No Christ, no Mass

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    With Christmas just round the corner, I've thought, is there anyone who doesn't celebrate it? Assuming at least one other person on this huge message board doesn't, saying why would be great. :)

    Now I'd best answer my own question, eh? I don't celebrate Christmas, and simply because I'm not a Christian. Yes, Christmas has become pretty much secular in modern times, but I don't see it as such.
     
    With Christmas just round the corner, I've thought, is there anyone who doesn't celebrate it? Assuming at least one other person on this huge message board doesn't, saying why would be great. :)

    Now I'd best answer my own question, eh? I don't celebrate Christmas, and simply because I'm not a Christian. Yes, Christmas has become pretty much secular in modern times, but I don't see it as such.

    This is a very interesting sentence. Even if one isn't a Christian, are you still allowed to celebrate Christmas? Did the value of what its really about decline? Or is it just that people are getting into the holiday spirit?

    My friend is Jewish, so he doesn't celebrate. But he still buys me a present, & I him.
     
    Of course you can still celebrate Christmas if you're not Christian. It's not like it has any religious significance anymore.

    Too bad we bastardized what once held a LOT of significance.
     
    Of course you can still celebrate Christmas if you're not Christian. It's not like it has any religious significance anymore.

    Too bad we bastardized what once held a LOT of significance.

    Ah, watch what you say. I celebrate at church. The mass thinks its only about presents.
     
    I don't believe in god. I celebrate Christmas just the same. No one really knows I don't believe, and I'm forced to go to church, but...

    Meh, I celebrate it as a holiday of love and spending time with family.
     
    In my opinion, I think it's kinda sad that such an important day on the Christian calender has been turned into a corporate holiday about material goods. Heck, even though I'm a Christian, Christmas won't mean much to me at all, neither spiritually nor materialistically. I'll go to church, get my gifts, see and eat with family, and once the day goes by I won't think about it for another year.

    Maybe I associate it too much with gifts (I mean, look at my current theme - girls in Santa suits XD), and as I've grown up I've grown out of the whole "omg squee presents under the Christmas tree" deal. But nyeh, as [sugarPUNK!] up there said, family time, while accompanied by the occasional argument, is still good.

    Actually, I'm probably just recollecting my thoughts of Christmas from last year ...

    Also, I fixed the typo in your title for ya :D
     
    I don't think my family has fully grasped that Christmas is a Christian holiday XD;
    (We don't go to church. I can't say 'oh my god', my dad doesn't know it's a derogatory statement for Christians ^^')

    I'm not complaining though. I think we're more of a 'celebrate the season of giving' type of family, and that's what I think everyone who celebrates it anyway has in mind too~
     
    This is a very interesting sentence. Even if one isn't a Christian, are you still allowed to celebrate Christmas? Did the value of what its really about decline? Or is it just that people are getting into the holiday spirit?

    My friend is Jewish, so he doesn't celebrate. But he still buys me a present, & I him.
    Indeed I can celebrate Chirstmas, anyone can. :0 I just choose not to. That's just "how I am" and all that stuff. x0

    Also, I fixed the typo in your title for ya :D
    Oh, what was the typo? :0


    Thus far, I seem to be the only person not involving myself in this festival... somewhat surprising, can I say.
     
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    I don't celebrate christmas, for I am jewish. I mean I could celebrate the holiday, but I wouldn't get any presents or see any family. Plus I'm proud to be a jew.
     
    I don't celebrate it religiously because I'm not a Christian. I do give gifts to dear people that take part of that belief, though; that includes my whole family. Nevertheless, I personally take part in the gatherings and stuff my family and friends like to do socially, of course.
     
    I'm a Christian (and I'm proud of it!) so I celebrate it. But sometimes I think it getrs so comercialized that I forget the actual meaning...
     
    Christmas wasn't even a Christian holiday to begin with. The early Christian church simply appropriated the date from various pagan winter festivals, and various aspects of the holiday take cues from pagan Germanic and Scandinavian rituals.

    I'm a devout Christian, but I celebrate the secular and commercial Christmas with the lights, the gifts, the eggnog, the decorations, and National Lampoon's Christmas Vacation playing on the TV. I do not celebrate the lame-ass right-wing fundie evangelist Christmas where people sit in church on a hard wooden bench while the minister guilt-trips them for hours on end. My minister doesn't even bother with the guilt-trip sermon to begin with; he knows it's a waste of time, and he knows that Jesus Christ wasn't really born on 25 December.
     
    I'm a Christian but I don't think Christmas is a great hoilday.

    Maybe because of my family, Which doesn't really enjoy christmas becuase all of our family isn't here.
     
    Christmas wasn't even a Christian holiday to begin with. The early Christian church simply appropriated the date from various pagan winter festivals, and various aspects of the holiday take cues from pagan Germanic and Scandinavian rituals.

    I'm a devout Christian, but I celebrate the secular and commercial Christmas with the lights, the gifts, the eggnog, the decorations, and National Lampoon's Christmas Vacation playing on the TV. I do not celebrate the lame-ass right-wing fundie evangelist Christmas where people sit in church on a hard wooden bench while the minister guilt-trips them for hours on end. My minister doesn't even bother with the guilt-trip sermon to begin with; he knows it's a waste of time, and he knows that Jesus Christ wasn't really born on 25 December.

    Oooo, controversial.

    Maybe we should drop the religious discussion, lest a flame war starts.

    EDIT:What kind of sermon do you attend? I avoid the sermons where the minister is so much better he can judge me. My church isn't like that. He's just boring. Very very boring.
     
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    Christmas wasn't even a Christian holiday to begin with. The early Christian church simply appropriated the date from various pagan winter festivals, and various aspects of the holiday take cues from pagan Germanic and Scandinavian rituals.

    Maybe it wasn't, ages and ages ago, but it certainly is now. I'd say celebrating the birth of Jesus is pretty Christian.
     
    It is Christian now. That's why they only write "Xmas" and say "Happy holidays" now because of the so-called "separation of church and state."
     
    Christmas wasn't even a Christian holiday to begin with. The early Christian church simply appropriated the date from various pagan winter festivals, and various aspects of the holiday take cues from pagan Germanic and Scandinavian rituals.

    I'm a devout Christian, but I celebrate the secular and commercial Christmas with the lights, the gifts, the eggnog, the decorations, and National Lampoon's Christmas Vacation playing on the TV. I do not celebrate the lame-ass right-wing fundie evangelist Christmas where people sit in church on a hard wooden bench while the minister guilt-trips them for hours on end. My minister doesn't even bother with the guilt-trip sermon to begin with; he knows it's a waste of time, and he knows that Jesus Christ wasn't really born on 25 December.

    I heard about that on the History channel(I WAS BORED T_T) it approximated his birth to around spring. I forgot why, it had something to do with sheep. ._. I'm not devout and probably never will be.
     
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