Let's Get Going
Published on December 14, 2005 By KFC Kickin For Christ In Current Events


I'm on a "Merry Christmas" mission and I'm in full throttle. My little yellow VW Beetle has turned into a Christmas billboard with Merry Christmas written across the back window. Yes, I've decided to trek off to work everyday on the public highways with a message that seems to offend people.

At stop lights, I even turn my music up a little louder, and to top it off, I sing along with it. Don't I know that stopping at a red light to roll my windows down only to share the joy of Christmas carols on public streets is a No-No? Don't I fear the Christmas Gestapo and those who would have me remove the written message from my car?

I'm sorry folks, but the only person I'm concerned about "offending" during this Christmas season is the Lord himself. LEAVE THAT MANGER ALONE! We've allowed the Baby Jesus to be kicked out of His lowly manger, and those offended by Christmas are still not happy.

I refuse to let this happen. I'm going to do my part to make sure "Merry Christmas" doesn't become extinct. Because like it or not, if the believers in Christmas don't take a stand now, it's gone forever.

Listen folks, the Christian community has been underestimated before; we will have to show ourselves again.

I walked into a Wendy's Restaurant the other day and was rather exuberant with my "Merry Christmas" greeting to the manager. He didn't have much of a response and I said, "Where's your Christmas spirit?" He said, "We're not allowed to use the words "Merry Christmas" when greeting customers. We can only say "Happy Holiday."

This morning I grabbed a quick breakfast at a Whataburger Restaurant. I noticed there wasn't a single decoration in the store. I asked the manager why they weren't decorated for Christmas. He told me the corporate headquarters decided not to send any decorations to any of their stores, and he didn't know why.

A fter I heard about all the Macy's and Federated Stores taking down their Merry Christmas signs, the Target stores not allowing the Salvation Army to "Ring the Christmas bells," and the many incidents of children, choirs, and bands not allowed to play or sing Christmas carols, I realized it was happening right here in my own little Texas town.

How can this be? Not Texas!

We do, however, have a store, Hobby Lobby, that plays nothing but Christmas carols during the season. On Christmas Day they run a full page ad in our local newspaper. That ad is not to promote the store, but uses the entire page to tell the story of Jesus' birth. Now that's taking a stand. We need to thank them.

When I saw a news report the other evening of children being taught new words to a song we've sung for years - "We Wish You a Merry Christmas" - I was saddened to hear "We Wish You a Splendid Holiday."

I know now that it's just a matter of time that the "Merry Christmas" gr eetings will be gone. Look around your town. Notice the "Holiday" greetings and not "Christmas." It's happening right before our very eyes.

Start singing the songs; go down the streets of America singing to your heart's content. Get some of those wash-off markers that these kids use to write on their car windows when they're rooting for their hometown football team. It's easy to do, and if a torrential rain washes it off, write it on there again.

We've got to get this message out. "Go Tell It On the Mountain . . . that Jesus Christ is Born." Sing it, speak it, be a billboard for our Lord.

The story of this "Baby Jesus" alone has brought about more goodwill at this time of year than any other day we celebrate. How can we sit back and allow Him to be snuffed out of our lives?

Is it Jesus, or is it His followers that the "offended" don't like? What kind of revulsion galvanizes one to campaign so vehemently against the mere mention of His name, the m ere singing of a carol, or the mere visual of a sign that says "Merry Christmas?"

I can listen to my own boss at work use some of the vilest words and follow up with, "Excuse my French." I may cringe inside at his damning of God's name, but I tolerate it. So if you don't like me wishing you a "Merry Christmas," I'll say, "Excuse my joy." You may cringe that I celebrate the birth of Jesus, but just tolerate it.

I cannot be concerned that "Merry Christmas" offends you. If I'm not careful, the day will come when saying I'm a Christian will offend you.

I'm offended that you're offended. How about that?

