New Times,
New Thinking.

  1. Politics
17 December 2010updated 05 Oct 2023 8:16am

The War on Christmas: Part 94

The annual hysteria is manufactured and unnecessary and needs to stop.

By Tony Hudson

Well, it’s that time of year again. The mother of all manufactured controversies. It’s the War on Christmas!

Once again, Christians are lashing out at secularists and the non-religious under the pretence that Christmas is under attack. In the United States, there is renewed controversy over billboards and bus ads carrying atheist messages.

The Fox News host Bill O’Reilly claimed the posters were designed only “to offend people who enjoy Christmas”. So what are the messages that are causing such dire offence during this holiest of seasons? “Millions of people are good without God”, “Don’t believe in God? You are not alone” and “You know it’s a myth. This year, celebrate reason!”.

Can someone explain how encouraging people to be intellectually honest about their beliefs is offensive?

These posters and slogans are not designed to convert believers into non-believers. Even the most controversial slogan (“You know it’s a myth”) is clearly aimed at people who already think that way. It is a means of encouraging non-believers to be public about who they are and what they do or do not believe. Is that so dangerous?

Why is it OK in the US and in Britain to plaster Christian slogans and posters everywhere, but when secular causes do the same it is “an attack” on Christianity and on Christmas? It seems to happen all the time.

Give a gift subscription to the New Statesman this Christmas from just £49

Remember when the “There’s probably no God. Now stop worrying and enjoy your life” slogans appeared on buses and billboards in 2008. Or, the example that won’t seem to go away, that Birmingham City Council once had a winter marketing campaign that it called “Winterval“. There are always these types of stories in the news, and they are totally manufactured and utterly unnecessary.

In contrast to these “attacks”, there is the Christian side of the argument. I see a poster at a bus stop every morning on the way in to work which depicts an image of a child in the womb with a halo around its head. The poster reads “Christmas starts with Christ”. Is that not the same thing that these atheist posters are doing, but for Christianity? Of course it is. Yet, where is the controversy? I have seen nobody complain about these posters and have seen no news stories about them causing offence. Christian preaching is apparently fine, whereas atheists are held to a much harsher standard because people don’t like what they’re saying.

As an atheist, I could find the poster very annoying, mostly because the only way in which Christmas starts with Christ is in the word. The celebration itself pre-dates Christianity by a great many years. Stories were being told of gods being born as men on 25 December to a virgin mother for centuries before Jesus was ever reported to have lived. Christmas the celebration does not start with Christ. Christianity hijacked 25 December from paganism in order to make conversion easier. After all, if you still celebrate on the same day, what difference does it make?

Despite that, though, I am not going to demand that the poster be taken down, or claim that secular society is “under attack”, or anything like that. That is because the person or organisation that commissioned the poster was well within its rights to do so. Just like atheist groups have the right to encourage people to be honest about their non-belief. It is not an attack. It never is.

The “War on Christmas” rhetoric has become a perpetual-motion machine of modern journalism. Every year, reactionary journalists will howl about some “PC” measure that is waging war on Christmas, and not-so-reactionary journalists will have to take their time to debunk the claims.

I appreciate the irony that, by writing this piece, I have become a cog in the perpetual “War on Christmas” machine, but it really does need to stop. There is no war on Christmas. Let people put up posters expressing their beliefs, and let people celebrate the season however they choose. I, for one, will be indulging my Christmas tradition of watching The Muppet Christmas Carol.

Content from our partners
Building Britain’s water security
How to solve the teaching crisis
Pitching in to support grassroots football