Hili dialogue: Holiday edition

December 25, 2025 • 7:00 am

Welcome to December 25, 2025, and of course it’s not only Christmas, but the first day of Koynezaa, my personal holiday extending from today until my birthday (December 30).

We’re at the end of another year, and it was almost sixteen years ago that this website started, first simply as a way to promote my book Why Evolution is True.  But then it grew into a monster, chronicling many of the things I was thinking about, and, to my surprise, people wanted to read about more than vestigial organs and island biogeography.

Well, I’m still here for the nonce, and greatly appreciate the readers, including those who send me links, tips, and especially wildlife photos. (It’s time to send more in!) 2025 pretty much sucked, both personally and worldwide, and so let me leave you with hopes that 2026 will be brighter. Of course we’ll have more bad news, but remember that life is short, that it’s is a gift (from your parents and the Universe, not from God), and that you’re not going to be moaning about Trump on your deathbed.  Eat, drink, be merry, tell your friends you love them, and read good books.

Best holiday wishes from Professor Ceiling Cat (Emeritus)!

I’ll proffer just a few holiday-related items before we get to our most awesome Readers’ Cats Parade. It’ll be posted at 9 a.m. Chicago time.

Da Nooz:

*More of the same Department: The Justice Department announced that they’ve found a million more Epstein files!  Where were they hiding? Was there a huge cabinet of documents that were simply overlooked.  The exegesis and redaction of those documents will last well into 2026.

*If you need Jesus today Department:  If there’s any doubt that the Free Press is going way soft on faith, doubtlessly via orders from above, here are two headlines on today’s front page. First, a list of eleven books from religionists to fill that GOD-SIZED HOLE IN YOUR HEART.  (You do have one, don’t you? My latest echocardiogram didn’t show one, but perhaps others have one.) Click headline to read.

Here’s the intro from the editors, all of whom have the Big Lacuna:

Between the rush of travel, hosting, and endless to-do lists, the Christmas and New Year season can easily become a frenzy—leaving little space for what the holidays are truly about: rest, connection, and spiritual renewal.

But as the year winds down, there’s no better moment to pause, reflect, and rediscover meaning. Sometimes, that pause begins with something as simple, and as powerful, as a book.

To that end, we turned to three of our friends from different religious traditions and asked them to recommend titles that nourish the spirit, and may bring readers closer to God. Rabbi David Wolpe, Timothy Cardinal Dolan, and Eboo Patel, the Muslim founder of Interfaith America, made some wonderful—and surprising—selections. Together, they form a rich reading list for 2026. Enjoy! —The Editors

Here are a handful of the eleven books they’re pressing upon us this Christmas, saying that they’ll “bring us closer to God.”

The Sabbath (1951) by Abraham Joshua Heschel

From a master theologian and an exquisitely gifted writer (working in English, a language he only learned as an adult) comes a tone poem that explores the place of time and space in our lives. Heschel helps us understand the ways each day can be sanctified.

—DW

Life of Christ (1958) by Fulton J. Sheen

One of the great evangelical Catholics of modern times, Sheen here vividly retells the “greatest story ever told.” There is no better book for those seeking to discover the message of Jesus Christ.

Encountering God: A Spiritual Journey from Bozeman to Banaras (1993) by Diana L. Eck

The book that inspired my commitment to interfaith work. Eck’s memoir of deepening her Christian faith by engaging with Hindus on her various visits to India demonstrates the importance of religious pluralism.

—Eboo Patel

Here’s a must-read if you seek beauty and mercy:

Muhammad, the World-Changer: An Intimate Portrait(2021) by Mohamad Jebara

Of the many works I have read on the Prophet Muhammad and Islam, this is the most moving. I can think of no better book for making the beauty and mercy that are central to Islam accessible to American readers.

—EP

Shoot me now. . .  I am reading Matthew’s new biography of Crick, which is terrific. Crick had no truck at all with religion, and refused an appointment as a fellow at a Cambridge University college because it wanted to build a chapel for worship.