When we get to a point that we can no longer take part in a tradition we hold dear, we have no choice; we either defend that tradition or we give it up to those who say NO. That's it . . . period. So, which will it be?

I'm not giving up my "Merry Christmas" joy to anyone. If I know of someone that celebrates another holiday during this time of year, I will be glad to wish them whatever holiday they want. Just tell me what it is and I'll shout it to the world and wish you a grand celebration.

Just give me Christmas. To you merchants: Stop being so hypocritical and "filling your tills" on the back of Jesus! Who do you think is the symbol of giving at this time of year? It was the wise men bringing gifts to the newborn Christ-child.

You want your coffers full, but have ordered your employees to take down all the Merry Christmas signs. If that's the case, I'll buy gifts at a place that understands my joy.

If you're worried about offending someone, you just did. The most recent Newsweek survey shows that 82% of Americans believe that Jesus is the Son of God. So, in trying not to offend a few, you've offended many.

It's okay to jump into the "Merry Christmas" spirit when it fills your cash register, but let's call it something else . . . and don't stop giving . . . and don't stop buying. . . we'll just change the name and you'll never know the difference.

I know the difference and I'm feeling it greatly. It's hard not to be aware that townships across our country have actually banned the singing of Christmas carols because it might offend someone. And it's not just the religious songs; it's the secular ones too. No more "Jingle Bells" or "Rudolph, the Red-Nosed Reindeer" because they're associated with Christmas. Boy, aren't we getting sensitive?

If we're not celebrating Christmas for the hope it gives with the birth of our Savior . . . there is no hope!

I noticed a few years ago that we changed the name of Abraham Lincoln's and George Washington's birthday so as to be all inclusive regarding the Presidents. Hark, if we should recognize anyone as exceptional. Now it's called Presidents' Day.

Well, if we're going to be so all inclusive, next month I'll have to refer to Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Day as Civil Rights Leaders' Day. W e don't want to exclude great Americans like Rosa Parks or Cesar Chavez, do we? And to think that Jesse Jackson and Al Sharpton might be left out.

We might need to change Mother's Day, Father's Day, and Grandparents' Day to All Parents' Day. Just lump them all together.

It sounds ridiculous, doesn't it? So what's the difference?

My freedom to celebrate Christmas in the tradition of the Christian religion is as much my right as it is your right to be offended by it. So what are we going to do? Did anyone hear me . . . what are we going to do?

Do we defend a person's right to go forward with a time tested tradition (how about 2000 years?), or do we defend a person's right to end it all because they're offended? As long as we live in this great land and have the freedom to express ourselves and what we believe in, we will always offend someone.

If we try to make everything right for everyone, we won't have anything for anyone.

May you always have Christmas in your heart!

by Debbie Daniel"

Comments
on Dec 14, 2005
I think you have a point with the merchants.  If they want to kill Christmas, they had better be (and they are not) prepared to accept the consequences.
on Dec 14, 2005
I guess Target just got that message Doc. They have relented and the ban against them by the American Family Association has been dropped. They did see the forest thru the Christmas Trees.....

The Chairman of Target has promised a new way of doing things and next year he said will be approached much differently. We need to keep getting the message out that Christ is the Reason for this Holy-day.

If they want to come up with another holiday....let them.....just leave this one alone!!!!
on Dec 14, 2005
Good Article! wish we could get this article out to ALL merchants and the world.
on Dec 14, 2005

We need to keep getting the message out that Christ is the Reason for this Holy-day.

This is the way to do it.  While a boycott of all merchants is impractical, targetting the worst offenders can work, even if only a portion of the Christians take part.

on Dec 14, 2005
time tested tradition (how about 2000 years?)


I had no idea that Christmas by name (and with trees and stockings and lights and Santa Claus) has been celebrated exactly as such for "about 2000 years."



Honestly, I think that many Christians are acting like whiney crybabies about all this. How does it possibly harm you for someone to wish you happy holidays or for a store to not put up decorations? Does that hurt your faith?

