Home Business Internet invitations Market Stock Downloads Dvd Games Software Office Parent Category Child Category 1 Sub Child Category 1 Sub Child Category 2 Sub Child Category 3 Child Category 2 Child Category 3 Child Category 4 Featured Health Childcare Doctors Uncategorized
I think it is time that political correctness should bring common sense and courtesy. No one should be afraid or uncomfortable about wanting Merry Christmas. Happy Holidays, on the other hand, seems to indicate something that the government will let me know. Happy Holiday does not mean anything? Nothing. It is kind of the same message that you receive when you are waiting on the phone for a customer service representative and you are saying, "Stay on .... We appreciate your business." They do not appreciate our business, and I do not appreciate anything in general about just to be politically correct. Maybe someone should say Happy Holidays or something. Or maybe someone who does not believe in religion to begin, will do justice by saying nothing or Christmas greetings. Maybe they should say Happy Holiday to the government or bank holidays, and leave alone those who believe in Christmas to say whatever they want to say!
Although I was a Jew, I celebrate any holidays that preach the message of peace and goodwill: Christmas included. I often say to my Christian friends is no need to wish me a happy Hanukkah, when talking about Christmas wishes Christmas or birth. My reasoning is Christmas is # 1 religious holiday for Christians and I realize that. Hanukkah is 8 on a scale of 1 to 10. I feel it's Christmas when an injustice when I say Merry Christmas, I heard the response: Happy Hanukkah. Happy Hanukkah want me, want me to turn into "Happy Candle Festival". However, Christians wishing me a merry Christmas mean you're wishing me peace and goodwill, they gave me good wishes of them. Which one do you want? Candles happiness or peace on earth goodwill to men?
No insult in velvet Christmas greetings needs of other religious invitations people Merry Christmas. These objects can be painful and may use some "Christmas Spirit". These people assert that you are casting some sort of spell on them ... Well ... Forgive them. They obviously too stupid to think of anything else in any other terms.
Maybe I think this way because during elementary school and my high school in Montreal, I attended the Protestant School Board of Greater Montreal. From kindergarten to high school, I was accepted in practice the Christmas wishes or Christianity, as well as my students were mostly Jews. You see, in Montreal school was (and remains) to be operated by either the Catholic Church invitations or Protestant. French Canadians, who are mostly Catholics, of course attended Catholic schools and English invitations Canadians, who are mostly Protestant attend board Protestant or Christmas wishes of Greater Montreal. For Jews, well, we were not allowed in the Catholic Church, and speak mainly English. We are allowed to attend Protestant invitations schools. It was quite interesting because in my area of town, Protestant 99 percent of Jews. However, even so, we are taught in the same way as Christians, reading from the New Testament each morning and sang hymns loudly, including velvet Christmas invitations greetings or both Onward Christian Soldiers. In the environment of our secular, Jewish grew up and went to a Protestant school is a way of life. It would seem here in the United States as impossible. But here in the United States, Montreal is considered as close to Spain. (Refer Geography is not the most popular invitations topic in school here)
The fact is, I see absolutely no contradiction between my learning about Christianity and I was Jewish. Going to school is a school, and back home, well, that is where the religious blessing or religious Christmas is really practical. In my family it is no different.
Growing up and going to school in a Christian environment gave me a full understanding of the need for tolerance and the need to respect the views of others. Christianity is not my religion, which is something I was taught in school. There is absolutely no threat in learning about other people's religions. Not a Jew that I know has been converted and no one forced me to think I think.
Complete high school and Christmas, hosted by