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Roger said:I remember seeing a trailer for a movie and it read; "Coming Holiday 2002" Which holiday???????
Kwanzaa? [huh]
Roger said:I remember seeing a trailer for a movie and it read; "Coming Holiday 2002" Which holiday???????
jamespowers said:Kwanzaa? [huh]
Mr. Norman doesn't know his butt from a hole in the ground. The X comes from a shorter way of writing "christmas" in Greek.It used to be the birthday of the man who saved our necks. Now it stands for Santa Clause and we spell it with an "X". - Larry Norman
Without reading 24 pages of remarks . . .
Has anyone mentioned Religion's debt to ancient seasonal observances of solstices?
Against my better judgement...
Lots of non-Christians love the spirit of Christmas, too.
Public decorations and celebrations which predate the 1950's were quite invariably secular. Christmas in the modern sense entered the American calendar as a secular celebration, it seems, and has gradually acquired more and more religious significance.
A slow day on the Lounge? :eeek:Against my better judgement...
First, I am somewhat surprised at seeing an overtly religious thread here. I went back to the beginning. I think the second post said it best. Really, the reason for the season is whatever you make of it. The earliest winter celebrations were simply that our ancestors noticed that the days were no longer shrinking. Anything after that, be it Xmas or Kwanzaa is riding on the coattails of our ancestors. No group today can lay claim to the "real" reason. Styles change, mystical beliefs change. This is just another change. I think the best way to react to such change is to take the parts that work for you and dump the rest. Celebrate it all or none of it. Personally, I like blinking lights on my house and presents under a tree. And I like fruitcake!
I've never been offended by the use of "Happy Holidays" because Christmas isn't the only one we celebrate. Let's not forget that New Year's Eve is a week after Christmas and is traditionally the biggest party holiday of the year.