With increasing threats, lawsuits and exposure over what constitutes a ‘legal Christmas season’ in this country, it is astounding albeit wonderful, that the current White House administration, President and Congress have not decided to remove the word Christmas or Christ from the upcoming tree lighting ceremony in Washington D.C.
Current reports on the NPS.gov webpage have the traditional ceremony of the National Christmas Tree Lighting happening on December 3rd this year at the Elipse, south of the White House grounds in Washington D.C. Each year the National Park Service and National Park Foundation sponsor the tree lighting ceremony that helps kick off a four week Christmas celebration in the U.S. Capital.
During the ceremony each year military bands, celebrities, entertainers and the President make an appearance to help kick off the Christmas season. The beautiful presence of the National Christmas tree is only part of the beauty of the ceremony. There are actually numerous trees lit that night. There is a tree representing each state in the United States plus one for each of the five U.S. territories, as well as the National Christmas tree. Each night starting from December 3rd through January 1st the following year, the trees are lit and on display as a “Christmas Pathway of Peace”.
In early October, school children in Arizona were asked to make decorations for the National Christmas Tree. Those who made ornaments referring to Christ or Christmas were told they had to redo their artwork in order to leave out Christ. After the Alliance Defense Fund became involved, sending a letter to the NPS stating that banning such ornaments was unconstitutional, the NPS agreed and changed their mind on the religious ornament ban. Children have constructed thousands of ornaments this year, thankfully now without fear of rejection due to their religious depictions on them. The ornaments will go be placed on the nearly 65 foot tree that will grace the grounds near the White House starting December 3rd.
As many conservative and tradition-loving Christians look forward to various tree lighting ceremonies during the upcoming Christmas season, some still hold their breath waiting to see which extremist anti-Christian organization will throw a fit over someone else celebrating their own religion and sharing those celebrations with the rest of the majority in the United States.
With fears of possible lawsuits sucking more money out of already low budgets, many smaller government entities, counties and states are succumbing to even at utterance of a protest over the use of the word Christmas and the traditional ceremonies surrounding it.
Last week the Columbus Ohio Dispatch reported a major controversy over a traditional Christmas parade in the city of Amelia. The business sponsor who usually backed the cost of the parade was unable to financially support it, backing out this year, suggesting the Village Council sponsor the Christmas parade. The Council voted to support the parade financially in order to keep it up and running; however those plans were quickly nixed when an attorney told the Village Council that they could easily be sued for supporting a parade that had religious content to it. The mayor’s suggestion was to change the parade name to 'Holiday Parade', in order to appease those who might protest it but the bulk of the parade participants, including churches, balked at the change and refused to participate in a Christmas event that removed Christ from its’ name.
In a letter to Amelia residents, the major pointed out the many reasons the parade had been cancelled but also noted that a local gentleman was trying to get funding in order to pay for a Christmas Parade and if he was successful then the Council would be in full support of it.
What should boggle everyone’s mind is how in the world does changing the name from Christmas to Holiday negate the fact that Christmas is about Christ? It does not. It would also not change the fact that well over half the floats in the parade would be Christ-centered.
In another Christmas versus Holiday battle, the Governor of the Commonwealth of Kentucky, Steven Beshear announced in late October that the traditional Christmas tree that graces the yard at the Capital in Frankfort, Kentucky would no longer be called a Christmas tree but rather, a Holiday tree. Barraged with emails and phone calls over the rewording, the Governor announced November 4th that he didn’t want to change the name all along and was going back to the traditional wording, using Christmas in the celebration after all.
While many do indeed hold their breath, check with their attorneys, worry about who is going to be up in arms, take down a tree for fear of being sued or have anxiety attacks over possible protests for using the word Christmas versus Holiday…I pray every Christian will step back and remember what Christmas is about and what it is not about.
