that's the, when I watch the Scrooge musical, the Albert Finney Scrooge musical,
I have the whole thing memorized.
There's so many beautiful moments in it.
But Albert Finney, you know, his voice,
He says, Scrooge.
It's incredible.
And then when Scrooge is opening his door, so the knocker, you know, he hears Scrooge.
And then he goes into the house and then a ghostly coach pulled by white horses comes past him.
And the ghostly coachman says, Merry Christmas, Governor.
Merry Christmas.
It's really spooky.
And by the way, you also find this out.
Mary used to mean an old England that you had.
a little bit too much to drink.
You were a little inebriated.
So people didn't say Mary back then, but he kind of popularized that war.
Okay, that's another thing.
I did not know that Charles Dickens popularized the phrase Merry Christmas.
We used to say Happy Christmas or whatever.
It seems like over in England, they still say Happy Christmas and we say Merry Christmas here.
Right.
But I wanted to get to some of the toys because I teased them at the top of the show.
But this was something I bought, you know, the Charlie Brown Christmas, which came out in 1965.
Can I hold him?
You can.
Oh, please.
See?
Oh, my God.
Where do you get this?
I got that about 20 years ago.
20 years ago.
Yeah, but that's what I like about the Charlie Brown Christmas.
It actually talks about the real meaning of Christmas, the Savior coming.
And in the voice of lines.
Did you know, I don't know if you knew it, but Charlie Brown Christmas, I mean, obviously Charles Schultz, he refused to back down.
The network wanted him to take out the religious part.
This is in 1965.
Exactly.
They wanted him to take it out.
Yeah.
And he refused, and they kept it in, and forever and ever.
This is, again, to show you the power of culture.
That's right.
That's right.
Forever and ever, people have been watching this beloved Christmas classic, and it includes the gospel, Christmas story from the gospel of Luke.
How amazing.
I know.
They can't get rid of it.
They can't because everybody wants to see the Peanuts Christmas special, and there it is.
Does he say the same thing over and over?
Yeah.
Can we say it one more time?
Yeah, go ahead.
Okay, we got to hear this.
What's Christmas all about?
Linus?
Oh, my gosh.
Here's something else Christmas is all about.
My mother-in-law gave me this.
I'm, I'm, I'm speechless.
I'm speechless.
See, she was so happy that I married her daughter.
You know, we're going to a break.
We're going to play a little Charlie Brown Christmas.
Oh, my gosh.
Ladies and a gentle people, that was a, that was Bugs Bunny.
There was some Bugs Bunny episode where there was a magician, and he says,
The ladies and a gentler populace.
And these ideas are stuck in my head.
Alvin, I know you and I are from the same generation.
We basically remember all the loony tunes, all the little rascals, all of that stuff.
It's like buried in our heads.
Three stooges.
If everybody needs proof of the existence of God, imagine that inside our skulls, there's this mushy, moist tissue.
and in that little amount of mushy, moist tissue is an infinity of information.
Can you explain this?
You think evolution did this?
I don't think so.
Okay.
Most important thing I want to share right now, folks.
I talk about this, in a sense, it's the theme of my new book, the short book,
Letter to the American Church.
It is faith without works is dead.
You have to live out your faith.
And part of the reason faith is on the decline, has been on the decline over the decades in America,
is because we've really sold it cheaply.
It's cheap grace.
We kind of act like, oh, you just have to believe and you're good.
You're going to heaven.
No, no.
That's nonsense.
That's a lie from the pit of hell.
You're supposed to live out your faith.
If you don't live out your faith, it's proof you don't have faith.
And so it's a joy to get to live out our faith.
And I say there's a million ways you can do that.
but I say on this program, support people who need your support.
We're living in crazy times, right?
So if you want to support this program, if you want to support other programs,
support their sponsors.
Our sponsors on this program, as you already know, are, well, we have many.
We have, I always mention mypillar.com and my store.com.
Use the code, Eric.
Please tell your friends to use the code, Eric.
Okay, we're not getting rich over here.
We need support.
I won't go into details.
But if people are going to mystore.com to get coffee or all kinds of other stuff from
mypillar.com, please tell your friends to use the code, Eric.
The other thing I want to talk about, another sponsor on the program, is InspireAdvisors.com.
I'm telling you, this is like you can see me getting agitated.
This is one of the greatest things ever that the folks at InspireAdvisors.com, they have
figured out a way that all the zillions of dollars that people like us have in investment funds that
are being used to support woke ideas, horrible ideas, anti-biblical, anti-American ideas, all that money
needs to be transferred to funds and to companies that believe in some of the same things that we do.
And so I just want to beg you, folks, go to inspireadvisors.com slash Eric.
Okay, this is not, this, I'm just telling you, this is free.
it's free.
InspireAdvisors.com slash Eric.
You've got tons of money supporting stuff that you hate
and supporting companies that hate you.
Fix that.
Go to inspireadvisors.com slash Eric.
Everyone can do this.
It is free.
It is crucial that we begin using the power we have to do that.
And actually, Albin, before we go,
let's remind our listeners,
oh my gosh, an opportunity to do something great,
for God. There are people enslaved in Sudan. We want to free them. We can free them. CSI. We're partnering with them. Any amount of money you give to CSI helps literally free slaves. These are Christians enslaved by radical Muslims. CSI. God bless them has figured out a way to deal with this. Any amount you give, anybody who can give 200
$150 that frees a slave and sets them up in a life of freedom.
Many people can do less.
Many people can do a lot more.
I'm just begging you take advantage of this.
We do this once a year.
This is so beautiful, so meaningful.
Live out your faith in this way.
Tell your kids about it.
Go to metaxis talk.com.
At the very top is the banner, you will feel good.
This is a glorious, glorious thing.
Metaxistalk.com.
Go to the top of the page.
You'll see the link.
God bless.
you as you give and he will bless you as you give.
