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rj_fernalld (rj_fernalld)
12-07-2005, 11:19 AM
Bushes' 'holiday' cards ring hollow for some
Christian conservatives wage war to put religion back into Christmas

What's missing from the White House Christmas card? Christmas.

This month, as in every December since he took office, President Bush sent out cards with a generic end-of-the-year message, wishing 1.4 million of his close friends and supporters a happy "holiday season."

Many people are thrilled to get a White House Christmas card, no matter what the greeting inside. But some conservative Christians are reacting as if Bush stuck coal in their stockings.

"This clearly demonstrates that the Bush administration has suffered a loss of will and that they have capitulated to the worst elements in our culture," said William A. Donohue, president of the Catholic League for Religious and Civil Rights.

Bush "claims to be a born-again, evangelical Christian. But he sure doesn't act like one," said Joseph Farah, editor of the conservative Web site WorldNetDaily.com. "I threw out my White House card as soon as I got it."

Religious conservatives are miffed because they have been pressuring stores to advertise Christmas sales rather than "holiday specials" and urging schools to let students out for Christmas vacation rather than for "winter break." They celebrated when House Speaker J. Dennis Hastert (R-Ill.) insisted that the sparkling spectacle on the Capitol lawn should be called the Capitol Christmas Tree, not a holiday spruce.

'Sent to people of all faiths'
Then along comes a generic season's greeting from the White House, paid for by the Republican National Committee. The cover art is also secular, if not humanist: It shows the presidential pets -- two dogs and a cat -- frolicking on a snowy White House lawn.

"Certainly President and Mrs. Bush, because of their faith, celebrate Christmas," said Susan Whitson, Laura Bush's press secretary. "Their cards in recent years have included best wishes for a holiday season, rather than Christmas wishes, because they are sent to people of all faiths."

That is the same rationale offered by major retailers for generic holiday catalogues, and it is accepted by groups such as the National Council of Churches. "I think it's more important to put Christ back into our war planning than into our Christmas cards," said the council's general secretary, the Rev. Bob Edgar, a former Democratic congressman.

But the White House's explanation does not satisfy the groups -- which have grown in number in recent years -- that believe there is, in the words of the Heritage Foundation, a "war on Christmas" involving an "ever-stronger push toward a neutered 'holiday' season so that non-Christians won't be even the slightest bit offended."

One of the generals on the pro-Christmas side is Tim Wildmon, president of the American Family Association in Tupelo, Miss. "Sometimes it's hard to tell whether this is sinister -- it's the purging of Christ from Christmas -- or whether it's just political correctness run amok," he said. "I think in the case of the White House, it's just political correctness."

Retail boycotts
Wildmon does not give retailers the same benefit of the doubt. This year, he has called for a consumer boycott of Target stores because the chain issued a holiday advertising circular that did not mention Christmas. Last year, he aimed a similar boycott at Macy's Inc., which averted a repeat this December by proclaiming "Merry Christmas" in its advertising and in-store displays.

"It bothers me that the White House card leaves off any reference to Jesus, while we've got Ramadan celebrations in the White House," Wildmon said. "What's going on there?"

At the Catholic League, Donohue had just announced a boycott of the Lands' End catalogue when he received his White House holiday card. True, he said, the Bushes included a verse from Psalm 28, but Psalms are in the Old Testament and do not mention Jesus' birth.

"They'd better address this, because they're no better than the retailers who have lost the will to say 'Merry Christmas,' " he said.

Donohue said that Wal-Mart, facing a threatened boycott, added a Christmas page to its Web site and fired a customer relations employee who wrote a letter linking Christmas to "Siberian shamanism." He was not mollified by a letter from Lands' End saying it "adopted the 'holiday' terminology as a way to comply with one of the basic freedoms granted to all Americans: freedom of religion."

"Ninety-six percent of Americans celebrate Christmas," Donohue said. "Spare me the diversity lecture."

Diversity has been a hallmark of White House greeting cards for some time, according to Mary Evans Seeley of Tampa, Fla., author of "Season's Greetings From the White House." The last presidential Christmas card that mentioned Christmas was in 1992. It was sent by George H.W. and Barbara Bush, parents of the current president.

Seeley said the first president to send out true Christmas cards, as opposed to signed photographs or handwritten letters, was Franklin D. Roosevelt. "Merry Christmas From the President and Mrs. Roosevelt," said his first annual card, in 1933.

Politicization of a holiday
Like many modern touches, the generic New Year's card was introduced to the White House by John and Jacqueline Kennedy. In 1962, they had Hallmark print 2,000 cards, of which 1,800 cards said "The President and Mrs. Kennedy Wish You a Blessed Christmas" and 200 said "With Best Wishes for a Happy New Year."

Lyndon and Lady Bird Johnson continued that tradition for a couple of years, but it required keeping track of Christian and non-Christian recipients. Beginning in 1966, they wished everyone a "Joyous Christmas," and no president has attempted the two-card trick since.

Seeley dates the politicization of the White House Christmas card to Richard M. Nixon, who increased the number of recipients tenfold, to 40,000, in his first year. The numbers since have snowballed, hitting 125,000 under Jimmy Carter, topping 400,000 under Bill Clinton and rising to more than a million under the current Bushes, with each president's political party paying the bill.

The wording, meanwhile, has often flip-flopped. Jimmy and Rosalynn Carter put "Merry Christmas" in their 1977 card and then switched to "Holiday Season" for the next three years. Ronald and Nancy Reagan, similarly, began with a "Joyous Christmas" in 1981 and 1982 but doled out generic holiday wishes from 1983 to 1988. The elder President Bush stayed in the "Merry Christmas" spirit all four years, and the Clintons opted for inclusive greetings for all of their eight years.

