Herald on Sunday

Share in the spirit

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If Christmas did not exist we would have to invent it. The world needs a season of goodwill, when problems and disputes can be put aside and people can remember what really matters. People, families, friendship, love.

Wait, you may say, we did invent it. Or at least, pre-Christian culture in the Northern Hemisphere invented it to celebrate the passing of their winter solstice when thoughts can turn to spring. Was that like Christmas as we know it?

Nobody knows. For the past 2000 years the images, ceremonies and music of Christmas have celebrated the birth of Christ, the beginning of the religion that has underpinne­d the history and culture of western Europe and its colonies, and today is practised more strongly in Africa and parts of Asia than in western societies such as ours.

Go to a church in New Zealand tomorrow and you will probably find a congregati­on more diverse than the community outside. Multicultu­ral immigratio­n has been a boon to Christiani­ty in countries such as this. Yet secular sensitivit­y to cultures in these countries would have us replace the Christmas greeting with “happy holidays” or something equally agnostic. Their sensitivit­y is misplaced.

Christmas is known the world over, as are its carols, cribs, the legend of Santa Clause and all its commercial excess. To see excessive eruptions of tinsel, trees and whiskered Santas with their reindeer and sleighs, you do not need to go to a “Christian” country.

The Christmas spirit is universal, bigger than the church that spread it.

You do not have to be religious to recognise it. There is goodness in the air. Kindness. Considerat­ion.

Colleagues and competitor­s share a convivial drink, old friends and family get back in touch. Cards were exchanged but email is rapidly replacing them. Whatever form of communicat­ion is convenient, wherever acquaintan­ces meet, the spirit is alive. It makes us kind, warm, appreciati­ve of people.

So wherever you are today, stay safe, drive carefully, be considerat­e.

Help children learn the joy of giving as well as receiving gifts. Have carols playing. The sweet songs and stories they tell are their heritage. Share it, be grateful and have a happy Christmas.

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