Sixty years ago, when Charles Schulz (“Sparky” to his friends) and his small creative team first brought the Peanuts gang to life on television, executives thought the project was doomed. Everything about it seemed wrong for network TV. The pacing was slow. The voice actors were children instead of professionals. And worst of all—in the eyes of executives—Schulz insisted that Linus stand onstage and recite the nativity story straight from the Gospel of Luke.
One executive flatly said that including Scripture in a Christmas special was too religious, too risky. But the air date had already been set, so CBS reluctantly agreed to broadcast it—once. They didn’t expect to do it again.
Then came December 9, 1965. Fifteen million people tuned in. And everything the executives had criticized—the simplicity, the sincerity, the Scripture—became everything viewers loved. The next morning’s reviews were glowing. Families had gathered around their televisions and heard, perhaps for the first time on primetime TV, the angels’ announcement: “Glory to God in the highest, and on earth peace, good will toward men.”
The special became a classic not because it followed the trends, but because it gently pointed back to something deeper than commercialism or sentimentality. Schulz once told his colleagues, “If we don’t tell the story, who will?”
This little, unlikely cartoon dared to tell the Bible’s story of Christmas. And decades later, the world is still listening.