The current Bush has straddled the divide, offering generic greetings along with an Old Testament verse. To some religious conservatives, that makes all the difference.

"There's a verse from Scripture in it. I don't mind that at all, as long as we don't try to pretend we're not a nation under God," said the Rev. Jerry Falwell.

© 2005 The Washington Post Company

david_munson (david_munson)
12-07-2005, 06:15 PM
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That's a good article RJ.
What concerns me even more is the general attack upon anything of Christ.
This nation is going down the hopper so fast it's not funny.

People who are anti-Christ in their thinking are offended by the name.
Why don't we as beleivers start a lawsuit that claims we are offended by those who attack our belief in Christ and demand that they shut up?
Sort of play it back to them.

If it was only that simple.I think you know as well as I do,that we are in the last days of the gentile rule or age.
There is a change coming that's going to really freak Americans out because we are not ready for it.

Oh well,we always have the hope of His return and His care for us.
Watch what takes place in 2006.It's going to get really "interesting."

God bless you and keep you as He promised He would,

Dave


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luvliberty (luvliberty)
12-09-2005, 02:38 PM
how are Bush's cards an attack on Christ? since he serves as the president for people of various backgrounds why is it wrong for him to send a card that reaches out to all this time of year.Wouldn't Jesus have reached out to all? isn't that the christian thing?

rj_fernalld (rj_fernalld)
12-09-2005, 06:45 PM
I am totally with you on that...just found it amusing that the Christian right has such a hissy fit over this

dinaweena (dinaweena)
12-09-2005, 07:15 PM
I'll have to agree with you ladies on that too...no wonder we (Christians) look like a bunch of idiots.

sojourner (sojourner)
12-09-2005, 11:39 PM
Amen Dina...how about certain gripers start living the message one and one and stop moaning and complaining....get a life...for some Christians it seems life is nothing more than a game of "What's wrong with the picture?"
I loved your Chirstmas letter by the way...but why didn't you include all of the reindeers and elfs and ...?...aww I'll get over it!

dinaweena (dinaweena)
12-10-2005, 04:19 AM
Patricia,
I'm not that proficient with the computer...that's the first time I've ever even done anything like that....I thought it was pretty got for my first time :-) Also, I didn't actually have any reindeer or santa clip art...

atagirl (atagirl)
12-10-2005, 05:13 AM
David,
Your right about anti-Christ thinkers being offended by the name of Jesus. God said let no man have an excuse. God has revealed himself everywhere and i wonder if these people that are so passionate about not believing in Christ are actually exposing themselves as believing He really does exist. What I mean is...I never heard nor met a real atheist that was offended by the religious. They really don't believe, so it doesn't matter to them. They don't need to argue. Interesting..

luvliberty (luvliberty)
12-10-2005, 03:48 PM
Rj... I too find it a baffling argument ...I thought that christians would be more christlike and extend to all... also, there are other religious faiths than just christian existing here in America... if we are going to pride ourselves on religious freedoms then that needs to encompass all religious faiths. I rarely agree with Bush on anything, but attempting to reach out to all his constituents regardless of what faith they hold seems to be a good gesture. Everybody already knows he is a christian, so it is obvious that he is sending Happy Holidays as a sign to reach out to some who may not be christian... I do not see how he can be faulted for that. the word Holi-day indicates sacred or holy day anyway.

cordell (cordell)
12-14-2005, 01:04 AM
<font color="0000ff">I am totally with you on that...just found it amusing that the Christian right has such a hissy fit over this...

I'll have to agree with you ladies on that too...no wonder we (Christians) look like a bunch of idiots.</font>

Evanjellycull Christians in America are sadly more interested in their "rights" than they are about the message of Christmas--"Hey, look, God became one of us, TABERNACLED amongst us!" Most said evanjellyfish couldn't tell you the meaning or the necessity of the incarnation if you enticed them with evanjellybeans.

These are the same folks who got all bent out of shape when the "signs" of the Ten Commandments were being taken down--but yet they couldn't recite them in order without peeking, much less tell you what they mean for the lives of believers seeing how they believe they were not intended for believers anyway.

These type of folks are bent on getting their own place at the table of the other slighted pseudominorities which America seems to spawn by the truckload.

(Message edited by cordell on December 13, 2005)

dinaweena (dinaweena)
12-14-2005, 03:29 AM
cordel- have I told you lately that I love you?

jeannie (jeannie)
12-14-2005, 04:20 AM
"These are the same folks who got all bent out of shape when the "signs" of the Ten Commandments were being taken down--but yet they couldn't recite them in order without peeking.."

Well thank god for a Catholic education cuz I can recite them or I would have felt the wrath of Sister Joseph Michael!

Who is God? God is Love.
Where is God? God is everywhere.
Baltimore Catechism circa 1961

boss_martian (boss_martian)
12-14-2005, 08:00 PM
This just in:

http://www.theonion.com/content/node/43438

gone_to_pa (gone_to_pa)
12-15-2005, 11:35 PM
HEY BOSS,
THAT POOP WASN'T A BIT FUNNY. IT ALMOST HAD ME GOING THERE UNTIL THE PART WHERE IT SAID ALL CHRISTIANS WILL REGISTER AND BE SUBJECT TO RANDOM SEARCHES OF THEIR HOUSES. I WAS REALLY GETTING P-OOOed. LOVE YA BROTHER.

GTP/ TOM

dinaweena (dinaweena)
12-16-2005, 02:25 AM
Yeah- it caught me at that same part too....I was like, "WHAT THE SHLOCK?!?!?!?!""

david_munson (david_munson)
12-16-2005, 04:32 PM
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Sad thing is,we're headed that way fast.

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