Christmas in an Anti-Christian Age

WebNote: Pat Buchanan wrote this column back on December 25, 2012. I posted today as we observe this happy Christmas Yuletide of 2016 — And give thanks that we have finally elected a president who proudly and fearlessly proclaims Merry Christmas to all!

Guest Post by  Patrick J. Buchanan

Christmas in an Anti-Christian Age

For two millennia, the birth of Christ has been seen as the greatest event in world history. The moment Jesus was born in a stable in Bethlehem, God became man, and eternal salvation became possible.

This date has been the separation point of mankind’s time on earth, with B.C. designating the era before Christ, and A.D., anno domino, in the Year of the Lord, the years after. And how stands Christianity today?

“Christianity is in danger off being wiped out in its biblical heartlands,” says the British think tank Civitas.

In Iraq, Syria, Egypt, Ethiopia and Nigeria, Christians face persecution and pogroms. In Saudi Arabia and Afghanistan, conversion is a capital offense. In a century, two-thirds of all the Christians have vanished from the Islamic world.

In China, Christianity is seen as a subversive ideology of the West to undermine the regime.

In Europe, a century ago, British and German soldiers came out of the trenches to meet in no-man’s land to sing Christmas carols and exchange gifts. It did not happen in 1915, or ever again.

In the century since, all the Western empires have vanished. All of their armies and navies have melted away. All have lost their Christian faith. All have seen their birthrates plummet. All their nations are aging, shrinking and dying, and all are witnessing invasions from formerly subject peoples and lands.

In America, too, the decline of Christianity proceeds.

While conservatives believe that culture determines politics, liberals understand politics can change culture.

The systematic purging of Christian teachings and symbols from our public schools and public square has produced a growing population — 20 percent of the nation, 30 percent of the young — who answer “none” when asked about their religious beliefs and affiliations.

In the lead essay in the Book Review of Sunday’s New York Times, Paul Elie writes of our “post-Christian” fiction, where writers with “Christian convictions” like Walker Percy and Flannery O’Connor are a lost tribe.

“Where has the novel of belief gone?” he asks.

Americans understand why Mao’s atheist heirs who have lost their Marxist-Leninist faith and militants Islamists fear and detest the rival belief system of Christianity. But do they understand the animus that lies behind the assault on their faith here at home?

In a recent issue of New Oxford Review, Andrew Seddon (“The New Atheism: All the Rage”) describes a “Reason Rally” in Washington, D.C., a “coming out” event sponsored by atheist groups. Among the speakers was Oxford biologist Richard Dawkins, author of “The God Delusion,” who claims that “faith is an evil precisely because it requires no justification and brooks no argument.”

Christians have been infected by a “God virus,” says Dawkins. They are no longer rational beings. Atheists should treat them with derisory contempt. “Mock Them!” Dawkins shouted. “Ridicule them! In public!”

In “The End of Faith,” atheist Sam Harris wrote that “some propositions are so dangerous that it may even be ethical to kill people.”

“Since the New Atheists believe that religion is evil,” notes Seddon, “that it ‘poisons everything,’ in (Christopher) Hitchens’ words — it doesn’t take much effort to see that Harris is referring to religions and the people who follow them.”

Now since atheists are still badly outnumbered in America and less well-armed than the God-and-Country boys, and atheists believe this is the only life they have, atheist suggestions to “kill people” of Christian belief is probably a threat Christians need not take too seriously.

With reference to Dawkins’ view that the Christian faith “requires no justification and brooks no argument,” Seddon makes a salient point.

While undeniable that Christianity entails a belief in the supernatural, the miraculous — God became man that first Christmas, Christ raised people from the dead, rose himself on the first Easter Sunday and ascended into heaven 40 days later — consider what atheists believe.

They believe that something came out of nothing, that reason came from irrationality, that a complex universe and natural order came out of randomness and chaos, that consciousness came from non-consciousness and that life emerged from non-life.

This is a bridge too far for the Christian for whom faith and reason tell him that for all of this to have been created from nothing is absurd; it presupposes a Creator.

Atheists believe, Seddon writes, that “a multiverse (for which there is no experimental or observational evidence) containing an inconceivably large number of universes spontaneously created itself.”

Yet, Hitchens insists, “our belief is not a belief.”