Another headline:

This is the story of Martin Shaw, a writer who went into the woods seeking to fill that hole in his heart. And then, just like Francis Collins saw a frozen waterfall that turned him to Jesus, Shaw saw a falling star. That astronomical phenomenon somehow made him realize and accept the whole truth of the Christian story:

The falling star, the nine words, now the dreams. With my 50th year now only days away, I submitted to the reality of what now seemed screamingly apparent. God, the Ancient of Days, was announcing himself. For decades, myths had told me all about life, but this myth, crashing like that January arrow into human time, told me how to live that life.

On October 21, 2021, I became a Christian. Or, more likely, I realized I was a Christian. Just not a very good one. A little out of focus. Praying on a hill doesn’t make you a Christian, and I wouldn’t have thought myself as one during the vigil. But on that October evening, I finally verbalized quite what had happened.

. . . I’ve kept my attention on the particular mysteries of the Christian tradition rather than taking an endless à la carte approach to myth. What you lose in variety, you gain in absorption. “Falling into the mind of Christ” is how the Apostle Paul would put it. Life is generally much quieter now. I watch the skies hopefully, but I suspect I’ve had my Bethlehem moment.

Amen, ladies and gentlement, brothers and sisters, friends and comrades.

*Matthew says that Bob Dylan of all people, born a Jew, has released a Christmas album.  And he did—in 2009. This is apparently one of the songs on it, with a lively polka beat. “Must Be Santa” was not written by Dylan, but by Hal Moore and Bill Fredericks.

From Wikipedia:

In November 2009, Bob Dylan released a version of the song in a polka-meets-klezmer style (based on an arrangement by Brave Combo, whose version he had played on Theme Time Radio Hour) for his Christmas album, Christmas in the Heart. The New York Daily News described Dylan’s version as such: “It’s sort of unclear if Dylan (…) was aiming to celebrate the holiday, or gently poke fun at the music’s Norman Rockwell-esque simplicity”.[6] Following Brave Combo’s lead, the lyrics in Dylan’s version mix in the names of several United States presidents with a list of Santa’s reindeer (e.g., “Dasher, Dancer, Prancer, Vixen / Carter, Reagan, Bush, and Clinton”). Eleven years after its release, “Must Be Santa” placed 24th in a Rolling Stone article about the “25 Best Bob Dylan Songs of the 21st Century” where critic Amanda Martoccio called the song “zany” and the “centerpiece” of Christmas in the Heart.

Nash Edgerton directed an official music video for “Must Be Santa”, described as “bonkers” by Martoccio, in which Dylan lip synchs the song at a raucous Christmas house party with other holiday revelers. Count Smokula makes an unexpected appearance as an accordion player, miming the accordion part that David Hidalgo played on the actual recording. As of Christmas 2024, the video had been viewed over 8 million times on YouTube, significantly more times than the next most popular versions of the song (i.e., those recorded by Mitch Miller, Raffi and Brave Combo). “Must Be Santa” was also released as a music video ecard and a 7″ single, the b-side of which is a recording of Dylan reading ‘Twas the Night Before Christmas that was first broadcast on Theme Time Radio Hour

I have to say that this is better than most latter-day Dylan songs. He appears in a bowler hat and wig throughout the video, and, at the end, in s Santa hat.

Meanwhile in Dobrzyn,  Hili is recalibrating

Andrzej: Are you asleep?
Hili: Nope, I’m rescheduling every problem for next year.

In Polish:

Ja: Śpisz?
Hili: Nie, odkładam wszystkie problemy na przyszły rok.

Three from CinEmma:

From Jesus of the Day:

From Now That’s Wild:

Screenshot

From Larry the Cat; a post and a video (h/t Simon)

. . . and a video:

From Matthew: Victorian Christmas cards. They don’t make ’em like this any more!

Merry Christmas 🎄✨

Natalia Jagielska (娜塔莉) (@nataliajagielska.bsky.social) 2025-12-24T16:48:31.979Z

From Rawan Osman; just as predicted by Hili:

Speaking of that, here’s a relevant sketch from that Israeli comedy show (I can’t remember its name).

J. K. Rowling’s charm bracelet (shown below) is apparently of significance to her. (“Strike” is a series of crime novels written by Rowling under her pen name. I haven’t read any of them.)

