What are the rules of being an elf in the movie elf?

Dec9Thu

The Code of Elves

Singing Christmas carols and Christmas hymns is a great way to honour and celebrate the birth of Jesus December 9, 2010

Filed Under: Opinion & Critical Thought

What are the rules of being an elf in the movie elf?
Since its release in 2003, the film Elf has become a Christmas movie classic. It stars Will Ferrell as Buddy, a human raised as an elf by elves in the North Pole after sneaking into Santa's sack one Christmas Eve many years ago.

As an elf, Buddy has to adhere to The Code of the Elves, which states:

1. Treat every day like Christmas.

2. There's room for everyone on the nice list.

3. The best way to spread Christmas cheer is singing loud for all to hear.

I think we can put a wonderful spiritual spin and theological twist on The Code of Elves for this Christmas season and throughout the whole year.

Treat Every Day Like Christmas
Christmas, as you know, is the yearly Christian celebration of the birth of Jesus Christ. It's a time for giving, serving and loving. It's a time to praise and worship God for the Word, Jesus Christ. “The Word became flesh and blood, and moved into the neighborhood” (John 1:14, The Message).

The Word becoming “flesh and blood” refers to the incarnation. The writers of Salvation Story define incarnation as “the act of becoming flesh, as God took on full humanity for our salvation and became a man in Jesus of Nazareth” (Salvation Story, 147). Before he could be a man, Jesus was born as a baby. He was “wrapped in cloths and lying in a manger” (Luke 2:12). We celebrate this birth at Christmas. Let's remember the incarnation, which leads to salvation, every day. Let's treat every day like Christmas.

There's Room for Everyone on the Nice List
When an angel of the Lord appeared to shepherds to announce the birth of Jesus, the angel said: “I bring you good news of great joy that will be for all the people. Today in the town of David a Savior has been born to you; he is Christ the Lord.” (Luke 2:10-11).

The good news of great joy is the birth of Jesus Christ, our Lord and Saviour, the provider of salvation. This good news of great joy is for everyone; every child, woman, and man on the face of the earth. Every person has the chance to be saved by Jesus Christ. There's room for everyone in the book of life. There's room for everyone on the nice list.

The Best Way to Spread Christmas Cheer is Singing Loud for All to Hear
I love the lyrics of Christmas hymns and Christmas carols. They're full of references to Scripture and theological truths. Singing these songs is an amazing way to tell the Christmas story and spread Christmas cheer. The lyrics of these songs contain a promise and power that is unleashed when sung or read aloud. The words touch people's hearts and turn their thoughts towards Jesus Christ.

One of the best Christmas hymns is O Little Town of Bethlehem. Phillips Brooks' lyrics are beautiful. The third verse reads:

How silently, how silently
The wondrous gift is given!
So God imparts to human hearts
The blessings of his Heaven
No ear may hear his coming;
But in this world of sin,
Where meek souls will receive him, still
The dear Christ enters in.

Hark the Herald Angels Sing, written by Charles Wesley, ecstatically announces the birth of Christ. “Hark the herald angels sing, glory to the new-born King. Peace on earth, and mercy mild, God and sinners reconciled.”

Singing Christmas carols and Christmas hymns is a great way to honour and celebrate Christmas and to tell the Christmas story. As Buddy the Elf tells us, “the best way to spread Christmas cheer is singing loud for all to hear.”

Be a Buddy and remember the Code of Elves this Christmas season and throughout the new year.

Photo: © New Line Productions.

What are the rules of being an elf in the movie elf?
Captain Mark Braye and his wife, Nancy, are the officers/pastors of The Salvation Army Tri-Town Community Church in Temiskaming Shores, Ont. They have two children, Hannah and Micah. The four of them love to play and watch Sesame Street, Dora the Explorer, and The Wiggles.

@FlyingPineapples Best line in the movie :D

yah, and i love the whole, "Does Santa know you're here?" " You must be a South Pole Elf." "Call me an Elf one more time and I"ll wipe that chessy smile off your face!" "You're an angry elf!"

By Jake Doberenz

In the 2003 Christmas classic Elf (I think I can call it a classic now), the elves have about perfected a recipe for joy.

Elf, directed by Jon Favreau and starring Will Ferrell and Zoey Deschanel, depicts the elf-raised human Buddy as he ventures into the wild world of New York City. Buddy, raised as an elf to recite and take to heart the Code of the Elves, finds the world unexpectedly joyless. It first starts when a racoon for some reason doesn’t want a hug. Then, when he meets his dad, his dad doesn’t want to go ice skating nor hold hands—and his dad definitely does not appreciate his gift of lingerie. Buddy quickly learns that in the real world, people dress up in suits and go to work and (apparently) drink on the job in the mail room. It’s not really a happy place.

