I wasn’t aware of a secular passover. How do you celebrate it? I do go around wishing people a happy Hanukkah, spin a dreidle with my kids and give my kids presents. We even have a light up menorah. I’ve never worried that someone would mistake me for a jew since that isn’t a bad thing.
Eta. We also watch eight crazy nights and listen to all three versions of the Hanukkah song.
I think it was my post that was misunderstood. And I didn’t say that anyone was afraid of being thought to be Christian, but that people didn’t want to be thought to be celebrating a Christian holiday – a holiday that isn’t theirs. In fact, I’d guess that some people don’t want to be thought by themselves that they might accidentally pick up some of the Christian bits.
And there are LOTS of Christian bits to the celebration of Christmas, at least in the US. Starting with the name of the holiday.
I guess I don’t understand the distinction. If only Christians celebrate Christmas because it is a religious holiday what is the difference between someone who celebrates Christmas and a Christian?
We celebrate Christmas and Chanukah. But no religion at all in the Christmas part, just the season, (Winter Solstice and all), capitalism, Santa and most importantly family. For Chanukah my wife says a prayer as she lights the candles.
So for us, I an ex-Catholic, Christmas is secular. But for plenty of Americans it is religious.
Easter is still pretty religious. A lot of Catholics only go to Easter Mass. It is a far more important religious Holiday than Christmas.
Huge numbers of people celebrate Christmas without being Christian. Including large portions of Japan. But even in the US there are plenty of us that aren’t Christian or are ex-Christian that celebrate this awesome family holiday.
It would depend on the context; but I might well wonder whether that meant you felt there was something wrong with being Jewish or being Black.
But you think other people in this thread are worried that they’d be mistaken for Christians? Wouldn’t that imply that being Christian is a bad thing?
I don’t think anyone has said that only Christians celebrate something that they call Christmas. Only Christians celebrate it as a religious holiday, though.
Because some people are celebrating only a secular holiday doesn’t mean that large numbers of others aren’t celebrating a religious holiday. Nor does it mean that the holiday, specifically in the USA, is not in its essence a religious holiday. I gather that it isn’t in Japan. I have no opinion as to whether it is in South Africa.
There’s the rub - in its essence, is it still religious, or has it been secularized? Not superficial aspects like the name or decor trinkets, but how people actually spend their time in the holiday season. Because I’d say that’s the “essence” of any holiday - what people are doing, and their thoughts and feelings while doing it.
And it shouldn’t need saying, but “in its essence” =/= “in origin”.
The distinction isn’t about whether only Christians celebrate Christmas (which is not true) . It’s about whether someone who doesn’t want people to think they are celebrating a Christian holiday are "afraid’ or “embarrassed” to be thought of as Christian as if they believe that it’s a bad thing rather than simply because they aren’t Christian or because people will have expectations because they are believed to be Christian or because they don’t want to be accused of cultural appropriation.
I am not Jewish - but people frequently believe I am. I understand why people make that assumption * but I am not. It’s not embarrassing when people think I’m Jewish - it’s annoying. Not because there is anything wrong with being Jewish , but because of how I find out the assumption has been made. Here’s just one example ( there have been many others)
Stanley - Doreen, we have to reschedule our training.
Me - Why?
Stanley- Because we are scheduled on the holiday.
Me- What holiday?
Stanley- Yom Kippur
Me- Stanley, I’m not Jewish
Stanley then falls all over himself apologizing for assuming I’m Jewish.
* I live in NYC, I have a German surname and my coloring and certain traits come from my mother’s Italian family.
Yes, and to a large fraction of Americans, Christmas is a time to contemplate “the true meaning of Christmas”, and think about their relationship with Jesus, and about other Christian-themed topics.
Even if most of their actions are things that could be secular, Christmas is absolutely a Christian holiday in important ways to a huge fraction of the US. To a lot of my friends. I’m not speculating here, I know this from direct interaction with Christians celebrating Christmas.
I see a large difference between the secular and religious holiday. My family in fact doesn’t celebrate religious Christmas.
This seems to imply it would be a negative for these people to be taken as someone who celebrates Christmas.
