Posted on 12/26/2013 9:57:04 AM PST by Morgana
Dec. 24, 2013 (LifeSiteNews.com) - The war on Christmas is by now a long-hallowed tradition in North America. Every year, starting in November, atheists and conservatives battle over nativity scenes and Christmas trees on public property. And we have the naughty or nice lists, the boycotts, and letters targeting retailers who try to cash in on Christmas without acknowledging the reason for their annual windfall.
Its a worthy battle and one that Im happy to play some small part in as a pro-life, pro-family, and pro-Christmas journalist. But I think its important we recognize that what we have come to know as the war on Christmas is really just a minor skirmish. The real war on Christmas is not, in fact, waged by the irreligious, but by principalities and powers. I would suggest, in fact, that the largest part in that war nowadays is played by Christians themselves. The best way to destroy Christmas isnt by banning it from the public square, even though that strategy plays its part. The best way is to gut it and imbue it with a new meaning.
They do it, not by opposing Christmas, but by celebrating it, intentionally or not, in a way that robs it of its meaning. The atheist campaign pales in comparison not only because they are still largely a fringe group (in Gallups 2012 poll only 14% of Americans had no religion, compared to 74% identifying as Christian), but because its always more effective to distort an ideal than to oppose it.
The pro-abortion movement knows this well. By twisting the notion of freedom, theyve convinced two generations now to accept legalized baby-killing. Likewise, the best way to destroy Christmas isnt by banning it from the public square, even though that strategy plays its part. The best way is to gut it and imbue it with a new meaning.
Essentially, Christians do that by divorcing Christmas from the Cross when they want the peace, mercy, and love without the spiritual battle, justice, and hatred of sin.
The Keep Christ in Christmas slogan that we so often see this time of year on bumper stickers or billboards is a useful reminder. But its effect is largely muted by the fact that the target audiences basic reaction is duh. People who celebrate Christmas know that they are celebrating the birth of Christ. Theyre not challenged by the slogan because they fully agree with it, in their own way.
The problem is that Christ and His Gospel have been co-opted and distorted. The Cross has been edited out, and Christ has been re-envisioned according to modern sensibilities. In the public mind, the Lion of Judah has become a hippy sentimentalist; the Lamb of God a cuddly teddy bear. Hes nice; He doesnt make great demands of us except for the ones the culture does. Our path to heaven is laid wide by being a good person, in other words, by staying on the right side of the law and giving to charity now and then. One of the key challenges of proclaiming Christ in this culture we live in is that to get our message across we have to first break through these preconceived distortions.
This distortion of Christ is what allows even the most virulent opponent of the unborn childs right to life to profess a belief in the Author of Life. Its what creates the heinous situation that one can celebrate the Christ Childs birth as the manifestation of God, while at the same time upholding his mothers right to kill Him even the moment before.
The rigorous, believing Christian knows that Christ not only was born to die and rise again to welcome us into eternal life with Him, but that to follow Him into heaven we must first embrace His Cross. The fact is, though, that we cannot embrace Christs Cross without also embracing His humiliation and His poverty. And I think this is where even believing Christians can play an unwitting role in the war on Christmas.
Our culture, and I dare say even our Christian culture, has often lost the simplicity of Christmas, the poverty of Christmas. Something seems backwards when we celebrate Gods condescension to be born in a stable by spending many hundreds, if not thousands, of dollars on gifts. I dont begrudge the gift-giving tradition whatsoever, but I do condemn the consumerism that has engulfed our annual festivities. Christmas is most certainly a time for celebration, but we wreck the celebration by overindulgence.
My family was forced to embrace the poverty of Christmas this year in a simple way that forced us to rely on Gods providence and our community.
Our tradition is to delay buying our Christmas tree until the last week of Advent. We find it helps us embrace the season of Advent, and we use a spindly Jesse Tree in the lead-up to Christmas instead. This delay in buying a tree has never been a problem before because we lived near a city and there were always trees available right up until the end.
This year, though, we have moved to a small town in Northern Ontario and found to our disappointment that by the time we were looking for a tree they were gone from all the stores around us. Rather than relying on the store, we would have to step a little outside our comfort zone and use a bit of ingenuity. Fortunately, we have a wonderful Christian community here and we were able to visit some friends with a large acreage who helped us cut down a beautiful tree from their property.
Embracing simplicity is a scary thing when were used to doing things on our own, but it forces us to rely on Gods providence. When we do that, we find that Hell open up new paths and show us unexpected joys. We should ponder that especially at this time of year, for it was through Marys self-renunciation, her yes, that Gods greatest and most unexpected of gifts came into the world.
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We wish you all a very blessed and merry Christmas, and Gods blessings on the New Year!
Patrick, Jenna, Noah, Isaiah, and Anna Craine
Nothing new. Religious leaders were the ones that sought to kill Jesus and instigated his crucifixion.
Nope.
The battle for Christmas is waged by the armies on each side and like most wars the political objectives are the codified by the politicians on behalf of the litigants.
Thankfully we have no practical need for drawing blood.
Every year, the atheists beat up on Christmas and Christians, and every year, the atheists take a day off of work on Christmas.
As is usual for liberals, socialists, anarchists, and atheists, they can’t come up with principles of their own, so they bash everyone else’s.
But: in the attempted killing of Jesus shortly after his birth, the intended-homicidalist was King Herod, who was neither a Jew nor a religious figure. In fact, he was a Roman client king, irreligious in character, Idumaean by birth.
The same group of americans who call for total secularism are no different than the romans who called for the crucifixion of Christ. This battle has been going on for the last 2000 years, what makes you think it has stopped? It will NEVER end.
Jesus has a way sometimes of standing in the way of our plans (for our good, but we don't always think so). To the degree we hate that, we can unwittingly go about to do away with this Roadblock.
The divide in this nation will not be settled politically
This is the truth. Giving up one’s own will is extremely hard. (I know from my own rebelliousness.) But may God capture my heart and save me. You, too.
Sadly, you are right.
Yes, and the key to our progress, IMO, is deliverance from guilt and condemnation, growing in grace and knowing Him, who never condemns his children because all their wrongdoings were put away on the body of Jesus 2000 years ago. :)
Sure it will.
There is no reason for another Gettysburg.
It won’t be Yankee versus Dixie
Though there is an element of that
If so I prefer Manassas. Over PA.. either will do
Lol
That’s very realistic for a lady...guess that’s u r indeed a big girl
God bless you
Sad isn’t it
We are on the far bank of the Rubicon and so many fail to see it
That’s very realistic for a lady...guess that’s u r indeed a big girl
God bless you
Sad isn’t it
We are on the far bank of the Rubicon and so many fail to see it
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