Christmas Is for All of Us

You don't need to believe in a biblical story to celebrate the spirit and values of Christmas

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While I agree with the author that most of the important aspects of Christmas are secular, one cannot escape the fact that Christmas was originally intended to be a religious holiday. All of the secular aspects that the author cited were incorporated into the religious celebration by its earliest celebrants as a means of using this “Holy Day” as a means of influencing moral behavior, something religious leaders always do, for good or ill.

The most celebrated story associated with Christmas, is Dicken's “A Christmas Carol” and it is noteworthy that in the entire story, there is only one, passing allusion to Jesus Christ, coming in Tiny Tim's thoughtful observation that he hoped that people saw him in church because being crippled “it might be pleasant to them to remember upon Christmas Day, who made lame beggars walk, and blind men see."

Nevertheless, the whole thrust of the story is secular - man's moral responsibility to his fellow creatures; it was a social commentary on the appaling conditions that working class people in England were experiencing; a political commentary on the distribution of wealth and the control that the wealthy had over the poor. Scrooge's transgressions were not merely religious ones, but moral ones. As Marley's ghost put it, "Mankind was my business. The common welfare was my business; charity, mercy, forbearance, and benevolence, were, all, my business. The dealings of my trade were but a drop of water in the comprehensive ocean of my business!"

The original purpose of the drive to “Put Christ back into Christmas” wasn't intended to be exclusionary, but was rather a backlash at the overt commercialization that has turned this religious holiday into just another profit center; a gauge for measuring the success or failure of America's retailers. Its unfortunate that political agendas have misdirected that purpose into an exclusionary celebration and hanging out a sign “For Christians Only.”

The answer to this is less secularization of Christmas, not more. Put Christmas back into the religious box where it belonged in the first place; take all the trappings down from the public forum; and eliminate Christmas as a national holiday. At the same time, people should commit themselves to the true “business” of mankind; mercy, forebearance and benevolence. These qualities should not have anything to do with a religious observation, no matter how many people observe it. Everyone will still be able to get together with family and friends, eat and drink to excess, and give each other gifts if they wish. Local communities can still hold coat drives, perhaps because it is a human and humane thing to do, rather than “because its Christmas.”

In the end, Scrooge's redemption is not a religious epihany but a moral one. He does not awaken on Christmas morning committed to attending church or to pray more often, but to properly attend to the “business” of mankind, as Marley's ghost had admonished him.

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jennifer of KS 1:40AM December 23, 2011

I was raised purely secular with no religion nor Christmas, and never will feel the need to celebrate it. I prefer it remain CHRIST MASS and I respect those who want to celebrate it for it's now Christian basis--at least that is what it has been for the most recent centuries! What I don't like is now if I tell someone I don't celebrate it, I am called a scrooge. I am giving and caring all year...I don't need these holidays to remind me to be a good person. So, I totally disagree with the concept of Christmas being secular and some sort of National Holiday.nIt means nothing to me, and I have no fond memories of it from my past, as many do. And I love it that way! Please, don't turn this now Christian Holiday back into something else...esp. with the name it has now.

Norma Lee of NY 12:45AM December 23, 2011

I totally disagree with this article. I was raised purely "secular" with no religion, and never celebrated Christmas. It has no meaning or memories for me. To me, it was great my Christian friends celebrated the birth of Jesus ( as it should be) but people now think not celebrating it means I must be some sort of " scrooge" and selfish person. I do not like that Christmas has become like a National Holiday that we all should be expected to celebrate. So I say, PLEASE return it back to the original meaning of CHRIST MASS and lets respect that for the people who deeply care about it's religious meaning. I am giving and caring all year, and this holiday season doesn't change me at all.

Norma Lee of NY 12:35AM December 23, 2011

With all due respect, this is nonsense. What gives you the authority to say what the real meaning of Christmas is, anyway? The majority would probably agree with you on the fact, but let's not forget the true meaning of the word "Christmas"-- "Christ's mass." As for "family, charity, and generosity--values that all Americans share and celebrate"--No. That's a pretty big generalization. I'm pretty sure there are some Americans who do not hold these values. Furthermore, there are non-Americans who DO hold these values. But my main point is that these values are INDEPENDENT OF CHRISTMAS; people were celebrating them long before Christmas was a thing! Christmas is NOT for all of us, and it does NOT own human values. I would have no problem with a totally secularized Christmas (it would have a different name, of course, and would perhaps be indistinguishable from other winter holidays), but as long as Christmas remains a religious holiday that draws in the masses with non-religious traditions, it will continue to lend power to the Christian religion, which is not a good thing for the secular movement.

Alison of MD 11:34PM December 22, 2011

No. An overwhelming majority of Secular Americans who have provided data about their holiday practices to the American Secular Census www.SecularCensus.US indicate that they do engage in some form of winter celebration, generally a secular version of Christmas. These are individuals with a secular (or non-religious) worldview, but secularism as a Constitutional principle is exactly what frees religious Americans to observe their holidays as holy days, even as the non-religious celebrate the humanistic values of the season minus the dogma. There can be no such thing as "too secular" in a nation as diverse as the U.S.

American Secular Census of VA 10:29PM December 22, 2011

Has anyone noticed that all of the "Yes" arguments are based on either the writer's abject ignorance of their own religion (Jesus's birthday? It was a Winter Solstice celebration long before the Christians stole it from the pagans!) or just an whiney, emotional rant devoid of any objectivity or rational thought (anti-Christmas police - really! Just because we don't subscribe to your mythology?), while the "No" arguments are all based on historically accurate knowledge and rational, objective observations?

BenFromCA of TN 8:04PM December 22, 2011

No - this season has started to become associated with festivities and gift-giving in the same way Thanksgiving is with turkeys.

Most people nowadays see it as a tradition, not a deeply religious celebration, and those who try to ascribe religious meaning to today's traditions usually fail quite badly.

Steve of IL 3:22PM December 22, 2011

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