You clarified that it was particularly the
These seems to deny the existence of secular holiday or imply that the people you’re talking about are ok with wearing Rudolph antlers but won’t sing ‘O come all ye faithful’. In either case in their particular understanding is that it would be a negative for them to be taken for someone who celebrates religious Christmas. I am uncertain who celebrates religious Christmas except for Christians. In these people’s case it would be a negative for them to be taken for a Christian.
You seem to be saying I’m misreading you. What am I missing?
Many people who are some religion other than Christian in the US don’t see such a large difference. They don’t want to get sucked into the Christian holiday. Heck, my understanding is that early Christians CREATED the secular trappings of Christmas (or stole them from other religions) in a bid to help suck people into Christianity, or at least to let them continue their pre-Christian celebrations with a Christian spin. To proselytize.
And while I celebrate some secular aspects of Christmas (and New Years, and the solstice, and the Lunar New Year) it can be, in fact, extremely embarrassing for a Jew to be seen to be celebrating Christmas. Or “going too far” in celebrating Christmas, depending on their social background. I believe that many US Muslims feel the same way.
That’s my understanding too although 1,500 years later it seems to have backfired.
Is this because people think they are converting or it is just not how jews act?
The limited subset of jews I know all have a Christmas tree (all though the two Christmas parties I’ve been to at their house both had stars rather than angels as tree toppers, I assume to minimize the religious imagery) and do Santa. I know at least 1 who puts up lights. I’m obviously not certain if any of them are seen as going too far.
To generalize back to the thread I don’t understand why it would be a negative for anyone in a location that had it to celebrate secular Christmas or any other secular holiday. While there certainly shouldn’t be a requirement to celebrate I certainly look at people complaining about Christmas lights the way I do people complaining about fireworks on July 4th.
Growing up, my sisters’ best friend was Jewish but they had a Christmas Tree and some lights on the outside of the apartment. She would throw a sheet over the tree for when the Rabbi came over for her son’s lessons. I think this was prep for his Bar Mitzvah.
My MIL enjoyed joining us in decorating the tree a few years. Though I’m pretty sure my wife said they never had a Chanukah Bush. (my wife and her family are Jewish, if that wasn’t obvious)
I just don’t see ANY of this stuff except in church. ANY. You must live in a Bible Belt area.
Example: USPS holiday stamps will feature a menorah, a Kwanzaa something, the Virgin and Child, and generic winter scene, and a reindeer/santa claus/tree theme or two.
Where’s the Christian-themed aspect to opening presents, lighting up your house and watching The Grinch?
It’s not “could be” secular, it’s “are unabashedly” secular.
You’re not personally friends with a huge fraction of the US.
And I have Christian friends in the US too, who definitely partake in all the secular aspects I’m referring to, and in a big way.
Once again, I’m not saying Christians don’t celebrate religious aspects of the holiday, they unquestionably do. That explains MaxS’ stats, because that was the question asked.
I’m saying they also participate in the secular aspects, just as much as non-religious folks do. Non-religious folks aren’t the entirety of the more than $1 trillion annual Xmas spend in the USA. That isn’t all going to votive candles…
No, the early Christians did not celebrate Christmas at all. The holy season was Easter alone. The celebration of the birth of Jesus at the solstice was after Christianity was adopted as a state religion in Rome, that would be Constantine, 300 years later. This was a way to superimpose Christian values upon a rowdy pagan holiday.
For most of Christian history Christmas was a minor holy day, celebrated by going to a special, extra-long night Mass. The children’s gifting holiday was Twelfth Night, which commemorates the presentation of the gifts of the Magi. It was indeed banned by many Protestant reformers as a Catholic accretion, as the more severe reformers wished to reinstitute the practices of the very earliest church. It regained favor and then ascendancy in the 19th century; most of what we think of as Christmassy is borrowed from Germanic paganism.
Capitalism swallowed Christmas whole and we are left swimming in the brightly colored garbage it produced. Has nothing to do with Christianity at all really.
Raised by atheists, there was not a single reference to the birth of Jesus in my full-trappings Christmas (I was in my 30’s before I grasped the fact that Easter was about the Resurrection, but I am unusually oblivious to the rest of the world).