There was an interesting poll released a few days ago looking at what the British public find most important about Christmas.
Respondents were asked ‘Which, if any, of the following would you say make Christmas an important time of year to you?’ and were given 12 options and could select as many or as few of the options that they felt were important to them.
The options were:
Celebrating the birth of Jesus Christ
Attending a religious service(s)
Upholding family Christmas traditions
Spending time with family
Spending time with friends
Putting up Christmas lights and decorations
Watching Christmas television
Having time off work to relax
Eating Christmas food and/ or drinking Christmas drinks
Giving presents to friends/ family
Receiving presents from friends/ family
Being cosy indoors during the cold Christmas weather
Overall the most important was ‘Spending time with family’ selected by 76% of people, followed by ‘Giving presents to friends/ family’ selected by 63% (note not receiving presents which was only selected by 39%). The least important were ‘Celebrating the birth of Jesus Christ’ and ‘Attending a religious service(s)’ selected by just 22% and 15% respectively.
No doubt some posters will claim that this simply reflects the fact that most people in the UK aren’t actively religious. But hold on – the poll also asked about religious affiliation too and remarkably members of the mainstream Christian denomination also didn’t see the religious side of Christmas as particularly important.
So for CofE members:
‘Celebrating the birth of Jesus Christ’ – ranked 10th of 12 options
‘Attending a religious service(s)’ – ranked bottom in importance
So for Catholics:
‘Celebrating the birth of Jesus Christ’ – ranked equal 4th of 12 options
‘Attending a religious service(s)’ – ranked 10th of 12 options
For Church of Scotland
‘Celebrating the birth of Jesus Christ’ – ranked 10th of 12 options
‘Attending a religious service(s)’ – ranked bottom in importance
For Methodists
‘Celebrating the birth of Jesus Christ’ – ranked 4th of 12 options
‘Attending a religious service(s)’ – ranked 10th of 12 options
There are also results for other denominations but the numbers are too small to be meaningful (20 people or less)
Full details here.
https://humanism.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/Results-for-British-Humanist-Association-Christmas-OMNI_511-02.12.xlsxIn only one case did over 50% of the Christian respondents see one of the two religious options as important - ‘Celebrating the birth of Jesus Christ’, selected by 55% of Catholics.
So it isn’t just the non religious who see Christmas as increasingly secular, a majority of Christians do too.