He’s a long way from the bright colors and never-ending joy of the North Pole.

However, Buddy doesn’t abandon his ethics even in this strange world. No matter what happens, Buddy is going to have some fun and spread some Christmas cheer. And this is likely because he knows the Code of the Elves. But more so, he takes to heart the Code of the Elves.

The Code of the Elves is three simple rules:

1.     Treat every day like Christmas. 

2.     There’s room for everyone on the nice list. 

3.     The best way to spread Christmas cheer is singing loud for all to hear.

Throughout the movie, Buddy lives out these rules. Each contributes to his unfathomable enthusiasm and excitement. By treating everyday like Christmas, he finds the wonder and magic in each day. By acknowledging that everyone can be on the nice list, he looks for the best in people and really does believe even the worst people (or racoons) can have redemption. And by spreading Christmas cheer through singing, he keeps the joy of Christmas alive for others as well.

A Theology of Joy

There is nothing inherently religious about “joy.” One can have joy no matter what god you worship or even if you don’t worship a god at all. Yet it is a profound mistake to assume that joy is simply another emotion on the spectrum, a combination of neurotransmitters like serotonin or dopamine. Reducing joy to this level does joy a profound disservice, as artists and writers have known for millennia.

Joy is not just an emotion, but a total tour de force against a negative experience in and of the world. Willie James Jennings provides an intriguing look at the concept of joy. In an interview with Miroslav Volf, he says, “I look at joy as an act of resistance against despair and its forces. … Joy in that regard is a work, that can become a state, that can become a way of life.” [1] Joy transcends happiness in that it takes constant work and becomes a whole lifestyle.

For Jennings, you need three things to cultivate joy. Firstly, you need the right people around you. Jennings suggests that you have to have “conditions set up where those people who have learned to ride the winds of chaos can say to you ‘c’mon, let me show you how to do it.’” Secondly, you need a willingness to “hold on to life” despite whatever troubles arise. Thirdly, you require the right spaces and rituals that produce joy in you. A space of joy is marked by being a place of joyous infection, where the space has claimed you as its own. [2] 

This understanding of joy comes out clearly in the life of Buddy the Elf. His wide-eyed expression and enormous grin come from making the pursuit of joy a lifestyle. As the first rule in the Code of the Elves demands, he treats everyday like Christmas. No day is ordinary. Everyday is meant for magic, wonder, excitement, and joy.

Buddy has many of the conditions for joy that Jennings describes. The North Pole provides both a space for joy and people who are joyful—even if he doesn’t always fit in. When he comes to New York, he makes Gimbels into his space for joy by decorating it during the night. And Buddy certainly has that willingness to hang on no matter his trials and new experiences. He doesn’t stay sad very long, always getting distracted by a joke or finding a happy place. Buddy lives joy. 

Music and Joy

The third rule in the Code proves to be most important in Elf. In the climax of the film, Santa has (conveniently) crashed in New York City. While typically the sleigh flies by the magic of Christmas Spirit fanned by people believing in Santa and Christmas magic, that’s been in short supply. However, the back-up engine is gone. Santa can’t power his sleigh without some Christmas cheer in the air.

Buddy has been touching people’s lives through the whole film. Some he angered, many he made laugh, and a few he radically changed. In the climax, Jovie, the love interest of Buddy, realizes what she must do. Knowing that “The best way to spread Christmas cheer is singing loud for all to hear,” she sings a Christmas carol in Central Park on camera! Previously she had been shy about singing in public, but Buddy’s joy infected her and inspired her. Thanks to her efforts, and the whole city singing along, Christmas is saved.

While Buddy enjoyed life as an individual and could certainly entertain himself, his joy constantly caused him to engage with other people. Similarly, Jennings proposes the existence of a joy that is found “in between” people rather than a joy that is found in segregated spaces. This joy in between is far more beautiful. In one talk on joy, Jennings remarks, “If joy is a reality of the creature, then joy is always an opportunity to link us in ways only limited by our imaginations.” [3] Joy happens when we get outside of ourselves and invest in others.

In Elf, joy is most quickly spread through music. This is implicit in the Elf code. In our reality, too, music brings great joy. Jennings affirms that music brings enjoyment and the tools to fight despair, an idea in line with many Black theologians. For instance, James Cone, in The Cross and the Lynching Tree, explains how music helped Blacks resist suffering in the Jim Crow Era. He writes:

“How did southern rural blacks survive the terrors of this era? Self-defense and protest were out of the question, but there were other forms of resistance. For most blacks it was the blues and religion that offered the chief weapons of resistance. At the juke joints on Friday and Saturday nights and at churches on Sunday mornings and evening week nights blacks affirmed their humanity and fought back against dehumanization. Both black religion and the blues offered sources of hope that there was more to life than what one encountered daily in the white man’s world.” [4]

Music and religion help a person resist despair, the very process that creates joy. This is not just the reality of the Black Americans that Cone is discussing. It is a universal reality. Music is incorporated in all major religions, humans spend loads of time and money on concerts, and we fill the quiet spots in the day with music—car rides, jogs, and doing the dishes. Music stirs joy in us. The elves know this; we know this. 

