http://www.michaeladelberg.com/
This blog was originally published two years ago. It is being brought back at the request of a reader.
This blog was originally published two years ago. It is being brought back at the request of a reader.
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The week after Thanksgiving, a few things reliably
happen. Christmas music fills the radio; Christmas specials fill the TV;
Christmas ads fill the newspaper; Christmas decorations light-up the
neighborhood. And in recent years, amidst all the red and green, a few voices
reliably complain that there is a “War on Christmas”.
Best I can tell, “War on Christmas” complaints are
spawned from a handful of local controversies in which a school board bans the
singing of Christmas songs in the elementary school, or a city council resolves
to remove a manger from city hall’s front lawn. Then news-ish talk shows on
cable TV (most famously Bill O’Reilly, but others too) point to these oddball
controversies as proof that there is a “War on Christmas.” The charge is leveled
loudly and often enough to achieve parity with fact. So now we have a War on
Christmas.
Non-Christians, including yours truly, are mostly
ambivalent to the small-town controversies about the Christmas carol and the
manger. We don’t cheer when the manger is pulled down, and we don’t care whether
or not our kids sing Rudolph the Red
Nosed Reindeer in school. These things are small potatoes, and we understand
that the majority culture is entitled to set the cultural agenda. We even
patronize favorite pieces of Christmas culture: we stroll through Christmas
light shows and happily watch the Grinch
Who Stole Christmas, again and again.
The U.S. is now and has always been a Christian
nation. All non-Christian religions put together claim less than 10% of
Americans; another 10% or a bit more are atheist or ‘no preference’. That means that
roughly 80% of Americans are Christian. Even nominal Christians who rarely attend
church generally love Christmas. The huge majority of non-Christian
Americans—whether Muslim, Jew, atheist, or whatever else—understand this. We
don’t make waves.
With this in mind, let’s return to the “War on
Christmas”. War, by its very definition, implies organized hostility by one
group against another. I challenge anyone to find an organized movement to
subvert the annual Christmas tsunami. Even the ACLU, the boogeyman of many a
“War on Christmas” yarn, has defended the right of Christians to celebrate
Christmas a half dozen times since 1999.[i]
If
there has been a War on Christmas, it is the lamest offensive in the history of
warfare. But don’t trust the word of this secular humanist, do the research
yourself. Examine the TV Guide for
the month of December and count the number of Christmas-related programs. On
broadcast TV alone you will find dozens, and you will find dozens more if you
include cable TV. Then examine the number of real cases in which Christmas
symbols, carols, books, etc., were defiled or removed from a public setting. You
will find only a handful of local provocations, half of which were reversed in
short order.
This is no War on Christmas. There are only
conspiracy-theorists with megaphones.
[i] For example: The ACLU of
Rhode Island (2003) interceded on behalf of an interdenominational group of
carolers who were told they could not sing Christmas carols on Christmas Eve to
inmates at the women's prison in Cranston, Rhode Island. The ACLU of Virginia
(1999) represented Rita Warren and her right to erect a crèche on Fairfax County
government space that had been set aside as a public forum. The ACLU argued that
restricting the use of the public forum to county residents only was an
unreasonable restriction. The Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals
agreed.
The ACLU of Massachusetts (1996) filed a friend-of-the-court brief in the
Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts on behalf of two women who were fired
for refusing, on religious grounds, to work at a racetrack on Christmas Day. The
ACLU of Massachusetts (2003) intervened on behalf of a group of students at
Westfield High School who were suspended for distributing candy canes and a
religious message in school. The ACLU succeeded in having the suspensions
revoked and filed a friend-of-the-court
brief in a lawsuit brought on behalf of the students against the school
district. The ACLU of Massachusetts
(2002) filed a brief supporting the right of the
Church of the Good News to run ads criticizing the secularization of Christmas
and promoting Christianity as the "one true religion." The Massachusetts Bay
Transportation Authority had refused to allow the paid advertisements to be
posted and refused to sell additional advertising space to the church.
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