Anonymous wrote:You're off in some of your assumptions. I'm an atheist, I celebrate Christmas, and I spend no time making fun of Christians, or people with any other religious beliefs. None of the atheists I know avoid calling Christmas Day Christmas. But I don't wish people "merry Christmas" this time of year unless I know they celebrate Christmas. I send holiday cards rather than Christmas cards because I have friends and family with varying belief systems, but I don't know of anyone who doesn't celebrate one of the several holidays this time of year. I celebrate Christmas because it is a cherished family tradition; the tree, the gifts, music, baking, parties, family gatherings. With all due respect, no one needs to justify to you what holidays they celebrate.
You won't see any nativity scenes at my house!Anonymous wrote:My friends, none of this is important. None of it matters. It doesn't matter what you believe, or what beliefs you make fun of. All that matters is what is true.
It is possible Christmas is the celebration of the birth of our Savior, hallelujah, hallelujah.
It is possible Christmas is ultimately meaningless, because there was no Jesus, or he was not who he claimed to be.
If the former is true, everything matters.
If the latter is true, nothing matters.
That's the conversation we should be having this time of year--not about who gets to celebrate what, but whether there is actually something to celebrate at all.
Peace to all, goodwill to mankind.

Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How do you explain it to your kids? When they find out that their friends celebrate it because of Jesus' birth, but that you don't believe. Do you just tell them because it's fun.
Yes. Pretty simple, really.
It's people like you who are high-jacking our holiday and taking the meaning out of it. get your own holiday.
Anonymous wrote:Someone posted that Santa is for the atheists.....um, you know that Santa is based on St. Nicholas, right?
Anonymous wrote:My friends, none of this is important. None of it matters. It doesn't matter what you believe, or what beliefs you make fun of. All that matters is what is true.
It is possible Christmas is the celebration of the birth of our Savior, hallelujah, hallelujah.
It is possible Christmas is ultimately meaningless, because there was no Jesus, or he was not who he claimed to be.
If the former is true, everything matters.
If the latter is true, nothing matters.
That's the conversation we should be having this time of year--not about who gets to celebrate what, but whether there is actually something to celebrate at all.
Peace to all, goodwill to mankind.