For Ivan Sergeyevich Shmelev (1873–1950), Christmas was not just a religious holiday, but a central event of the cosmos, the heart of the national and personal cosmos. As one of the deepest Orthodox writers of the Russian emigration, Shmelev created in his prose an idealized, but piercingly authentic image of pre-revolutionary Russia, where Christmas was the main act of the annual renewal of the world, the connecting thread between God, nature, family, and people. His descriptions of the holiday are not an ethnographic sketch, but a theological and artistic study of the essence of Orthodoxy through the prism of childlike perception.
The canonical image of Christmas in Shmelev is given in the peak of his creativity — the novel-chronicle "The Year of the Lord" (1927–1948). The book is built as a cycle, where the annual cycle of Orthodox holidays is understood through the memories of a little boy, Vanya. The key part is dedicated to "Festivals." Here Shmelev realized his main creative principle: to show how faith organizes the entire way of life, permeates everyday life, transforming it into being.
The structure of the Christmas myth in Shmelev: from fasting to the holiday
Shmelev describes not one day, but an entire liturgical and everyday cycle, where spiritual and material things are inseparable.
Christmas fasting (Philip's fast): This is not a time of deprivation, but a period of joyful anticipation, "a bright hunger." Domestic activities (slaughtering meat, fishing, baking) are sanctified by the goal of decently welcoming Christmas. Even strict restrictions in food are perceived by a child as part of the general, meaningful preparation.
Christmas Eve: The culmination of anticipation. Shmelev masterfully conveys the feeling of increasing holiness. The whole day is special: no work is done, the house is cleaned, kvass (a festive drink) is prepared. The central moment is the appearance of the "Bethlehem star" (the first evening star), after which the family sits down for a fasting meal. The world stands still in anticipation of the Miracle.
Night and Christmas vigil: The child goes with his father to the service in the frosty night. The description of the road, lights, the crowd, the temple filled with light and singing "Christ is born, glorify!" is the climax of liturgical experience. Shmelev shows not the external ritual, but the inner experience of being part of the greatest event that is happening "here and now."
The holiday itself: A joyful festive meal, general joy, a feeling of universal forgiveness and love. An important motif is the unity of all classes: beggars, servants, and business partners come to congratulate the merchant. All are "in Christ."
The holidays: The continuation of the holiday in folk forms — caroling, masked figures, divination. Shmelev does not oppose them to churchliness, but shows them as a natural, "organic" part of the folk-Orthodox culture, where laughter and play are also sanctified by the joy of the Born.
Synthesis of the high and the mundane: The language of Shmelev uniquely combines church Slavonicisms ("golden gates", "heavenly krini") with juicy Moscow speech, merchant and servant slang. This creates an effect of complete immersion in the element.
Symbols of food: The festive meal is not just a treat, but a symbol of the eucharistic banquet, unity, and the abundance of God's gift. Descriptions of dishes (" goose with apples ", "pork head with horseradish", compote, gingerbread) become part of the sacred ritual.
Light and frost as symbols: The piercing Moscow frost that runs through the entire narrative is not an enemy, but a symbol of purification, a beneficient frost, against which the warmth of faith, the domestic hearth, and temple candles burn especially brightly. Light (from the star, candles, lamps, hoar frost) — the main metaphor of the holiday.
The figure of the father: Strong, just, pious master and head of the family, Sergey Ivanovich, embodies for Shmelev the ideal of the "holy layman," arranging his life and home according to the laws of faith. His role in the preparation and conduct of the holiday is key.
The theological meaning: Christmas as victory over death
For the emigrant Shmelev, who had suffered the loss of a son and his homeland, the memory of Christmas acquired a metaphysical significance. This was not a nostalgic escape, but an affirmation of eternal, immortal foundations of existence. In Christmas he saw a guarantee that the destroyed world of "Holy Russia" did not perish completely, because it was rooted in the event of the Incarnation, which is beyond time. The joy of Vanya from "The Year of the Lord" is the joy of all lost Russia, preserved in words as a relic.
The depiction of Christmas by Shmelev stands apart in Russian literature:
He differs from the descriptive sketches of Leskov or Chekhov in greater liturgical and theological richness.
He differs from the Gogol tradition with its humor and grotesque in deep lyricism and the absence of irony.
He differs from Dostoevsky's analysis of "the underground" of the soul — a clear, sunny, almost sinless picture of the world of childlike faith.
The Christmas chapters of Shmelev are more than literature. This is an act of creation and preservation of the world in its ideal, sanctified form. Through a magically precise, rich in images and aromas description, he managed to make the holiday of Christmas eternal, accessible to every reader. His creativity became the "Christmas light" for the Russian emigration (and later for Russia) in the darkness of historical disasters, a reminder of the spiritual homeland, which is not in geography, but in faith and memory. Shmelev showed Christmas as a miracle of a homey, warm, edible God, who comes not as a menacing Judge, but as a Baby, around whom it is natural and joyful to gather the whole life — from the temple to the stable, from the merchant's house to the humble cabin. In this lies the main strength and mystery of his Christmas myth, making his texts indispensable reading for many generations in the days before the bright holiday.
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