Commentary: The war on Christmas is over (if you want it)
Im a Christian who grew up not realizing there were holidays at the end of the year besides Christmas and New Years. I never had to. I was in the majority and uttering the words Merry Christmas was akin to breathing air; it was just something everyone did.
Thats why the supposed war on Christmas has long baffled me. I grew up being warned not to allow Christmas to become too secular, too focused on gift-giving and not enough on Jesus, only later to see fellow Christians outraged that employees at the mall and on commercials had begun saying Happy Holidays instead.
The irony is that in 1999, a federal court said that Christmas did not violate the establishment of religion clause of the U.S. Constitution because it had become so secular and was even being celebrated by non-Christians. Thats right. One of Christianitys most sacred holidays can remain public because it has been deemed insufficiently religious, and many Christians are passionately using the same rationale to protect the faith from a contrived war that only they seem to be fighting.
I only learned about other religions or that you could be an atheist and a good person at the same time when I was introduced to them after many years of believing there was only one true faith. And still, none of those faiths is treated with the deference Christianity is afforded in the United States, even with the secular embrace of happy holidays, which is simply a wise move by retailers and advertisers to engage as many potential customers as possible, and the ability of others to voice opinions and encourage laws and social norms that dont squarely align with the conservative Christianity I long embraced.
Thats why it has been odd to hear white evangelical Christians, in particular, giddily respond to President Donald Trumps claim that we can now say Merry Christmas again, as though President Barack Obama had outlawed the phrase. He hadnt; its easy to find video of Obama repeatedly using the phrase himself in multiple settings while in office. Its been odder still that the same Christians embraced Trump, a man whose life choices have not illustrated he has adhered to many if any Christian tenets while shunning Obama, a man whose personal life does.
As Christians, we are so accustomed to being the sole center of attention, it can feel like an attack when others are invited on stage to soak up a bit of the spotlight, too.
http://www.heraldnet.com/opinion/commentary-the-war-on-christmas-is-over-if-you-want-it/?utm_source=DAILY+HERALD&utm_campaign=3a96f3c1ec-RSS_EMAIL_CAMPAIGN&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_d81d073bb4-3a96f3c1ec-228635337
bearsfootball516
(6,377 posts)In an attempt to play the victim card. There was never any war on Christmas...but its a good way for people to claim they overcame persecution or something.