The bracelet. You figure it out:

From Ricky Gervais:

The Obamas’ Christmas-card photo. Lovely family, but Barack should lose the bow tie:

. . . and Christmas wishes from the beleaguered President Zelensky:

 

34 thoughts on “Hili dialogue: Holiday edition

  1. A THOUGHT FOR TODAY:
    The tools of conquest do not necessarily come with bombs, and explosions, and fallout. There are weapons that are simply thoughts, attitudes, prejudices, to be found only in the minds of men. For the record, prejudices can kill and suspicion can destroy; and a thoughtless, frightened search for a scapegoat has a fallout all of its own for the children, and the children yet unborn. -Rod Serling, writer of the science fiction TV series “The Twilight Zone” (25 Dec 1924-1975)

  2. A happy first day of Coynezaa (traditional spelling) to all!

    Thank you for the sixteen years of WEIT website, Professor…cannot believe it has been 16 years since the book was published.

    I also cannot believe TFP is serious….seems more like The Onion. Glad I unsubscribed when I did. This is ridiculous: three religions? Like they span belief space. What about atheism? Should not it be represented in TFP’s canonical list?

    Lastly, I look forward to unwrapping and cracking open “Crick” here around mid-afternoon myself, when I anticipate that a wife, child or grandchild will gift a copy to me.

  3. Hey awesome pic!

    Merry Christmas and Happy Coynezaa to all, and to all a good night!

    Was the ‘K’ deliberate or a typo? Also – I sent the mejdool dates – the return address might have been confusing – enjoy!

    I also just got CRICK – a page-turner! Also the spine looks awesome on the shelf!

    🧬🎶🎶🎄

      1. I like the Old World feel —

        And in fact “C” is an essss or ssss sound in certain old scripts/languages… “K” is a hard sound … they can get lost in modern talk …

        Cheers

  4. If there’s any doubt that the Free Press is going way soft on faith, doubtlessly via orders from above,

    Ummm – how far above?😉
    Happy Coynezaa!

  5. I think you are supposed to say that Jesus was a Palestinian man who was killed by the Jews to make the antisemitism even more explicit.

  6. Merry Newton Day! We should all aspire to stand on his shoulders as we continue the scientific and technological revolution made possible by his science and mathematics.

    1. But not his alchemy

      c.f. Newton’s own translation – inter alia – of The Emerald Tablet a foundational text – probably THE founding text – of Hermetic alchemy (Corpus Hermeticum is the other text) :

      As Above, So Below

      1. Well, we can forgive Newton’s alchemy and his nutty efforts to interpret the Book of Daniel. For that matter, God knows what absurd alchemical or religious ideas might have been had by Archimedes and Eratosthenes. These aforementioned gentlemen are regarded as geniuses because of their scientific insights and mathematical brilliance, not for whatever crackpot ideas they might have indulged.

  7. From one of the comments in the “King of the Palestinians” sketch:
    The skit is from the Israeli satirical show “Eretz Nehederet” (A Wonderful Country), aired on Keshet 12. It first broadcast on December 26, 2023, so the clip is about 2 years old. The comedy is by the show’s ensemble cast.

  8. Well, the bari weiss issue has finally gotten my family’s attention…apparently cbs is broadcasting the nfl commanders (nee redskins) game today, but NOT in our region…we get a couple of soaps..bold and beautiful/young and restless…boy are they pissed! Bari apparently has not recognized the football shaped hole in their hearts.

  9. I doubt Bari Weiss is a believer, but she is certainly terrified of the growth of Islam, and very likely thinks that the only protection is to unite with the Christians, who is the only community that upholds the same values as the Jews.

    1. Seems like bari would recall when the crusaders wiped out the muslims last time, the jews did not fair too well either. I would rather trust in a religion-replacing enlightenment myself. Remove and replace!

      1. A religion-replacing atheist enlightenment looks to me more like Marxism or Pharyngula than secular humanism, present august company excepted. If I was a Jew I wouldn’t bet on the atheists fighting off Islam for me. Why are atheist Europe and Canada capitulating to Islam today while Christian America pushes back? Even if the atheists mustered the collective will to win the Battle of Tours again (under what banner?), they’d turn on the Jews once the Muslims had been eliminated. Even if the Muslims renounced their faith — why on earth would they? They want to die for Allah — and joined in your religion-replacing enlightenment, just having more atheists doesn’t help the Jews….even if they became atheists too!