Joy that Connects

People throughout history have placed plenty of barriers between us. Jennings notes how Christianity along with many other religions use joy as a survival mechanism, to push back despair. Yet he says joy can do more than this: joy break out of our segregated spaces and join people together. Joy can and perhaps should be found in the mingling of people. 

Jennings chastises Christians for their lack of imagination in what joy can do, like overcoming racial and geographic segregation. As the remedy, Jennings preaches a lesson that Black Christians have long known: “Jesus presents a joy that gathers” [6]. Jesus’ joy draws from the great cloud of witnesses to God’s faithfulness and even more so from the very life of God. Thus, joy ultimately comes from God. He quotes John 15:8-11, which reads:

“This is to my Father’s glory, that you bear much fruit, showing yourselves to be my disciples. As the Father has loved me, so have I loved you. Now remain in my love. If you keep my commands, you will remain in my love, just as I have kept my Father’s commands and remain in his love. I have told you this so that my joy may be in you and that your joy may be complete” (NRSV).

As Jennings notes, “Completed joy suggested in this lovely passage is a joy that connects.” [7] Christian joy finds its completion in Christ, but it’s expression is in how we relate to others—in the fruit we bear. Joy spills into us from God and then out of us into our interactions.

In Elf, Buddy’s joy is constantly bringing people together. Buddy’s joy infects his father, who by the end of the movie forsakes his work to spend time with his family. The elf-human with yellow tights and a taste for candy on spaghetti managed to break barriers with the hardened New Yorker—his joy spread and changed him. 

Yes, it’s just a movie with plenty of fantastical elements. But it draws from human truth about how our demeanor and personality can make a profound impact in our circles. Joy can and should flow into the relationships around us. Joy is capable of so much more than we get it credit for.

Whether joy prompts us to sing, to smile, to decorate, to dance or get into a snowball fight, joy at it’s best connects us to the people around us. Joy breaks down barriers and quite possibly changes the world. The elves were on to something about joy. It’s not an expression just for the individual, but it’s a lifestyle and witness to the world. Will you embrace this kind of joy?

Jake Doberenz is an early career theologian who ministers at a local church and teaches middle schoolers (and has his hands full). He recently graduated with a Master of Theological Studies at Oklahoma Christian University. Jake occasionally blogs at www.JakeDoberenz.com and quite often tweets at @JakeDoberenz. Also check out his Christian entertainment and education company at www.TheophanyMedia.com.

[1] “Theology of Joy: Willie James Jennings with Miroslav Volf” (Video, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1fKD4Msh3rE)

[2] “Theology of Joy: Willie James Jennings with Miroslav Volf” (Video, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1fKD4Msh3rE)

[3] “Willie James Jennings on joy that joins” (Video, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CwiFx_mJAl4&t=3s&mc_cid=44afe186bb&mc_eid=74a53b36b9)

[4] James Cone, The Cross and the Lynching Tree, 12.

[5] “Theology of Joy: Willie James Jennings with Miroslav Volf” (Video, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1fKD4Msh3rE)

[6] “Willie James Jennings on joy that joins” (Video, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CwiFx_mJAl4&t=3s&mc_cid=44afe186bb&mc_eid=74a53b36b9)

[7] “Willie James Jennings on joy that joins” (Video, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CwiFx_mJAl4&t=3s&mc_cid=44afe186bb&mc_eid=74a53b36b9)

What are the rules from Elf?

What are the Rules for Elf on the Shelf?.
The Kids can not touch the elf. ... .
The elf does not move nor speak when the kids are awake..
The Elf Reports back to Santa at night when they fly back to the north pole to let Santa know how the kids were that day. ... .
Be Kind..

What is the first rule of being an Elf in the movie Elf?

63) In the movie Elf (2003), what was the first rule of The Code of Elves? The first rule of The Code Of The Elves is "Treat every day like Christmas."

What is the Elf code?

In computing, the Executable and Linkable Format (ELF, formerly named Extensible Linking Format), is a common standard file format for executable files, object code, shared libraries, and core dumps.

What 3 things make up the code of the elves?

And I'll start by telling him the "Code of the elves,” # 1 "Treat every day like Christmas." # 2 "There's room for everyone on the Nice list." And # 3 "The best way to spread Christmas Cheer, is singing loud for all to hear.”