Where is the harm in all this?

It bugs you, sure, but don't pretend like Christianity is under attack. I can't seem to find the word "Christmas" in the Bible. Perhaps I missed the passage where Paul decorates a tree with scraps of fabric and sits back to admire it with a toasty mug of hot cocoa?

Get your panties in a bunch if you like, it doesn't affect my enjoyment of the holidays (oops, CHRISTMAS!!!), but from where I'm sitting (not too far from my decked out CHRISTMAS tree) it seems like a lot of energy expended over a non-issue.
on Dec 14, 2005
For many years, child years, I never connected Christmas to a religion. I always believed that it was a day to celebrate Santa Claus, the giving of gifts and decorations. Kinda like a birthday but not connected to Jesus. Why I didn't do that? My family, apparently never took the time to explain to me this story. Only after I began to see the Christmas movies like the Little Drummer Boy and A Christmas Carol did I get it. You would wonder me being of Puertorican decent I would know of all of this. After all Puerto Rico mixes Govt and Religion like we mix coke and rum. It seems to work just fine here. But I guess even though there are several types of religions here they are all pretty much derived from Christians anyways so it's all good.

I am heartbroken by the stories you posted. But I ask myself where are all those people like you and me who believe in Christmas? Why are they not fighting back? Why are we allowing this to happen? I know for many it is not easy to stop bying from some stores like Walmart but an effort should be made. But that's just my opinion.

I for one can not do much ATM since I am in Puerto Rico and this problem does not exist here. But I will be returning to the States next summer and once Christmas is around again I will make sure everyone knows that Christmas is not dead as long as I'm alive. I will cover my car if I have to with the words "Merry Christmas" if I have to and will not hold back on decorations. I will wish a Merry Christmas to all those who deserve it and those who don't. And you don't like it, sue me. I will do everything within my power to have my family follow in my footsteps and keep Christmas going as long as they chose to.

I am not a very religious person, but I do believe in God. And even if God was not my reason for believeing in Christmas, I will do it for all the children who wait patiently for 11 months to see all the decorations, the Christmas spirit, the music, the movies, the parades, the cookies, the decorating of the Christmas tree, the wrapping of gifts, but most of all the appearince of the greatest person in the world, Santa Claus. Christmas is about the kids and it saddens me to think that some people are willing to take that away from them. I never thought that people here in the US would be willing to shoot down the one time of the year that this country, and most of the world for that matter, unites and spreads joy to everyone.

Sorry, I have the tendency of getting into what I write and don't realize that my replies end up very long. I always wonder if anyone takes the time to read anything I write when I write this long. Oh well. Keep up the good work.
on Dec 14, 2005
Good Article! wish we could get this article out to ALL merchants and the world.


Who said we can't? Most stores now have emails. I would just take so wanting to do it and send this message to them via email. Although the spam filter might catch it, it's worth the try.
on Dec 14, 2005
Please don't think I'm attacking you out of spite. I just wish to have a friendly debate. I just so happen to want to say something about your post that is all. OK?

Honestly, I think that many Christians are acting like whiney crybabies about all this. How does it possibly harm you for someone to wish you happy holidays or for a store to not put up decorations? Does that hurt your faith?


So is fighting for what one believes in is now considered crying? How does it possibly harm someone for saying Merry Christmas? It works both ways. No harm in Happy Holidays or Merry Christmas. It hurts my faith in humanity. This is done more for selfish reasons than for not offending. It's all about money, don't bit the hand that feeds you.

It bugs you, sure, but don't pretend like Christianity is under attack. I can't seem to find the word "Christmas" in the Bible. Perhaps I missed the passage where Paul decorates a tree with scraps of fabric and sits back to admire it with a toasty mug of hot cocoa?


Christianity, Christmas and baby Jesus all have one thing in common, Christ. That would lead many to think that Christianity is under attack. Just because the opposing force is not 10 times bigger doesn't mean it's not there.

