2004 Skelly Family Christmas |
Christmas Lists | Christmas Past | Christmas Present | Christmas Yet to Come |
Tis the Season to be Peevish
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Touching and topical stories begin to appear in the news as the holiday season builds towards its peak. We'll be keeping an eye on these, as they say so much about who we are as a people and where we're headed as a culture.
"And it was always said of him [Scrooge], that he knew how to keep Christmas well, if any man alive possessed the knowledge." (Charles Dickens, "A Christmas Carol") |
Florida county reverses Christmas tree ban
Saturday, December 18, 2004 Posted: 11:32 AM EST (1632 GMT)
NEW PORT RICHEY, Florida (AP) -- Christmas tree decorations were being rehung at Pasco County buildings after the reversal of a county attorney's finding that the trees were unacceptable religious symbols.
Trees had been removed from county buildings Wednesday after the initial decision, which allowed them only in "semiprivate" areas such as personal offices. That decision drew angry reactions from residents and the American Center for Law & Justice, a law firm founded by televangelist Pat Robertson. "People should respect the religious views of others; people should broaden their perspective, their intelligence, stop being so narrow-minded," said dry-cleaning clerk Marijane Graham. "What's next, banning Santa Claus?" In a revised decision Friday, the attorney said that a Christmas tree is a purely secular symbol, along with Santa Claus and candy canes. "Whether through misunderstanding or miscommunication, the actions and statements of this office ... have been taken to the extreme," wrote Kristi Wooden, an assistant county attorney. The initial decision had been in response to a man who wanted to display a menorah at a county building. Wooden said a menorah could be displayed with a Christmas tree if a sign was added to the display reading: "Salute to Liberty. During this holiday season, the (government entity) salutes liberty. Let these festive lights remind us that we are the keepers of the flame of liberty and our legacy of freedom." Jay Sekulow, chief counsel for the American Center for Law & Justice, said the sign wasn't necessary but that "nobody's going to complain about a sign about freedom and liberty."
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This Season, Greetings Are at Issue
A Southern church presses store workers to say 'Merry Christmas,' not 'Happy Holidays.' RALEIGH, N.C. (Los Angeles Times) — This year, as Christmas season swung into gear, Pastor Patrick Wooden's followers fanned out to shopping malls across Raleigh to deliver a muscular message of holiday cheer: As Christian shoppers, they would like to be greeted with the phrase "Merry Christmas" — not a bland "Happy Holidays" — and stores that failed to do so would risk losing their business.
Nearly six weeks later, some citizens in Raleigh are seething over what they see as an attempt to force religion into the public square. But others say "Merry Christmas" is rolling off their tongues more easily and more often than in previous years. Conservative Christians nationwide have converged around the topic of Christmas, complaining that secularists and nonbelievers have tried to obliterate the holiday's religious meaning. In Oklahoma and Miami, local skirmishes have erupted over the display of nativity scenes on government property. A California man has called for a boycott of Macy's and Bloomingdale's department stores, demanding the phrase "Merry Christmas" be used. In Denver, the mayor's attempt to remove "Merry Christmas" from a light display raised such a howl of protest that he reversed his decision. Here in Raleigh, the grass-roots campaigning has focused on retailers. And it's been so invigorating that the church is making plans for next year, said Wooden, a barrel-chested former football player who leads a conservative black congregation of about 3,000. "Our position is: If they want the gold, frankincense and myrrh, they should acknowledge the birth of the child," said Wooden, pastor of the Upper Room Church of God in Christ. Conservative Americans feel ready to push back against "the secularists or the humanists or the elitists" who dominate popular culture, said the Rev. Mark Creech of the Christian Action League of North Carolina, which is based in Raleigh. "It's a cultural war. We are in the thick of it," Creech said. "It's not so much an attack on us. It's an attack on Christ."
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