While a lot of people start listening to Christmas music as soon as Advent begins, others prefer waiting to listen to it until the actual Christmas season begins.
Growing up, my family never listened to Christmas music until we put the tree up on the Fourth Sunday of Advent or Christmas Eve. So, we spent most of December wishing all the stores and radio stations would also wait.
I have become a little more lenient since I have been running my own household with my husband.
We have a great selection of Advent music, including several concerts sent to us by Christian colleges and Advent at Ephesus by the Benedictines of Mary Queen of Apostles. We listen to Advent music to prepare our hearts for Christmas and to remind ourselves that as we wait for Christmas, we also wait for Christ to come again.
A couple of years ago, we noticed that several secular (not about the birth of Jesus) songs called “Christmas” music should be classified as winter-themed music or even Advent music.
If you look at the lyrics of many popular secular Christmas songs, you will discover that they are actually about getting ready for and waiting for Christmas.
Here are 12 examples of secular Christmas songs that are actually about Advent:
1) It’s Beginning to Look a Lot Like Christmas
“It’s beginning to look a lot like Christmas everywhere you go.”
This song does not proclaim it to be Christmas, but that it is starting to look like Christmas. Stores are having sales, and people are shopping and decorating, but it is not Christmas Day.
2) Silver Bells
“Silver bells silver bells, It’s Christmas time in the city, Hear the bells go ring-a-ling, soon it will be Christmas day.”
This song is not appropriate for after Christmas because the line about Christmas coming soon would no longer work. Again, we hear of people shopping and preparing for Christmas. They are waiting and preparing.
3) Santa Claus is Coming to Town
“You better watch out, You better not cry, You better not pout, I’m telling you why, Santa Claus is coming to town.”
Now we know that the real reason for Christmas is Jesus’ birth, but the songs about Santa Claus coming are definitely more appropriate for Advent than Christmas. We should all take the penitential part of Advent seriously and shape up, and one could argue that the songs are irrelevant after Saint Nicholas Day on December 6. My children actually call Santa, Saint Nicholas.
4) All I Want for Christmas is My Two Front Teeth
“All I want for Christmas is my two front teeth, my two front teeth, see my two front teeth!”
Again we have a song preparing for Christmas. Maybe the sentiment of needing one's two front teeth is a little bit silly, but still, this child is clearly in Advent.
5) All I Want for Christmas is You
“All I want for Christmas is you, You baby, Oh, I won’t ask for much this Christmas, I won’t even wish for snow, And I’m just gonna keep on waiting, Underneath the mistletoe...”
This love song is really about waiting. It is about waiting for the one the singer loves. We too are waiting for the One that we love to come on Christmas and at the end of time.
6) Last Christmas
“Last Christmas I gave you my heart, But the very next day you gave it away, This year, to save me from tears, I’ll give it to someone special.”
This is another song on the theme of disappointed love. The song anticipates Christmas as a better time and is ready to be done with past sorrows.
7) I’ll Be Home for Christmas
“I’ll be home for Christmas, You can plan on me, Please have snow and mistletoe, And presents ‘neath the tree.”
Several Christmas songs are about wishing for a place or a person. These songs are symbolic of our Advent longing for Jesus to come as a little baby and to come again.
8) White Christmas
“I’m dreaming of a white Christmas, Just like the ones I used to know.”
"White Christmas" dreams and anticipates Christmas. This one is more eschatologically focused since it remembers happy Christmases of the past but hopes for the ultimate end of another white Christmas. We remember the first happy Christmas in Advent as we await the second coming.
9) "Frosty the Snowman"
The version of the song that ends with “I’ll be back on Christmas Day.”
In one way, "Frosty the Snowman" is merely a winter song. However, when Frosty speaks of returning on Christmas Day, it must occur during Advent.
(Unless it happened in Minnesota where we get snow in November).
10) We Need a Little Christmas
“But Auntie Mame, it’s one week past Thanksgiving Day now, But we need a little Christmas, Right this very minute, Candles in the window, Carols at the spinet”
The setting of this song takes place during Advent. It is not taking on a very good spirit of waiting. It is sympathetic to those who like to decorate at the beginning of Advent.
11) Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer
“Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer, Had a very shiny nose, And if you ever saw it, You would even say it glows, And all of the other reindeer, Used to laugh and call him names, They never let poor Rudolph, Join in any reindeer games”
We all are familiar with the story of poor Rudolph who did not fit in with the other reindeer because of his shiny nose. However, there is Christian symbolism in his waiting and suffering to be accepted, and finally, on Christmas Eve, his light is symbolic of the light of Christ coming to each and every home.
12) It’s the Most Wonderful Time of the Year
“It’s The Most Wonderful Time Of The Year, There’ll be much mistltoeing, And hearts will be glowing, When love ones are near”
Lastly, we have another song anticipating all the joys of Christmas. It talks about everything that is going to be done during the Christmas season, and it is waiting for those joyful things to happen.
So, this Advent, keep in mind as you hear preemptive Christmas music on the radio, in the stores, or even if you cannot resist in your home, that some of it actually is Advent music. This list is not exhaustive of all Christmas music, so we would love to hear if you can think of any others!