Coming Soon đ At the beginning of April, youâll be
introduced to a brand-new GoComics! See more information here. Subscribers, check your
email for more details.
I wonder if this is a heads-up that they are dropping Johnnyâs traditional twice a year religious themed strips? While I have never been a fan of someone pushing their views on religion at me, twice a year on days that for much of the audience was a day based, at least in theory, on religion was something I could tolerate and quite often enjoy because of how he did his strips for those occasions.
Christmas has ceased to be a religious holiday. You will note that the zealots who speak out against it love Black Friday and the Holiday-Whose-Name-We_Cannot-Mention shopping season.
Perhaps we should do away with celebrating it altogether along with all the commercialism â economic stimulus if you will â that goes along with it. Also remove it as a holiday from our calendar. Thatâs one more day of productivity for American Business and whatâs good for American Business is good for the USA.
It is more of a secular holiday then a religious one, but it does encourage some people to be more generous to charities and to feel compelled to treat other people a bit less harshly and maybe even tolerate them or, Diety-Whose-Name-We_Cannot-Mention, forbid compassion.
Well, now, December 25th as Christâs birthday is not biblically based. Thereâs no indication in the two books of the bible that mention Christâs birth (Matthew and Luke) of the actual day, unless you count the bit about Ceasar Augustusâ calling for a tax.
AnywayâŚThe first time the birth of Jesus Christ was attributed to the date December 25 was in the 4th century, according to early Roman history. Early celebrations of Christmas are thought to have derived from Roman and other European festivals that marked the end of the harvest, and the winter solstice.
Some customs from those celebrations that have endured include decorating homes with greenery, giving gifts, singing songs, and eating special foods.
Every winter, Romans honored the pagan god Saturn, the god of agriculture, with a festival that began on December 17 and usually ended on or around December 25 with a winter-solstice celebration in honor of the beginning of the new solar cycle. This festival was a time of merrymaking, and families and friends would exchange gifts.
After the Roman Emperor Constantine I converted to Christianity in 312 and sanctioned Christianity, church leaders made efforts to appropriate the winter-solstice holidays and thereby achieve a more seamless conversion to Christianity for the emperorâs subjects.
This is the Christmas season and that is what we are celebrating!Whether you like it or not, whether you believe in Christmas or not! Whether you agree or not!MERRY CHRISTMAS TO EVERYONE!!!!
âŚAnd letâs face it: who cares how other people celebrate a holiday? Most of the Christmas traditions came from pagan rituals and have nothing to do with Jesus Christ. Most popular âChristmas songsâ donât even mention him (Christmas Carols, of course, by definition, do).
Me, personally? I LOVE the idea of a gift-giving season, and even though Iâm a Christian, I donât try to associate Christmas with Jesus. We should be âpeace on earth, good will towards menâ all year round anyway. But at least we think about it once a year.
Same with Thanksgiving. We should give thanks EVERY FREAKINâ DAY. But at least we do it once a year.
Same with Independence Day, Memorial Day, Veteranâs Day, Motherâs Day, Valentineâs DayâŚthose are all things we should appreciate all year, every day. I think it says great things for us as people that we set aside time each year to do soâweâre acknowledging that if we donât set aside that time, even important things will get lost in the shuffleâŚ
Ah, the âwar on Christmasâ whine. Iâm sorry about your establishmentarian frustration, but those of us who are secure in our beliefs donât feel bad if someone says Merry Christmas, or Happy Holidays, or Happy Yule, or Merry Solstice, or whatever. Everyone has their own reasons for the season, yours notwithstanding.
For what itâs worth, I have never personally run into anyone discouraging me from saying Merry Christmas, and it seems that I hear it often enough at the businesses that I go to. We didnât put up our Christmas tree at work this year, but thatâs more from being overworked, understaffed, and generally distracted.
I donât doubt that there are places where people are discouraged from having Christmasy decorations at their desks, and have to be careful of saying anything with even remotely religious implications, but not every place is like that.
Iâm so broke this year itâs scary, my family has mostly all passed away, the rest I havenât seen or hear from in decades. Christmas is a wonderful holiday to remind everyone to appreciate the wonders that God has given us, and the love that surrounds us. But itâs NOT THE ONLY HOLIDAY.
