Feeding The Fish

An on-going investigation into everything.

The Church is stealing Christmas

with 3 comments

Friendly Christian draws my attention to a depressing story. Apparently Borders have been giving out Christmas Cards with the message ‘O Come all ye faithless’ when people are buying Richard Dawkins’ God Delusion. This is in itself a bit of a non-story, except we seem to have people quite strongly offended by it.

This constant see-saw we play between ‘dominant and must be respected’ and ‘oppressed and must be protected’ is just bizarre. How are we going between being a Christian country and Christians being a ‘punching bag’ and back in the blink of an eye? Of course there have been Christians that have been oppressed, but in this country at least, that’s always been by fellow Christians. There’s a weird, paranoid persecution complex that seems to come out whenever someone sticks a church spokesman in front of a reporter.

Everyone knows the origins Christmas has in pagan festivals and this really shouldn’t bother Christians. Either it’s wonderful the saviour was born it or it isn’t. What annoys me is this constant insistence on ownership of something Christianity co-opted when it has a far bigger meaning to our society. They say Borders are taking a Christian festival and abusing it, and I just don’t see how they get this. To be honest, I don’t think ‘O come all ye faithless’ is a funny joke but then I’m not sure it is a joke at all, I think it’s a very good message for churches. Isn’t Christ for everyone? At Christmas shouldn’t all churches have ‘O come all ye faithless’ written outside? Aren’t the faithless exactly who they want to reach? Aren’t we ‘lost’ without God’s light in our lives? Why aren’t these vicars shaking their heads, saying ‘oh those wacky atheists’ and then demonstrating how to live the gospel by turning the other cheek to any offence and reaching out to those outside their flock?

Why is it that whenever someone does anything to suggest that Christmas may be something more than a Christian holiday, they get torn down? Why does the Archbishop of York write angry letters in newspapers when card shops are selling secular Christmas cards when that’s the Christmas people want? No one wants to shut down churches, no one wants to make Christmas less than what it is or take away what it means to Christians, people just want to come together and celebrate love and practice generosity in the darkest time of the year, just as we have on this island for thousands of years. If Jesus preaches love, why do so many church leaders seem to have a problem with that?

When I’m blogging, I come off a lot of the time as angry because that’s what motivates me to finish writing, but this story just makes me sad. What a horrible world these people live in, to have so much anger in their lives over such a minor thing. How paranoid they must be to see the crowd of Atheists around them jeering in support of this devastating attack on the foundation of their faith. This is the kind of religion I loathe, the religion that seeks to dominate everything and dares to have ‘love’ on its lips when it has nothing but hate in its heart. It’d be a lot simpler if I bought into the idea that all religious people were like that, but I don’t because I know they’re not. All I have to do is go talk to Christians I know to find that. What I don’t understand is how there is such an incredible disconnect between the Christianity I see in those around me and what I see coming from these church leaders. Am I not being exposed to all the real leaders of Christianity because the media only reports on the angry ones? What’s the deal guys?

Written by Alex Parsons

December 18th, 2007 at 10:07 pm

3 Responses to 'The Church is stealing Christmas'

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  1. Very valid point, and a very well written article. I agree with the sentiments within, and as a Christian, I disapprove of a lot of the actions the church carries out ‘on behalf’ of its members. I feel no obligation to go to church at all any more, and actually feel compelled to worship in my own individual way, because I felt that the original messages of peace and love were being obfuscated by these ceremonies and traditions, and I found myself forgetting what it was to be Christian in the first place - to have a love for everyone else in the world, to be acceptant, wise and loving and to just generally be a nice bloke.

    Tom Milsom

    19 Dec 07 at 8:17 pm

  2. [...] Surprise, Surprise, this has caused some controversy, but this time there are people on both sides of the fence condemming the controversy. Thanks to feeding the fish and friendly christian for the heads up. [...]

  3. Wow. I think the card is brilliant. Really. I am a believer. I think this is brilliant on the level that if we, as Christians, invite the “faithless” into our lives we get a chance to share the love and grace that has been given to us. I believe God wants me to love everyone, be grace-filled with everyone-no matter what their personal belief system!

    wineymomma

    20 Dec 07 at 12:23 am

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