happy holidays!
Today's blog is from a column written by the Fat Pastor. After reading it, I stopped and thought a moment and realized, he is definitely on to this!!! So for all of you who may need a clarification also, please read on:
I am the associate pastor of Riverside United Methodist Church in Moline, and a 2006 graduate of Eden Theological Seminary. I was ordained as an Elder in full connection with the Illinois Great Rivers Conference of the United Methodist Church in 2010. I graduated from Illinois Wesleyan University in 1999, where I met my wife. I love God and I love the three girls in my life. The rest is just details.
"A few weeks ago I read a letter to the editor which basically said
that anyone who says, “Happy Holidays,” is a P.C., Christmas-hating,
God-ridiculing, Communist. Okay, so those weren’t his exact words, but
he was clear that he was not a fan of the alliterative greeting.
I really do not understand why people do not like the greeting “Happy
Holidays.” I too celebrate Christmas, but if I want to say, “Happy
Holidays,” does that make me less Christian? Is saying “Merry
Christmas,” really the badge of true Christianity? When someone says
“Merry Christmas,” are they then keeping the day holy?
The only reason most people care about whether or not you say “HH” or
“MC” is because Bill O’Reilly made it a big deal. Before he claimed
that there is a “war on Christmas,” no one noticed said war. “Seasons
Greetings,” and “Happy Holidays” have been accepted greetings for
years. There is an old Christmas song, “Happy Holidays,” that no one
seemed to mind. The word holiday is a contraction of the words holy
day, so in effect, we are saying “Happy Holy Days,” thus keeping
Christmas holy.
Plus, this is simply the time of year when there are a lot of holy
days. Beginning with Thanksgiving, then Christmas, and New Years, this
is considered the holiday season. I’m not sure why acknowledging a
coincidence of our calendar is somehow seen as “attacking Christmas.”
Another holy day in this season is Hannukah. Hannukah is actually a
minor feast day in the Jewish tradition, but has been co-opted for
commercial reasons. Much like Christmas was.
For many centuries Christmas was not a holiday. Two of the four
Biblical Gospels give no account of Jesus’ birth, and Matthew and Luke
have almost no references back to the birth stories once they are over.
The birth stories were not a big deal to early Christians. Christmas
only became a holiday as a way to appease pagans in the Roman empire.
It is little more than a co-opted winter festival.
But today it has become an important holiday. Not only in our
religion, but more so in our culture and economy. Many retailers depend
on the holiday season to survive. And mind you, not everyone buying a
bunch of crap at Christmas time is Christian. For the most part,
Christmas has become a cultural holiday – driven by economic need much
more than religious fervor.
So when people get angry when someone says “Happy Holidays,” I get
angry that they are angry. If you want to keep Christ in Christmas,
worry about things more important than the signs and decorations at JC
Penney. You think Christmas should be about Christ? Then take up your
cross and follow Jesus – not into department stores, but into the
prisons, the hospitals, among the poor and the outcast. You get angry
when someone doesn’t say “Christmas?” Try getting angry over Christ’s
children dying of malnutrition or AIDS. Try getting angry over the fact
that the Christmas chocolate you love so much was kept cheap on the
back of the working poor. Try getting angry over the fact that
Christians are keeping people out of churches with their closed minds
and closed doors.
You want to keep Christ in Christmas? Try putting Christ in your life
first. Then we’ll talk about how to greet each other. And if you want
a truly Christian greeting, one that makes no mistake whether or not
you follow the Christ child, try, “the peace of Christ be with you.”
You brood of vipers. You hypocrites. Try getting upset over something that matters. Merry Christmas and Happy Holidays."
I am the associate pastor of Riverside United Methodist Church in Moline, and a 2006 graduate of Eden Theological Seminary. I was ordained as an Elder in full connection with the Illinois Great Rivers Conference of the United Methodist Church in 2010. I graduated from Illinois Wesleyan University in 1999, where I met my wife. I love God and I love the three girls in my life. The rest is just details.
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