Get your panties in a bunch if you like, it doesn't affect my enjoyment of the holidays (oops, CHRISTMAS!!!), but from where I'm sitting (not too far from my decked out CHRISTMAS tree) it seems like a lot of energy expended over a non-issue.


So if it doesn't affect you in any way why do you care what we think? Does our unhappiness affect you in any way that you felt the need to let us know that you don't care? It's about the word Christmas and Merry Christmas not the tree itself, or Santa, or the decorations but the meaning. It's also about if we let them win one it's only opens the door to new possibilities. Eventually they will attack the Santa Clause idea since the word Santa means Saint. Then what will we tell our kids, that Santa no longer exist because someone thought he was offensive by his name? Why now, why after so many years of not being bothered or offended?

Once again please keep in mind that I only wish to debate in a civilized manner and I am not picking on you just because you don't like me.
on Dec 16, 2005
It bugs you, sure, but don't pretend like Christianity is under attack. I can't seem to find the word "Christmas" in the Bible


Hmmmm you haven't heard all the news storys all over the planet about Christmas being taken out of everything? Big news in Wisconsin this week about changing the words (not the tune) of Silent Night to a "Cold Winter Night." All appearances of Christimas were to be eradicated there, but a Christmas Witch was put up in the school and that was ok? In many schools I've heard they can celebrate a "winter holiday" with decorations but no red and green are allowed. Why is that?

In the Netherlands the big news story there was about a Pastor being tried with jail time looming cuz he dared preach on homosexuality right out of the bible. In Canada there are similar stories. In many parts of the word mentioning Christ or what the bible states as truth is called "Hate Speech." I would most definitely say that Christianity is being attacked. But am I surprised? No....am I all bent up over this? No. You know why? Cuz Christ himself said....."They hated me first, and they will also hate you."

The word Christmas is not in the bible....you are correct. But the story is. The word dinosaur is not in the bible either, but there is evidence the creatures named (by other names) are what we call dinosaurs today. The word dinosaur is made up of Greek terms meaning "monstrous lizard." Compare to what Job says in Job 40:15 and 3:8, 41:1.



on Dec 16, 2005
Hmmmm you haven't heard all the news storys all over the planet about Christmas being taken out of everything? Big news in Wisconsin this week about changing the words (not the tune) of Silent Night to a "Cold Winter Night." All appearances of Christimas were to be eradicated there, but a Christmas Witch was put up in the school and that was ok? In many schools I've heard they can celebrate a "winter holiday" with decorations but no red and green are allowed. Why is that?


The claims that you are making, specifically about what happened in Wisconsin are false. Perhaps you shouldn't accept the claims from the right-wing media so blindly.

War on Christmas Fraud Exposed: The Silent Night “Rewrite” That Wasn’t
On Friday, Bill O’Reilly took to the airwaves to share the latest “War on Christmas” outrage:

In Dodgeville, Wisconsin, the Ridgewood Elementary School has changed the song Silent Night to Cold in the Night and forced the kids to sing the lyrics, “Cold in the night, No one in sight, Winter winds whirl and bite,” to the tune of the original Silent Night.

O’Reilly was by no means the only conservative to repeat this story. During a Dec. 10 appearance on Fox News, Mathew Staver of the Liberty Counsel said the presentation at Ridgewood Elementary had “no balance here. They have no Christian Christmas carols.” He even threatened to sue the school:

People are outraged. We sent a demand letter asking them to immediately change the song and allow the actual lyrics of “Silent Night,” and if they do not, if they insist on this ridiculous course of action, we’ll file a federal lawsuit.

As it turns out, the entire story is a fraud.

Ridgewood Elementary didn’t change the lyrics to “Silent Night.” What they did was perform a 1988 copyrighted play called “The Little Tree’s Christmas Gift.”

