Christmas holidays & separation of church & state

In order to keep church & state separate, wouldn’t you have to eliminate Christmas holidays for federal workers? Easter, as well? Of course you could just CALL them something else, but it’d still be the same thing.

Why is there not an atheist holiday? Would Christians be “forced” to celebrate it/ :wink:

I’d like to agree with you, but I’m too busy looking forward to my Christmas vacation.

Around these parts (I work for the State of Texas), if a non-xian wants to take off a religious holiday that’s not already an “institutional” holiday like those mentioned, it’s a simple bit of paperwork and a done deal; their freedom of religion has not been abridged. Since most Americans are “xian” to some degree–or would at least claim such affiliation for vacation’s sake–the paperwork would be overwhelming, so the government goes ahead and gives in and the Jews, Muslims, Hindus, Agnostics, etc., get time off, too. I’d interpret the first amendment to also include the liberty to not be forced to work if it interferes with your religious celebrating. In any event, we’re not “forced” to celebrate–unless you’re talking about a 12 year old agnostic forced to go to church by their parents!

I celebrate these holidays by sleeping late. I’m as agnostic as the next guy, but don’t be touching my holidays!

A co-worker of mine thinks the government should celebrate ‘Battle of Trenton Day’ on December 25 each year, to commemorate the occasion when George Washington and his troops crossed the Delaware on Christmas Day and caught the Hessians in mid-celebration. That would work for me.

Trumpy: The answer is yes. (Although Easter is Sunday, so it’s kind of moot in general.) In fact, that discussion was one of the first threads here. I’ll go find it and post a link.

Unfortunately, the Supreme Court, in all of its wisdom (read: too chicken to do the right thing), has declared Christmas a nonreligious holiday. Personally, if I were a Christian, I’d be offended.

Here it is:
http://www.straightdope.com/ubb/Forum7/HTML/000008.html

David B said:

How about “the Supreme Court, in all of its wisdom (read: acknowledging the obvious)…”

Pray tell, what do a jolly fat old elf imitating a chimneysweep, decorated conifer kindling, shop till you drop, and airborne caribou have to do with Christianity, or any religion?
Sure there is a religious holiday using the same name going on at the same time as the non-religious holiday but, as that religion’s leaders will tell you, its meaning is completely different.
Judging by people’s actions, I’d say the secular holiday is way out in front of the religious one as far as observance goes.

Yes, many people have forgotten the meaning, but that meaning is still the reason it is a holiday. I mean, the holiday is called Christmas, after all. The tree is supposed to represent the cross Christ died on or some such thing (although it’s actually an excuse to use a pagan symbol, but that’s their problem, not mine).

The fact is that it is most certainly not a secular holiday. It is celebrated by Christians. Not Jews. Not Muslims. Not anybody else. Christians. It is a religious holiday that has gotten out of hand a bit, perhaps, but it is a religious holiday nonetheless.

FYI
http://dailynews.yahoo.com/h/nm/19991207/od/christmas_1.html

I wish I could have found this with more of the doggerel quoted. My newspaper had more of it, but they don’t have a good search on their web page.

:slight_smile:

Merry Christmas!

Forgot to ask–David, do you want to reconsider your statement that Christmas is celebrated only by Christians? I sure see a lot of Christmas trees around in houses of people who are secular humanists or atheists.
I never heard that Santa only visited the Christians, either. :slight_smile:

David, I’m an atheist. I consider Christianity to be a large truckload of bull leavings, but I’ll celebrate christmas. Hey, call me sentimental, but the greed just rips at my heartstrings. Plus, it’s fun.

David to respond to your points:

Are you referring to the birth of Sol Invictus? :slight_smile:
Just as Christians hijacked a pagan holiday and made it Christian, so the nonreligious are hijacking a Christian holiday and making it secular.

True, but etymology is not the same as meaning. For instance, the name used in the English speaking world for the Christian Feast of the Resuurection is derived from something to do with pagan fertility celebrations- I doubt that many bishops therefore consider Easter a pagan holiday.

Exactly- it is just feeble after-the-fact rationalization. My tree certainly represents no such thing, and I don’t personally know of any Christians who subscribe to the theory either.

That is merely your reassertion of the point in question. I believe it is wrong. Lets get back to advancing arguments for our respective positons.

This is inaccurate. I am a non-believer and I celebrate it. Other non-believers have told you they celebrate it. I know secular minded Jews and Muslims who celebrate it. I can’t find the post now, but I recall somebody posting something on this or another SD messageboard about how Christmas was becoming popular in Japan.

I beg to differ. It was a religious holiday; it no longer is so exclusively.

Tell it to the Pope.

Ok, so I went overboard (never say “never”). Yes, some secular folks celebrate it, but they do so, in my experience, almost exclusively because they had Christian roots, even if they are atheists now. The point remains that it is a Christian holiday. Not Jewish. Not Muslim. Not Native American. Christian. Yes, a few Jews will rationalize that they want to celebrate something too. BFD. I also knew a few who clamored to see the Pope when he was in town a while back. Is the Pope secular?

Frankly, all of this is just so much rationalizing, by the courts and those here defending them. Christmas is a Christian holiday. If it were not a Christian holiday, the government would never have given its workers the day off (you don’t see people getting Yom Kippur off, do you?). The current overcommercialization doesn’t change the fact that it is, at its heart and root, a Christian holiday. If non-Christians want to take off the day, good for you. But nobody should force governmental workers to take it off as a holiday if they don’t want to.

I feel somewhat like I’m repeating myself, so I would encourage folks to check out the link to the earlier thread.

Actually, yes I do. My husband teaches for the Los Angeles Unified School District. They shut down for Yom Kippur.

-Melin

D’oh! I should have known better than that!

Yes, some public schools do shut down for Yom Kippur – if they have a large population of Jewish students and/or teachers. (In other words, they do it for logistical reasons, not religious ones.) Similarly, it would make sense to do this for Christmas in the schools as well (which doesn’t really come into play because all the schools are on winter break anyway). I was talking more along the lines of other governmental agencies. For example, you won’t see the EPA shut down on Yom Kippur.

Sorry 'bout that.

The problem I see, David, is that if Secular Beauracrat Joe wants to work on Xmas, then Xian Watchman Bob has to work on his (Bob’s) religious holiday to unlock the door. I suspect that the vast majority of jobs where the employee has unassisted access to his place of work do not activly prevent employees from working that day, in the same way you are allowed to work at home on the holidays. (How can they stop you?) However, security at most comanies demands that someone else be there–something that can be diffucult to provide without trampleong on someone’s sensitivities.

David, those same logistical reasons exist throughout government for the Christmas holidays.

And it’s a bit disingenuous, isn’t it, to say that “oh well, the schools are closed for winter break then anyway.” I’m willing to make a wager that the reason winter break exists is because of the Christmas holiday.

-Melin

David:

My man, if you don’t want to celibrate it, then don’t. I don’t.


“It is lucky for rulers that men do not think.” — Adolf Hitler

Don’t you think it’s coercive, though, to say that I can’t do business with the post office because other people celebrate Christmas? :wink: (Just funnin’ ya.)

pl, I DO wish the post office would stay open on all holidays.I hate that everything shuts down.What if i want to see a movie(well,Blockbuster IS open),or anything?
Manda: xian’s are people who worship BobDobbs,BTW.


We are on an irreversible path to democracy and freedom. But that could change-Dan Quayle