Obviously there are those (Christians and non-Christians) who are indifferent to either greeting. They realize they are able to use one greeting or both greetings without any hard feelings. Their purpose is not to offend but just to be cheerful...good for you! For those of you who feel so strongly about this issue that it makes you angry and invokes in you a sense of injustice, I hope you will hear me out. I'm trying not to judge, knowing I myself am a sinful person and don't always think rightly. Hopefully what little humility I have will be evident in my writing. My main concern is for people to be informed and for the Gospel not to be muddied by an unnecessary struggle. So here are a couple of observations I think everyone (although I'm writing more specifically to Christians) should consider before donning sandwich boards and ringing bells shouting, "Don't take the 'Christ' out of Christmas!"
#1 - Why would we force people who are not Christians to say "Merry Christmas"? Are we so prideful that we'd make other people recognize and unwillingly hold to our beliefs? Sometimes this mindset is in conjunction with the idea that, "America started its journey to hell when prayer was taken out of schools." No it didn't...taking prayer out of schools should have never changed a Christians' prayer life. 1Thessalonians 5:16-17 says, "Always be joyful. Never stop praying." Although, that's for another blog post, the underlying belief is the same...taking the 'Christ' out of Christmas should not change how Christians view Christmas. Protesting the use of 'Happy Holidays' and 'Holiday Tree' does not convey the message of hope, forgiveness and love found in Jesus. We can still celebrate Christmas as a remembrance of Christ's birth no matter what greetings people are using. Our energy and zeal should be utilized in growing in our relationship with Jesus and sharing the gospel daily, not in demanding others to conform to our preferences.
#2 - Does anyone know what "Happy Holidays" actually means? The word 'holiday' is literally translated 'holy day' and since we celebrate December 25th in honor of Jesus' birth...that makes it a holy day! I'm not sure all Christians know this, but what we celebrate as Christmas - December 25th - is not actually Jesus' birthday. Most scholars think it was sometime in the spring. The earliest recorded celebration of Christmas was in Constantine's Day (336AD) and December 25th was declared the official date by Pope Julius I, a few years later. There is some historical evidence that this date may have been chosen due to some Pagan winter celebrations that also took place in December.
![]() |
| image courtesy of US News |

AMEN!! Love this!! Have a very "Merry, Happy Christmas Holiday"!
ReplyDeleteenjoyed reading this, treasure your beliefs and inform others -- but not demand/expect conformity!! thx for your honesty. ~as
ReplyDelete