Do Atheists Celebrate Christmas?

Procrastinating on Twitter the other day, I saw a thread about the “most irritating questions atheists are asked”, courtesy, of course, of Richard Dawkins, whose writing solidified my son’s absence of belief into actual, active atheism.

Now, according to my spawn, who is a bona fide, card-carrying atheist, I’m not actually an atheist, but an agnostic, because I don’t entirely want to rule out the possibility that something survives of the person after life other than the fleeting memories others have of them and sundry atoms and molecules, because that’s just too darn depressing for words.

But, either way, I’m fairly close to atheist. I certainly don’t believe in any of the various deities floating around, even the Sky God I grew up with as a Catholic – although having once deeply held beliefs in various objectively ridiculous things from virgin births in species that aren’t fish to the physical transformation of a piece of wafer into the body of a deity, I’m happy with other people believing what they want to believe.

Well, provided they don’t go killing people about it, anywise.

To refuse to Skype call someone on Christmas, have a Christmas meal, or buy my child a present because I’m atheist strikes me as the same kind of radical statement a religious person might make.

What surprised me on this thread, though, was that the question “Do atheists celebrate Christmas?” kept coming up. You see, that doesn’t strike me as a stupid question at all. Or, especially, an irritating one.

I imagine there are atheists from a Christian background who don’t celebrate Christmas. But it never occurred to me – to either of us, in fact – not to celebrate Christmas. Like most Britons, I don’t go to church, except for weddings and for funerals: by the end of her life, my grandmother was the only practising Catholic in a once firmly Christian family.

And, in my younger, more radical days, I never crossed myself in church, because that seemed wrong as it communicated belief – although I do now, when it’s expected, though I’d never touch holy water.

But Christmas is a cultural thing. It’s a family thing. It’s a fun thing. And to refuse to Skype call someone on Christmas, have a Christmas meal, or buy my child a present because I’m atheist strikes me as the same kind of radical statement a religious person might make.

I suppose I could have some kind of humanist ceremony on Christmas day. But, boy, that would be a lot of hard work.

Isn’t this, fundamentally, an age-old human celebration with very little to do with religion at all?

Which leaves me genuinely curious. And, yes, I know we’re a long way into January, but I’m just about to write about Christmas and I can’t get this out of my brain, and I’m still trying to work out what fun chocolate thing we could do for Easter given the boy’s too old for hunting the stuff. (Aztec-style chocolate smoothies? Organic chocolate-making?…)

You see, many of the defining elements of Christmas – notably feasting, lights, Father Christmas, gifting and trees – derive from pre-Christian midwinter celebrations. Further, none of the various astronomical events most associated with the Star of Bethlehem fell anywhere near December. Isn’t this, fundamentally, an age-old human celebration with very little to do with religion at all?

And, further, isn’t it rather odd to make such a big deal about it? The missionary tradition is enshrined in Christianity (and how!), but to be a missionary for atheism, which isn’t a religion, strikes me as paradoxical.

So: a question. Or, rather, a series. What does Christmas mean to you? Do you celebrate it? And how? And if you don’t, why not?


Image: Bellagio Christmas Garden 2011 Christmas Tree Closeup courtesy of Scott Ellis on Flickr’s Creative Commons.

8 Responses

  1. Jenny D says:

    Hi, as a fallen catholic married to an atheist I have pondered these same issues. I’ve always felt a bit of a fraud, as if I was crashing a party I hadn’t been invited to. But as you say, this was originally a midwinter celebration. So we have embraced that…..and celebrate light, warmth, friendship and family. Gifts to those we care about and feasting. And if I still set out a sneaky little Nativity scene in the corner, just because it appeals to me, why not? Love following your stories, Jenny

    • Theodora says:

      Thanks, Jenny! And nice to hear from you. That’s EXACTLY the way I see it. In fact, I’d probably go to a midnight mass, much in the same way as I attend temple celebrations here in Bali (although, as a lapsed Catholic I do feel rather *guilty* in churches). Really surprised me that some atheists were militant about it, TBH.

  2. We’re the same. I don’t know what to call us – multi-atheist? poly-atheist? But we do happily celebrate Christmas, Easter, Diwali, the Festival of Light, and any chance for a knees-up really.

    Can I recommend (for Easter) a chocolate extravaganza at Pod’s Factory? You get to make a chocolate elephant, presumably Ganesh-inspired if you’re that way inclined.

    http://podchocolate.com/bali-chocolate-tour/

    • Theodora says:

      Pod is exactly what I was thinking! I haven’t done it yet, and Easter would be the perfect excuse – they’re also the go-to chocolatier for many of the high-end restaurants here, so it’s not just organic but genuinely good. Be Chocolat does amazing choccies, but no courses, sadly. Fab seeing you guys when you were over, btw. I *may* have a work trip to Hangzhou coming up, so we might cross paths again in China. Trying to time it with the tea season, unless that’s a bad idea in your view….

  3. Rosa says:

    What a question!I’m a christian. I don’t celebrate Christmas at all.I study the Bible and I learned that Jesus (and his diciples) never celebrated birthdays. Besides Jesus was not born on Dec. 25th.

    • Theodora says:

      How funny, to have a Christian who doesn’t celebrate Christmas. And, yes, you’re right – birthday celebrations would definitely not have happened in old testament times….

  4. Polly says:

    I consider myself culturally Christian and “spiritually” Agnostic. The holidays are all about family for me. (I love Tim Minchin’s song ‘White Wine in the Sun’ as a kind of atheist Christmas carol – check it out if you’re not familiar!) I also still love the tradition of going to a Christmas Eve candlelight service. The idea of lighting a candle at the darkest time of the year has a spirit of hope that feels older, and more universal, than any religion.