Nonsense. Atheism requires a belief in the unbelievable.

Christians believe Christ could raise people from the dead because he is God. That is faith. Atheists believe life came out of non-life. That, too, is faith. They believe in what their god, science, cannot demonstrate, replicate or prove. They believe in miracles but cannot identify, produce or describe the miracle worker.

At Christmas, pray for Hitchens, Harris, Dawkins and the other lost souls at that Reason Rally.

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11 Comments
P
P
December 23, 2016 8:17 am

Atheism and climate change are the new modern religions, with all the merit of scientology.

Stucky
Stucky
December 23, 2016 8:54 am

Wah! Wah!!! Cry me a damn river. WAAAAH!!

What a bunch of bullshit. I am sick and tired of the Christianity-is-doomed crowd. What a bunch of maroons!! Don’t these assholes have access to a Bible???

“For where two or three have gathered together in My name, I am there ”
——– Mt. 18:20

” …. upon this rock I will build my church; and the gates of hell shall not prevail against it.”
——– Mt. 16:18

Ya get it, Mr. Buchanan? The church prevails as long as just TWO people exist! No matter what the world or the government does, the gates of hell will NOT prevail!!! So, stop your damned bellyaching. For fuksakes, I should charge $50 for this advice.

Actually, the very best thing that could possibly happen to the church in America is a PURGE. Get rid of all the Fake Fuckers pretending to be what they are not …. of which I am sure there are millions in this country.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Stucky
December 23, 2016 10:44 am

Mat 24:9 Then shall they deliver you up to tribulation, and shall kill you; and ye will be hated of all the nations for my name’s sake.

Mat 7:13-14 Enter in through the narrow gate, for wide the gate and broad the way that leads to destruction, and many are they who enter in through it. For narrow the gate and straitened the way that leads to life, and they are few who find it.

-Darby

JimmyOakland
JimmyOakland
December 23, 2016 11:09 am

Given that it is scientists who affirm that the universe sprang from nothing, and this fact is widely accepted, I’m always amazed that people have a problem with believing in the resurrection. Really, which of the two is the greater miracle? But as Terrence McKenna said, the posture of science is, give us one free miracle, and we’ll explain the rest. Uh, no.

kokoda the deplorable
kokoda the deplorable
December 23, 2016 11:22 am

The complexity of the earth, our solar system, our galaxy, all the other galaxies, and everything in between (spend time thinking about it).

Get into the weeds – the inner and magnetic core of the earth; the moon just happening to be there and in a good spot – same with the earth itself being spotted a specific distance from a star (our Sun); Gravity; our atmosphere, and the formation of stars, planets, galaxies, etc.

BB
BB
December 23, 2016 12:05 pm

This is what I have been trying to explain to idiots like Indent Service.He claims to be a astronomer but in the same breath claims there’s not enough evidence for God.Sometimes I think he just mildly retarder.

overthecliff
overthecliff
December 23, 2016 1:21 pm

Because of age difference, I think that I will precede Stucky into the great beyond. I wouldn’t be surprised to look up and see him walking through the Pearly Gates. bb too. That should be interesting.

rhs jr
rhs jr
December 23, 2016 1:26 pm

It’s Merry Christmas (Jesus Christ Mass) not Merry Clausmas (Santa Claus Mass) as the Bad Jews, Atheist, Illuminati, MSM, Universities, etc are trying to change it to.

ditchner
ditchner
December 23, 2016 2:42 pm

There are still many who proclaim the faith but when asked “what are you protesting?” have no answer. This is due to the success of the counter reformation and we now see a pervasive move of nearly all major denominations into an ecumenical alliance with the “mother” church that has inflicted great injury (but not death) to Protestantism. 2017 will be an interesting year in ecumenism as the Lutherans are poised to officially apologize for their ( 16th century) apostasy later in the fall.

Jesus said, “Because strait is the gate, and narrow is the way, which leadeth unto life, and few there be that find it.” Matthew 7:13-14

Anonymous
Anonymous
December 23, 2016 3:56 pm

Yes. It is clear there is an antichristian, pro-religion-of-peace, pro-I-believe-in-everything-and-nothing slant going on. I’m surprised Obongo didn’t say: “If you like your Christianity, you can keep your Christianity”….