Kasper
Diabolical
- Joined
- May 30, 2008
- Messages
- 11,590
- MBTI Type
- ENTP
- Enneagram
- 9w8
- Instinctual Variant
- so/sx
Sorry- I just don't buy that people of TODAY that are atheists celebrate Christmas because of these other non-Christian historical reasons.
I don't buy it.
You do it for the presents and the fun and the food.
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Actually, the answer is because it's a cultural tradition. If someone happens to be Christian and there is a link for them between their religion and Christmas then that would be their cultural tradition, for those who are not Christian, not religious, or simply do not link it to their faith, then it's a tradition without a link to religion, that's all.
We have a holiday for the Queen's birthday, I promise you the vast majority of people aren't giving a toss about the royal family as they enjoy a day off work doing whatever they do on that day, yet we all take advantage of it, including those who want Oz to be a republic, Christmas just has a whole heap of rituals around it like glowy trees, overloading on food/drink, presents etc. which keep retailers happy, with the focal point of being with others, specifically family. It's reported that people get lonely at Christmas more than any other time if they have no (contact with) family, that right there suggests a meaning more significant than religion.
I guess as an ENFP who is fascinated by what makes people tick and how they tick etc.- I'm trying to reconcile this idea that someone is "going with the crowd" and celebrating a Christian holiday (regardless of the origins of the specific rituals) when they outwardly deny Christianity.
Justify why it's a Christian holiday for all the parts of the world that are grey below. My country overall isn't especially religious, at least not in an active way, yet all the shops close down, no one works or goes to school and there are Santa Clause's everywhere waving in time to elevator sounding carols. Even ignoring the pagan origins it is still not a Christian holiday, it is a nation wide holiday that comes from tradition, there are those who choose to take the time to celebrate their religion, culturally though that isn't a default. Like Riva said, there are even countries with a religious majority other than Christianity that don't avoid Christmas.

Now compare with the below two maps. World religions:
And the importance of religion:
Seems most of the world get's a Christmas break, including non-Christian countries, and those who don't care much about their religion even if the main one is Christianity.
I'm wondering how an individual feels "okay" with this. If you are firm in your atheist beliefs, why not forgo any Christmas celebration? I can see going along with it for friends that are Christian. But putting up a tree, buying presents. I dunno. I've always been bewildered by people that celebrate to the hilt but do not respect the reason behind it.
Firstly because it bugs me, Atheism is a lack of beliefs so "firm in your atheist beliefs" doesn't work
Consider how you would feel if you were told by a Muslim that Allah was the one true God and your Christian beliefs were blasphemous and you would go to hell because you believed the wrong thing. You wouldn't care, right? Their version of reality doesn't match with yours so you would pay them no mind. Well that's about how much Atheists care about Christian's telling them about Christianity, personally I don't see it as a Christian holiday and I don't care if others see it as such, it has zero meaning to me when someone talks about the birth, death or life of Jesus or what Christmas is supposed to mean according to them, as you are Christian it's a view that you can't seem to understand so liken it to a different faith and try to understand how much you wouldn't care. And because you wouldn't care you wouldn't shun a public holiday because of it, you wouldn't ignore the celebrations either, frankly they're damn hard to ignore and takes a very deliberate act do to so.
I know this first hand because the most amusing part of this conversation to me is I grew up in an extremely conservative religion that was a spin-off form of Christianity and we were not allowed to celebrate Christmas growing up because of how "un-holy" the origins of the holiday were, they actively shunned Christmas, I was 14-15 the first time we did anything which was after we left the religion. Avoiding Christmas takes energy. If the tradition of Christmas died I wouldn't care, but so long as it happens I'll enjoy the two days off work and consider the blinky fairy lights pretty.