        The thing is, even an atheist Jew is still a Jew to the Jew-haters whether they are atheist, Christian, Muslim, Hindu, or pagan. The Evangelical Protestant Churches in America (and Canada) are more reliable allies in the here and now than the atheists because yes they are united in their resistance to Islam. Atheism may be no bar to creating Utopias where everyone gets free health care, free daycare, generous welfare, and a state pension (as long as they don’t have to deal with diversity) but it’s not turning out to be a very effective bulwark against intolerant totalitarian religious fanaticism.

    2. Actually I …think she is a believer. Perhaps maybe not as much as recent defections from atheism like Nial Ferguson and Ayan (whose explanation for their move to Christianity is, as you say Mr. FB, a legitimate fear of Islam).

      At the Times she wrote of the Tree of Life shule shooting (her childhood shule in PA).
      Seems like she spent a lot of time there growing up, bat mitzvah, community, family etc.

      Plus.. if she wasn’t a believer her wife wouldn’t have needed to convert. I can only speak from my own experience but when an atheist Jew “marries out” there’s no need to convert one’s partner. Esp since conversion is a hassle. But ….they’re women and I know less about women than just about anything at all. 🙂

      D.A.
      NYC

  10. Thank you for a great website Jerry. I’ve been there almost from the beginning.
    What a difference WEIT has made in my life.

    Looking forward to the Crick book today and cuddling my cat.
    Cheers to another year of Koynezaa!

  11. It’s great to see so many new Epstein files appearing each day. Keep the gravy train of outrage rolling! My God-shaped hole is overflowing with Epstein news.

    Books? I finished Matthew’s excellent book on Crick! I had no idea that he was such an interesting character, in addition to being a great scientist. One of his secret sauces was collaboration with people younger than he. It kept him young and feisty. But read the book yourself. Written by a scientist, it’s a paragon of clarity. No “artistic” puzzles to solve. Just a refreshingly clear presentation of events in chronological order.

    With Crick under my belt, I’m now reading a 2025 book by Laura Spinney called “Proto: How One Ancient Language Went Global.” OMG aid it hard going, full of obscure peoples and places! But it’s interesting and I’m working through it. The most important innovation in the study of the spread of the Indo-European languages is, you guessed it, DNA sequencing. It’s revolutionizing our understanding of the spread of humanity across the world.

    Thank you, Jerry, for helping me start my day this past year. The world can’t get any bleaker—until it does.

    Happy Koynezza to all, and to all a good book!

    1. Me also, Norman. Fills the “New York Times shaped hole” in my life every day since I unsubscribed a year or two ago.
      I’ve ordered Crick.

      best and Happy K. to all,
      D.A.
      NYC

      1. Love “NYT shaped hole since I unsubscribed”, David. When I was working, I always dreamed of when I would retire and could start the day with a leisurely breakfast and reading the nyt (door-delivered hard copy natch). So it happened in 2008, but then nyt went downhill and I unsubscribed and shifted to Wapo hardcopy, which also gave me VA political news (I live in VA). Then they went downhill and I unsubscribed. Now I start each day with breakfast and the daily Hili dialogues and da Nooz of WEIT…and the real-time comments (not a hard copy but it turns out that I am trainable). There was also an interlude of subscribing and unsubscribing to Common Sense and TFP I think.

  12. So I was only 40 when you started WEIT! That seems like a long time ago. I think I started following around 2012, so close to the impetus. It’s been a part of my life ever since and I appreciate it every day…well, almost every day. The Hili dialogue sure has evolved. I like your Santa picture, AI generated I imagine.

    Happy C-Koynezaa!

  13. I’d like to add my voice of thanks to Dr. PCC(e). I’ve been a reader and an advocate for WEIT to all who ask since the beginning.

    Thank you Dr Coyne for another year of great, thoughtful, worthwhile conversations. Not to mention the Hili dialogs and the Readers Photos. Here’s to another year of WEIT! raises a glass of Ardbeg

    Best to you Dr Coyne, and to all WEITers.

  14. Good suggestion Mark, and thanks for the link Jim. Very cool.

    One comment, lol! And the link to the book no longer works- no surprise.

    Oops, this was supposed to be a response to 2 comments above…

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