Each year, from sea to shining sea, our nation sets aside the first Monday of September as a day of great festival. People gather together by the tens and celebrate Labor Day, a day that “constitutes a yearly national tribute to the contributions workers have made to the strength, prosperity, and well-being of our country” (Department of Labor History of Labor Day). Labor Day is remarkable indeed, but not for the reasons for the Central Labor Union first envisioned when they celebrated the first Labor Day back in 1882. Instead, Labor Day is significant because it serves as a sign of a different achievement of modern man—the erasure of what Thomist philosopher Josef Pieper once called the “Festive Principle.”
This festive principle is written into the nature of mankind. One might even say that it is festival that man is made for. At the end of the first creation account, the seventh day, God invites man to celebrate a festival with Him, a time to not just to reflect and rest but to revel in the fact that all that is, is good. Therefore, each man and woman finds buried in his and her heart a desire to celebrate the eternal festival; a desire that is fanned into flame by the great feasts of this life.
This desire cannot be wholly stamped out, but it most certainly can be squashed. We can and, in fact, have become most un-festive, a truth marked by the “celebration” of Labor Day. An experiment that began with the founders of the French Revolution has failed because, as Pieper says, “while man can make the celebration, he cannot make what is to be celebrated, cannot make the festive occasion and the cause for celebrating. The happiness of being created, the existential goodness of things, the participation in the life of God, the overcoming of death-all these occasions of the great traditional festivals are pure gift. But because no one can confer a gift on himself, something that is entirely a human institution cannot be a real festival” (In Tune with the World, p. 46).
Labor Day, like the other National Holidays including Thanksgiving where no one will name Whom it is we are thanking, are about celebrating gifts we have bestowed upon ourselves. As the Department of Labor reminds us, “It is appropriate, therefore, that the nation pays tribute on Labor Day to the creator of so much of the nation’s strength, freedom, and leadership — the American worker.” Dramatic pause aside, the fact that there is a most of suspense as we mention not the real Creator of those things, but man, is most telling. Once God is removed from our festal vocabulary our festivals naturally fall flat. Labor Day is a completely flat holiday.
Labor Day in a particular way ends up in the orbit of the absurd because it is a celebration based upon something wholly material. It no longer has the eternal festival in view. It loses its sacramental meaning and therefore is boring. Because of its materiality (along with Thanksgiving and secular Christmas especially) its “celebration” also has an interior spirit of competition. Men and women cannot unite around a common material good. The limited nature of material things leads away from unity and always end in competition.
If we peel back the layers of secularization, then we can see why Labor was chosen as worthy of festivity. Along with procreation, it is the way in which we most image God. In both cases we image God the Creator. So it should not surprise us that the Fall, in bruising the image of God in mankind, turned these two things into labor. The work of Christ the Laborer was to dial back these effects so that work now becomes a source of grace. Now that is something that is worthy of festival. That the One Who simply speaks things into existence should allow mere creatures to use their strength and freedom to co-create with Him. Worker bees have no dignity, man the worker has dignity because and only insofar as he works as the image of God. To flatten Labor Day out also flattens each one of us making us mere cogs in an economic machine. Celebrate Labor Day in a spirit of awe and thanksgiving to God the Creator and each man is elevated to his rightful place in the cosmos.
Nietzsche, who was no friend of transcendent values, once said that “the trick is not to arrange a festival but to find people who can enjoy it.” For all of the reasons above, Christians should enjoy Labor Day and truly celebrate it for everything that it should be. “This is the day that the Lord has made, let us rejoice in it.”