While it is absolutely important to stand up for our rights to worship and celebrate as we see fit – no matter our religion - the meaning of Christmas is not removed when the word Christmas is removed from the name of an event. (Such as what has been done to the Hollywood Christmas Parade this year; recently renamed The Hollywood Santa Parade.) The God who is my Heavenly Father is not taken away when a Christmas Parade is taken away from the community nor will Christ disappear merely because His name is removed from a worldly event.
Christmas is not about the tree, what we label it, the presents, the lights or which religious or secular organization gets to dictate how and what to do with it all. It IS about the birth of Jesus Christ. Our Savior. It IS about the fact that no one can take away the love of God or the realization that sacrifices were made for us…No one can take away the worship in my heart on any day, let alone during Christmas. The very removal of traditions we have held on to for years as a majority Christian nation should give us pause and cause for righteous anger and proper action to be taken in order to change laws that take away our religious freedoms but those actions cannot take away the depth of understanding I have in my soul that Jesus Christ is Lord.
As time goes on, just as in other countries, our rights will no doubt be stripped away but no one can invade my heart and soul or cause me to move from solid ground to sinking sand because of political messages, anti-Christian rhetoric or banning verbiage they find unpleasing to their ears. Times change, politics change and even people change but Christ and His message are the same yesterday, today and forever.
For those who love Christmas cartoons and stories, you can surely relate to the fact that The Grinch took away all the Christmas packages, presents and bags and he got rid of the ornaments and the tree down in Whoville but he couldn’t stop the Who’s from celebrating the meaning of Christmas. With or without the worldly trappings of Christmas, I am still a Christian…all year long and not just at Christmas time.
For those who wish to attend the National Christmas Tree lighting ceremony in Washington D.C. this year there will be a lottery system used in order to make obtaining free tickets to the event a fair process. If you are unable to secure a ticket to the Lighting Ceremony, there will be free concerts and special events each night throughout the Christmas season, including model train displays, Santa’s Workshop and other seasonal events.
The truth about this story has been lost. I appreciate everyone trying to stand for their beliefs - however, it is like the old game of whispering a story down a line of people and the story being completely different when it gets to the end. I received a message this evening that it is 95% certain that the parade will happen - so please be a kind Christian and pray for the Village that has to try to live through these difficult times.
luvmyvlg-You're speaking about the truth of the Village Parade portion? Sources were checked, including the letters and story given by the Village Council...but I know that what is written is disclosed in situations is not always the full story or can get easily taken out of context. Please know that there was no intention of adding to such issues here.
The Christmas vs. Holiday battle is one that is spread far and wide, but no matter what the details in the Village story are and where some may have distorted the truth, you can be assured that they will be prayed for! A sad situation..and one that I would be happy to shed further light on if there is a different story that needs to be told concerning the Village.
Thank you for your comments. God Bless.
"some still hold their breath waiting to see which extremist anti-Christian organization will throw a fit over someone else celebrating their own religion and sharing those celebrations"
You mean FORCING the rest of us to endure the Christian nonsense imposed upon us. Grow up. Celebrate as you wish, but don't presume the privilege of using government to impose your beliefs on the rest of us. We pay taxes too.
What I find very sad is: As Christians we have let PC go this far. I worked in the housing business. In 1998 we were told to say Happy Holidays and we couldn't have any Christmas decorations in our offices because we didn't want to offend other religions. One of my Hindu residents said that was offensive to him..that we would think he would be so narrow minded he would be offended by a Christmas tree. A Muslim from Bangledesh said, "If you as a Christian celebrating Christmas offends me as a Muslim, then I need to examine my own faith; not object to yours." Those two young men will always have a special place in my heart...and I thank God for them.
Lowell tells the writer to grow up? That in itself is a childish statement when someone is making an observation about a real fact in our culture today. There is no immaturity in this article and in fact, I find the message to be a solid, mature Christian message. We shouldn't let the fact that others oppose our religion stop us from practicing it. The first amendment has been twisted by so many anti-reiligious organizations that the original intent, which was to protect the rights of all religions, has gone out the window. It's a sad sad state.