I decided that, since Christmas is kind of painful right now, I would simply wish everyone a HAPPY HOLIDAY. After all there are so many, but Iâm not celebrating any of them. Today Iâm not celebrating OATMEAL MUFFIN DAY. Saturday I (sadly, tragically) did not celebrate NATIONAL CHOCOLATE COVERED ANYTHING DAY. I wonât be celebrating the Solstice, Festivus, National Eggnog Day, and many others. Itâs fun!!
The only problem has been the distinct lack of âWar on Christmasâ trolls to laugh at. Ah, well, the month isnât over yet.
I work with the public, and I havenât been giving anyone well-wishes for any holiday. I just tell them to âhave a nice dayâ. If they, however, tell me âMerry Christmasâ, I will respond with âMerry Christmasâ. If they tell me âHappy Holidaysâ, I will respond with âHappy Holidays.â Iâm not offended, theyâre not offended, no problems.
if you donât like â Merry Christmas â how about â Happy Birthday Jesus â? yeah!!âŚHe was born âŚ. https://imprimis.hillsdale.edu/the-star-of-bethlehem/
charliefarmrhere about 7 years ago
Yep! With the ACLU & the PC crowd, this is what it is coming to.
goanoparsi about 7 years ago
Sad times indeed, when the very spirit of Christmas is destroyed by âpolitically correctâ jackasses
danketaz Premium Member about 7 years ago
If you feel tingly, see a doctor.
KenTheCoffinDweller about 7 years ago
I wonder if this is a heads-up that they are dropping Johnnyâs traditional twice a year religious themed strips? While I have never been a fan of someone pushing their views on religion at me, twice a year on days that for much of the audience was a day based, at least in theory, on religion was something I could tolerate and quite often enjoy because of how he did his strips for those occasions.
t1warren about 7 years ago
If no one else will say it I will. Merry Christmas to all.
DanFlak about 7 years ago
Christmas has ceased to be a religious holiday. You will note that the zealots who speak out against it love Black Friday and the Holiday-Whose-Name-We_Cannot-Mention shopping season.
Perhaps we should do away with celebrating it altogether along with all the commercialism â economic stimulus if you will â that goes along with it. Also remove it as a holiday from our calendar. Thatâs one more day of productivity for American Business and whatâs good for American Business is good for the USA.
It is more of a secular holiday then a religious one, but it does encourage some people to be more generous to charities and to feel compelled to treat other people a bit less harshly and maybe even tolerate them or, Diety-Whose-Name-We_Cannot-Mention, forbid compassion.
Bah! Humbug! and to all a good night.
sandpiper about 7 years ago
Riding the fence for long periods for no reason, brings rosy cheeks to celebrate the season
Sir Ruddy Blighter about 7 years ago
Well, now, December 25th as Christâs birthday is not biblically based. Thereâs no indication in the two books of the bible that mention Christâs birth (Matthew and Luke) of the actual day, unless you count the bit about Ceasar Augustusâ calling for a tax.
AnywayâŚThe first time the birth of Jesus Christ was attributed to the date December 25 was in the 4th century, according to early Roman history. Early celebrations of Christmas are thought to have derived from Roman and other European festivals that marked the end of the harvest, and the winter solstice.
Some customs from those celebrations that have endured include decorating homes with greenery, giving gifts, singing songs, and eating special foods.
Every winter, Romans honored the pagan god Saturn, the god of agriculture, with a festival that began on December 17 and usually ended on or around December 25 with a winter-solstice celebration in honor of the beginning of the new solar cycle. This festival was a time of merrymaking, and families and friends would exchange gifts.
After the Roman Emperor Constantine I converted to Christianity in 312 and sanctioned Christianity, church leaders made efforts to appropriate the winter-solstice holidays and thereby achieve a more seamless conversion to Christianity for the emperorâs subjects.
The_Notorious_Infidel about 7 years ago
This is the Christmas season and that is what we are celebrating!Whether you like it or not, whether you believe in Christmas or not! Whether you agree or not!MERRY CHRISTMAS TO EVERYONE!!!!
Sir Ruddy Blighter about 7 years ago
âŚAnd letâs face it: who cares how other people celebrate a holiday? Most of the Christmas traditions came from pagan rituals and have nothing to do with Jesus Christ. Most popular âChristmas songsâ donât even mention him (Christmas Carols, of course, by definition, do).
Me, personally? I LOVE the idea of a gift-giving season, and even though Iâm a Christian, I donât try to associate Christmas with Jesus. We should be âpeace on earth, good will towards menâ all year round anyway. But at least we think about it once a year.
Same with Thanksgiving. We should give thanks EVERY FREAKINâ DAY. But at least we do it once a year.
