
None of his works seems to exude this feature more so than his Christmas books. Even The Battle of Life, which is the only one of his Christmas books that contains no elements of the supernatural, is ripe with this other-worldliness, this Pagan Christianity. Reading the story, it is hard to not picture these characters worshiping their household gods. One could transpose the entire story to Ancient Rome and find little need to change a thing.

This scene at the window in very similar to a scene in The Chimes, when Trotty Veck is in the bell tower, viewing goblins, all over the country side, comforting lamenting souls and tormenting sinners, until the bells stop ringing and they all disappear. They are the spirits of the bells working on the souls of men. It is a perfect example of his Pagan Christianity. Then the true spirits of the bells appear, "a bearded figure. . .a figure and the Bell itself." They are described as "mysterious and awful." Yet, even these Bells, he says were Baptised. He links fairies with the Church, combining folklore with religion. This is actually very common among the British. Even today, many devout Christians of the Celtic countries hold to beliefs in the fairy folk.

Christ did not come into the world to destroy the law, but to fulfill it. We are to cast aside the parts we do not need, and keep only that which is pertinant to the Christian faith. In the same regard, I think Christ did not come into the world to destroy Paganism, but to complete it. We can throw aside the harmful beliefs, but there are many aspects that need not be eliminated simply because of their connection to false gods. The early Church knew this, but many movements since have feared the harmful effect of Paganism, not realizing that Christianity has rendered Paganism impotent. It was because of this that Puritains abolished Christmas. Even America was founded without Christmas, and if not for such writers as Washington Irving and Charles Dickens, Christmas might have gone out into obscurity.