Montreal Gazette

O’reilly unleashes Christmas battle cry

Holiday under fire from lefties, Fox host claims

- FRAZIER MOORE

NEW YORK — Deck the halls and man the battle stations. The fight has resumed.

That refers, of course, to the socalled War on Christmas, a yearly call to arms by those whose Christmas cheer is under siege. Or so they claim.

This annual uproar may have escaped the notice of some Christmas observers.

Those are people who mean no disrespect by replacing “Merry Christmas” with the more inclusive “Happy Holidays.” Those are people who are able to forgive as good intentions gone awry the occasional misguided stab at political correctnes­s. (“Holiday tree”? Really?!)

Those are people who might be surprised to learn that Christmas is under threat of a power grab by atheists, libertines, elites, advocates for gay rights, pro-abortion rights and drug legalizati­on, plus gardenvari­ety left-wing wack jobs.

In short, those are people who aren’t watching Bill O’Reilly.

No one is more vociferous in leading the Christmas pushback than this Fox News Channel superstar, whose seasonal war cry has become a Christmas tradition of its own.

Every right-thinking person needs to “stand up and fight against this secular progressiv­ism that wants to diminish the Christmas holiday,” he fulminated recently. “We have to start to fight back against these people.”

Turning the “No-Spin Zone” into a holiday war zone, O’Reilly is all for keeping Christ in Christmas.

At the same time, he proclaims that everyone — no matter their faith — should call a Christmas tree “a Christmas tree” and knock off their whining.

“No intelligen­t person could possibly see a secular display of Christmas as an imposition of religion,” he declared. “A Christmas tree is a

“Secular progressiv­ism wants to diminish the Christmas holiday.” BILL O’REILLY

secular symbol. It has nothing to do with Christiani­ty.”

And there’s more where that came from.

“It is a fact that Christiani­ty is not a religion. It is a phil-o-so-phy,” he told his audience, stretching out the word as if speaking to children.

Never mind that Webster’s New World College Dictionary defines “Christiani­ty” as: (1) Christians collective­ly; (2) the Christian religion; (3) a particular Christian religious system; (4) the state of being a Christian. No mention of “philosophy.”

It’s nothing new, according to Stephen Nissenbaum, author of The Battle for Christmas, a1996 cultural history of the holiday. Bottom line: The holiness of Christmas has always been challenged by earthly practices. Through the centuries, spirituali­ty and paganism have coexisted at Christmas time uneasily.

“Christmas has been a very difficult holiday to successful­ly Christiani­ze,” said Nissenbaum, a professor emeritus of history at the University of Massachuse­tts (Amherst). “Christiani­ty has taken over the season, even though in doing so, it has allowed itself to become infused with a lot of non-Christian elements.”

Nissenbaum’s book reminds us that not until the fourth century did the Church officially decree Dec. 25 as the date for Christmas, because it roughly coincided with the winter solstice, already long observed with a pagan festival.

Leaping ahead to the United States of the 1840s, the holiday had begun to resemble the Christmas we observe today, with the popular poem first published two decades earlier, ’ Twas the Night Before Christmas, serving as an influentia­l guidepost. And already — with images of Santa Claus even then being used in advertisem­ents aimed at children — people were decrying the holiday’s commercial­ization.

In short, Christmas has always been in flux and at odds with itself.

Nissenbaum reflected on the propositio­n that a Christmas tree is cultural and secular, and therefore shouldn’t offend non-Christians.

“That makes real sense only if the people making that argument don’t think of Christmas as a religious holiday,” he said. “The moment that you see Christmas as a Christian holiday, then something that bears the name ‘Christmas’ has got to have a religious significan­ce.” In other words: You can’t have it both ways.

But you can sure try. O’Reilly spent less than 14 minutes on the wars in Iraq and Afghanista­n last December, while devoting roughly 42 minutes to the War on Christmas, says liberal watchdog group Media Matters for America.

As an O’Reilly Factor franchise, the War on Christmas is just the latest chapter in the holiday’s contentiou­s history. It makes Christmas a political wedge issue.

“Beyond all the controvers­y lies a much bigger secular progressiv­e agenda,” insists O’Reilly, rallying his troops.

Call it what you like, Christmas waged like that is just an annual observance of Us vs. Them.

 ?? CTV ?? No one is more vociferous in leading the Christmas pushback than Fox News host Bill O’Reilly, left (with Daily Show host Jon Stewart).
CTV No one is more vociferous in leading the Christmas pushback than Fox News host Bill O’Reilly, left (with Daily Show host Jon Stewart).

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