Same with Independence Day, Memorial Day, Veteranâs Day, Motherâs Day, Valentineâs DayâŚthose are all things we should appreciate all year, every day. I think it says great things for us as people that we set aside time each year to do soâweâre acknowledging that if we donât set aside that time, even important things will get lost in the shuffleâŚ
Dr_Zinj about 7 years ago
I HATE VOMITING WHEN I HAVENâT HAD TOO MUCH TO DRINK.
Joe Cooker Premium Member about 7 years ago
Itâs Festivus for the rest of us .
toahero about 7 years ago
I always use âHappy Holidaysâ instead of âMerry Christmasâ
Not because of âpolitical correctness,â but because it makes the idiots who worry about the âwar on christmasâ throw a temper tantrum.
Plods with ...⢠about 7 years ago
Boo
Dkram about 7 years ago
MARRY CHRISTMAS!! â there, I said it.
\\//_
Gent about 7 years ago
Itâs a good thing we bears are atheists. (Unless weâre worshipping our great bear gods who live in the heavens of Ursa Major)
Weakstream about 7 years ago
cooganm Premium Member about 7 years ago
Ah, the âwar on Christmasâ whine. Iâm sorry about your establishmentarian frustration, but those of us who are secure in our beliefs donât feel bad if someone says Merry Christmas, or Happy Holidays, or Happy Yule, or Merry Solstice, or whatever. Everyone has their own reasons for the season, yours notwithstanding.
joefearsnothing about 7 years ago
No matter whatâŚsomeone will figure out a reason to be offended!And that offends me!
Kaputnik about 7 years ago
For what itâs worth, I have never personally run into anyone discouraging me from saying Merry Christmas, and it seems that I hear it often enough at the businesses that I go to. We didnât put up our Christmas tree at work this year, but thatâs more from being overworked, understaffed, and generally distracted.
I donât doubt that there are places where people are discouraged from having Christmasy decorations at their desks, and have to be careful of saying anything with even remotely religious implications, but not every place is like that.
GROG Premium Member about 7 years ago
Too late. You have.
vaughnrl2003 Premium Member about 7 years ago
Have a Happy Christmas and an epic new year, or shut the hell up.
Durak Premium Member about 7 years ago
So sick of people acting like other people were attacking Christmas.
Great Wizard Nala about 7 years ago
HAPPY KWANZA!
redback about 7 years ago
how dares he wish me a happy holiday. Who told you I wanted a happy holiday
DaveJohn1 about 7 years ago
I cannot understand why so many of you are so hateful. There is no reason for it.
dimndno about 7 years ago
Johnny Hart would deliberately say âMerry Christmasâ.
Skywatcher68 about 7 years ago
Almost exactly two years ago: âJust give me all your eggnog.â http://www.gocomics.com/bc/2015/12/22
nopainogain about 7 years ago
Iâm an atheist and I dont âdoâ offended. Merry Christmas, Happy Hanukkah, and whatever else applies.
sew-so about 7 years ago
Iâm so broke this year itâs scary, my family has mostly all passed away, the rest I havenât seen or hear from in decades. Christmas is a wonderful holiday to remind everyone to appreciate the wonders that God has given us, and the love that surrounds us. But itâs NOT THE ONLY HOLIDAY.
I decided that, since Christmas is kind of painful right now, I would simply wish everyone a HAPPY HOLIDAY. After all there are so many, but Iâm not celebrating any of them. Today Iâm not celebrating OATMEAL MUFFIN DAY. Saturday I (sadly, tragically) did not celebrate NATIONAL CHOCOLATE COVERED ANYTHING DAY. I wonât be celebrating the Solstice, Festivus, National Eggnog Day, and many others. Itâs fun!!
The only problem has been the distinct lack of âWar on Christmasâ trolls to laugh at. Ah, well, the month isnât over yet.
Rosette about 7 years ago
I work with the public, and I havenât been giving anyone well-wishes for any holiday. I just tell them to âhave a nice dayâ. If they, however, tell me âMerry Christmasâ, I will respond with âMerry Christmasâ. If they tell me âHappy Holidaysâ, I will respond with âHappy Holidays.â Iâm not offended, theyâre not offended, no problems.
oakie817 about 7 years ago
if you donât like â Merry Christmas â how about â Happy Birthday Jesus â? yeah!!âŚHe was born âŚ. https://imprimis.hillsdale.edu/the-star-of-bethlehem/