Rumor has it that there’s some kind of major holiday tomorrow, so perhaps it’s best to have a little Christmas-related discussion.
The other day, a reader gave me a heads-up on a column from the Minneapolis Star Tribune’s Katherine Kersten, a conservative, who suggested that it’s about time for a “cease fire” in the “war on Christmas,” in large part because [tag]Christmas[/tag] isn’t really a religious holiday anymore, so there’s no real reason to worry about the annual controversies.
The New York Times’ Randy Kennedy recently wrote an essay suggesting that this year we’ve got, not just a war on Yuletide symbolism, but a war on the holiday’s underpinnings: on belief in God itself. How ironic, he noted, that books such as Richard Dawkins’ “The God Delusion” and Sam Harris’ “Letter to a Christian Nation” (a defense of atheism) have climbed the best-seller lists so close to Christmas.
But Kennedy also revealed a fascinating detail: Dawkins and Harris celebrate Christmas. Harris even has a decorated tree in his living room. Dawkins explains why. Christmas, he says, has long since ceased to be a religious festival in America. […]
When an outspoken atheist such as Dawkins says “Merry Christmas,” we may be reaching a consensus. American popular culture has appropriated Christmas, as it has Thanksgiving, and drained it of religious meaning.
Is this true? And if so, have we reached a point in which Christmas has been secularized to the extent that even non-Christians can enjoy it?
As a personal matter, I don’t celebrate Christmas because I’ve always taken the religious meaning behind the holiday seriously. Christmas is for Christians, just as Hanukkah is for Jews, Ramadan is for Muslims, and Super Bowl Sunday is for Americans. Right?
Well, for a surprising number of people, that’s an overly-literal, antiquated look at the holiday. The NYT article that Kersten noted included some surprising comments from proud non-believers.
[Sam Harris] is a having a (relatively) holly, jolly atheistic Christmas, one that will include presents and a big family party. And Mr. Harris, who was raised by a Jewish mother and a Quaker father, sees no glaring contradiction in doing so, at least not one he feels the need to spend much time thinking about.
“It seems to me to be obvious that everything we value in Christmas — giving gifts, celebrating the holiday with our families, enjoying all of the kitsch that comes along with it — all of that has been entirely appropriated by the secular world,” he said, “in the same way that Thanksgiving and Halloween have been.”
Mr. Dawkins, reached by e-mail somewhere on a book tour, was asked about his own Christmas philosophy. The response sounded almost as if he and Mr. Harris — and maybe other members of a soon-to-be-chartered Atheists Who Kind of Don’t Object to Christmas Club — had hashed out a statement of principles. Strangely, these principles find much common ground with Christians who complain about the holiday’s over-commercialization and secularization, though the atheists bemoan the former and appreciate the latter.
“Presumably your reason for asking me is that ‘The God Delusion’ is an atheistic book, and you still think of Christmas as a religious festival,” Mr. Dawkins wrote, in a reply printed here in its entirety. “But of course it has long since ceased to be a religious festival. I participate for family reasons, with a reluctance that owes more to aesthetics than atheistics. I detest Jingle Bells, White Christmas, Rudolph the Red Nosed Reindeer, and the obscene spending bonanza that nowadays seems to occupy not just December, but November and much of October, too.”
He added: “So divorced has Christmas become from religion that I find no necessity to bother with euphemisms such as happy holiday season. In the same way as many of my friends call themselves Jewish atheists, I acknowledge that I come from Christian cultural roots. I am a post-Christian atheist. So, understanding full well that the phrase retains zero religious significance, I unhesitatingly wish everyone a Merry Christmas.”
So, is this folly, or are we approaching a post-Christian Christmas? Who can celebrate this holiday? If the answer is “everyone,” what should non-Christians who want to celebrate the holiday do?