And for Lowell - you can turn your head, don't tune it, don't go to the parade or watch the Christmas show. Censor yourself. There is gov't funds going into evolutionary speculation, abortion and other things that I take offense with. I fight it through the proper channels and then I hold my head high instead of boohoo over being 'forced' to participate. You are not forced. Get real.
In the Christmas vs. Holiday debate the answer ought to be very simple. If it is a government-sponsored event one should use Holiday because not only it is inclusive of Christmas, but also other winter-time festivities that are not Christian. Being that there exists a separation of Church and state that is the fair thing to do, when one is spending tax dollars of Christians and non-Christians alike. If a private institution or Church is sponsoring, then it's up to them to use Christmas or Holiday. As far as the word Christmas having Christ in it, it is not so in many other languages (e.g. Spanish or French) where the root of the word Christmas is the same as the word for birth.
All the christians should avoid buying their christmas gifts from stores that refused to say "Merry Christmas". Let them find out the how much the 'holiday' people spends.
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Comments
The truth about this story has been lost. I appreciate everyone trying to stand for their beliefs - however, it is like the old game of whispering a story down a line of people and the story being completely different when it gets to the end. I received a message this evening that it is 95% certain that the parade will happen - so please be a kind Christian and pray for the Village that has to try to live through these difficult times.
luvmyvlg-You're speaking about the truth of the Village Parade portion? Sources were checked, including the letters and story given by the Village Council...but I know that what is written is disclosed in situations is not always the full story or can get easily taken out of context. Please know that there was no intention of adding to such issues here.
The Christmas vs. Holiday battle is one that is spread far and wide, but no matter what the details in the Village story are and where some may have distorted the truth, you can be assured that they will be prayed for! A sad situation..and one that I would be happy to shed further light on if there is a different story that needs to be told concerning the Village.
Thank you for your comments. God Bless.
"some still hold their breath waiting to see which extremist anti-Christian organization will throw a fit over someone else celebrating their own religion and sharing those celebrations"
You mean FORCING the rest of us to endure the Christian nonsense imposed upon us. Grow up. Celebrate as you wish, but don't presume the privilege of using government to impose your beliefs on the rest of us. We pay taxes too.
What I find very sad is: As Christians we have let PC go this far. I worked in the housing business. In 1998 we were told to say Happy Holidays and we couldn't have any Christmas decorations in our offices because we didn't want to offend other religions. One of my Hindu residents said that was offensive to him..that we would think he would be so narrow minded he would be offended by a Christmas tree. A Muslim from Bangledesh said, "If you as a Christian celebrating Christmas offends me as a Muslim, then I need to examine my own faith; not object to yours." Those two young men will always have a special place in my heart...and I thank God for them.
Lowell tells the writer to grow up? That in itself is a childish statement when someone is making an observation about a real fact in our culture today. There is no immaturity in this article and in fact, I find the message to be a solid, mature Christian message. We shouldn't let the fact that others oppose our religion stop us from practicing it. The first amendment has been twisted by so many anti-reiligious organizations that the original intent, which was to protect the rights of all religions, has gone out the window. It's a sad sad state.
And for Lowell - you can turn your head, don't tune it, don't go to the parade or watch the Christmas show. Censor yourself. There is gov't funds going into evolutionary speculation, abortion and other things that I take offense with. I fight it through the proper channels and then I hold my head high instead of boohoo over being 'forced' to participate. You are not forced. Get real.
In the Christmas vs. Holiday debate the answer ought to be very simple. If it is a government-sponsored event one should use Holiday because not only it is inclusive of Christmas, but also other winter-time festivities that are not Christian. Being that there exists a separation of Church and state that is the fair thing to do, when one is spending tax dollars of Christians and non-Christians alike. If a private institution or Church is sponsoring, then it's up to them to use Christmas or Holiday. As far as the word Christmas having Christ in it, it is not so in many other languages (e.g. Spanish or French) where the root of the word Christmas is the same as the word for birth.
All the christians should avoid buying their christmas gifts from stores that refused to say "Merry Christmas". Let them find out the how much the 'holiday' people spends.
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