That play actually contains numerous songs about Christmas, including the grand finale, an audience-led group singing of “We Wish You A Merry Christmas.” The play’s creator, Dwight Elrich, happens to lead the New Covenant Singers of Bel Air Presbyterian Church in Los Angeles.

In fact, “The Little Tree’s Christmas Gift” has been performed in several churches, including the Oakwood Forest Christian Church in Kingsport, Tennessee, the St. Anthony Parish School in Des Moines, Iowa, and St. Mark’s Episcopal Church of Abeline, Texas.

So why are the Silent Night lyrics changed in “Little Tree’s Christmas”? Because the play is about a small, lonely Christmas tree that is told it is “too scraggly, it will never sell.” That character sings the revised lyrics — “Cold in the night, No one in sight, Winter winds whirl and bite” — in a scene lamenting his sad state. The rewording has absolutely nothing to do with “secularizing” the song.


Link

Many of the stories about schools banning red and green are false also.

O'Reilly's claim about Michigan town's opposition to Christmas colors is "flat-out not true"
Summary: Saginaw, Michigan, responded to Bill O'Reilly's false claim that "the township [Saginaw] opposes red and green clothing on anyone." O'Reilly offered this falsehood on The Radio Factor as part of a list of practices constituting what he characterized as an anti-Christmas "hysteria."
As the weblog Crooks and Liars has noted, Saginaw, Michigan, has responded to Fox News host Bill O'Reilly's false claim that "the township [Saginaw] opposes red and green clothing on anyone." O'Reilly offered this falsehood on the December 9 broadcast of his nationally syndicated radio show, The Radio Factor, as part of a list of practices constituting what he characterized as anti-Christmas "hysteria." According to a report on the website of WNEM-TV 5, a Saginaw TV station, "O'Reilly's comments are flat-out not true. [Township supervisor Tim] Braun goes on to say the township hall has red and green Christmas lights adorning the building at night."

While reading his list, O'Reilly also falsely asserted that the Plano, Texas, Independent School District prohibited students from wearing red and green clothing.

From the December 9 broadcast of Westwood One's The Radio Factor with Bill O'Reilly:

O'REILLY: In Saginaw, Michigan, the township opposes red and green clothing on anyone. [Laughing] In Saginaw Township, they basically said, anybody, we don't want you to wear red or green. I would dress up head to toe in red to green if I were in Saginaw, Michigan.


http://mediamatters.org/items/200512130007

This "War on Christmas" is not in fact a war, it is a campaign of lies and misinformation by radical right-wingers.
on Dec 16, 2005
This "War on Christmas" is not in fact a war, it is a campaign of lies and misinformation by radical right-wingers.


I wouldn't say lies and misinformation, I WOULD say hyperbole. Michael Newdow IS attempting, in his own words, to have Thanksgiving and Christmas banned as federal holidays. And the group Americans United for Separation of Church and State IS attacking several Christian themed displays. And this is where it becomes hyperbolic, because the aforementioned group is headed by a professed CHRISTIAN. So, the "war" IS there. But, aside from one lonely atheist who's desperately trying to buy a sixteenth and seventeenth minute of fame, it is CHRISTIANS, rather than secularists, who are waging the war.
on Dec 16, 2005
hmmmmm really?

Check this site out Link





on Dec 16, 2005
I wish people a Merry Christmas on Christmas. I do not wish people Merry Christmas on December 16. You know why because it's not Christmas. Is Christmas now a month long religous celebration? I don't think so.

If someone wishes me happy holidays, I'm not offended. If someone wishes me Merry Christmas I'm not offended. I think this is a non-issue that has blown way out of proportion.

So next year when all the stores have their Merry Christmas signs up what will be the problem. Maybe we should call it Happy Jesus Day.
on Dec 16, 2005
Maybe we should call it Happy Jesus Day.


I like that.

I think the problem is when the workers of any of these stores are told not to say Merry Christmas. They are told to be politically correct and say Happy Holidays.

Actually I've been wishing everyone this year a very Happy Christ-Mas!!!