christmas-spirit
Explanation
The Joke
A woman asks Jesus: "Dear Jesus, what is the true spirit of Christmas?" Jesus responds: "Songs. Commercialism." Taken aback, she pushes back: "What about family? And baby you in the manger?" Jesus explains that the manger scene is "a major contrivance to bring the Messiah to the prophecied location" -- in other words, it was a plot device, not a heartwarming moment. When she insists the family angle matters, Jesus replies: "That doesn't put food on a poor family's table."
The woman escalates, threatening to keep up her "songs and cloud confuser" approach, to which Jesus responds by threatening to make a card from locally sourced paper. She accuses him: "So it's all about you!" and he fires back: "I'm gonna make you a handmade card from locally sourced paper." The conversation devolves into a meta-argument about the commercialization vs. authenticity of Christmas, with Jesus himself seeming unable to define what Christmas should be.
The Humor
The comedy comes from Jesus himself being unable to articulate the "true spirit of Christmas" without either undermining the religious narrative (calling the nativity a "contrivance") or endorsing the commercialism everyone complains about. The comic satirizes the annual cultural debate about the "war on Christmas" and the "true meaning" of the holiday by showing that even the person Christmas is supposedly about cannot resolve the tension between its religious, commercial, and familial dimensions. The final jab about handmade cards from locally sourced paper mocks the performative anti-commercialism that can itself become a form of self-righteousness.