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A song that paints a rose-colored picture of a really rather grim reality dilutes the very nature of what Jesus was about. Perhaps many don't like to think of the king of kings being born amidst farm animals and all the unpleasantness that surrounds being in a working barn but to whitewash the nature of Christ's birth is in many ways to dilute what his entire mission was about. He was the lowest of the low in just about every respect - he said those who wish to be great must be the servant of all and every single aspect of his life, including his very birth, was consistent with that.
I wouldn't tell someone not to sing a song they liked, whatever the nature of the song. It just seems a shame when songs get ingrained in tradition to a point that something unpleasant becomes romanticised and we allow a picture to be painted that suggests Jesus was born in a barn that was presented just as it would be if a head of state were visiting.
The fact is, though, that the lyrics to Silent Night do not romanticize the stable or the animals or much of anything visual. Almost the whole of the wording refers to the wonder of the Savior being born, and there is nothing that suggests the event was a gala affair..