'Emboldened' Christians Celebrate Christmas
NewsMax.com Wires
Tuesday, Dec. 14, 2004
Emboldened by their Election Day successes, some Christian
conservatives around the country are trying to put more Christ into
Christmas this season.
In Terrebonne Parish, La., an organization is petitioning to add
"Merry Christmas" to the red-lighted "Season's Greetings" sign
on the main government building and is selling yard signs that
read, "We believe in God. Merry Christmas." And a Raleigh, N.C.,
church recently paid $7,600 for a full-page newspaper ad urging
Christians to spend their money only with merchants who include the
greeting "Merry Christmas" in ads and displays.
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'Revival'
"There is a revival taking place in our nation that is causing
Christian and right-minded people to say: `Wait a minute. We've
gone too far,'" says the Rev. Patrick Wooden Sr., pastor of the
Raleigh church. "We're not going to allow the country to continue
this downward spiral to the left."
In California, a group called Committee to Save Merry
Christmas is boycotting Macy's and its corporate parent, Federated
Department Stores, accusing them of replacing "Merry Christmas"
signs with ones wishing shoppers "Season's Greetings" or "Happy
Holidays." The organization cites "the recent presidential
election showing political correctness is offending millions of
Americans."
(Federated, for its part, says that it has no ban on such
greetings and that its store divisions can advertise as they see
fit and store clerks are free to wish any customer "Merry
Christmas." Macy's says its ads commonly use the phrase.)
The push from the religious right troubles Barry Lynn, executive
director of Americans United for Separation of Church and State.
"This mixing of secular and religious symbols ought to be seen
as a bad thing, not a good thing, for Christian believers," he
says. "Unfortunately, some of the Christian pressure groups seem
to have it backwards." He adds: "I think it's fair to say it's a
mistaken notion that they have a mandate to put more nativity
scenes up because George Bush was elected."
The battle over the manger on the city hall lawn is nothing new.
People expect the annual tussle.
'Agitated'
But the "keep the Christ in Christmas" contingent is
particularly agitated this year over what its members see as a
troubling trend on Main Street: Target stores banning Salvation
Army bell ringers; UPS drivers complaining to a free-speech group
that they have been told not to wish people a "Merry Christmas"
(an accusation UPS denies as "silly on its face and just not
true"); and major corporations barring religious music from
cubicles and renaming the office Christmas bash the "end-of-the-year" party.
"I think it is part of a growing movement of people with more
traditional values, which make up the majority of people in this
country, saying enough is enough," says Greg Scott, a spokesman
for the Arizona-based Alliance Defense Fund.
Amid stories of schools banning the singing of carols on buses,
Scott's group has distributed to more than 5,000 schools a
seven-point legal primer citing 40 years of case law that says it
is OK to mention Christmas in public places. And the group has
about 800 lawyers waiting in the wings in case that notion needs to
be reinforced.
'Secular' Birth of Christ
To that same end, the Virginia-based Rutherford Institute, which
says it received the complaints from UPS drivers, has reissued its "12
Rules of Christmas" guide to celebrating the birth of Jesus.
"I think the businesses and the schools have just gone too far;
this is the final straw," says Institute president John W.
Whitehead. "It's supposed to be a time of, what, peace and freedom
and fun. And they've kind of made it into a secular ... kind of
gray day."
Conservative radio and TV talk show hosts have chortled over
some recent incidents of what they consider political correctness
run amok.
Censor That 'Christmas Tree'
In Kansas, The Wichita Eagle ran a correction for a notice that
mistakenly referred to the Community Tree at the Winterfest
celebration as a "Christmas Tree." And the mayor of Somerville,
Mass., apologized after a news release mistakenly referred to the
Dec. 21 City Holiday Party as a "Christmas Party."
But to many, the threats and demands that stores put up "Merry
Christmas" signs are no laughing matter.
"Why not simply require stores owned by Jews to put a gold star
in their ads and on their storefronts?" the Rev. Jim Melnyk,
associate rector of St. Mark's Episcopal Church in Raleigh, wrote
in a letter to the editor.
© 2004 Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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