Whether they were or not, the point is, do atheists adhere to these now generally accepted Christian days? If so, they are hypocrites. "Christianity" requires a capital letter, as it is a proper noun.
So we're not allowed to celebrate Christmas because we're not Christians, but we're not allowed to drop Christmas because the Christians will cry about it - see the recent media articles about Starbucks' choice of cups for the holiday season.
Christmas is a cultural event that has moved beyond the purely religious institution it may have once been, just as it has moved beyond the pagan festival it was before the Christians hijacked it.
Like marriage, it was there before Christians and we won't be dictated to about how we treat these civil institutions.
O.
O.
Abject nonsense. Christmas is a Christian Festival now, and you hypocrites are simply clutching at straws to try and justify indulging in things Christmassy. Have the courage of your "convictions!"
In which case Easter is a pagan festival and you are a hypocrite for celebrating it in any other manner than a pagan one.
More to the point, what day is it? Surely not Monday, named by pagans after the moon? Surely, BA, you've good, decent Christian names of the days of the week? You wouldn't be so hypocritical as to casually adopt the pagan names for days of the week when you're such an upstanding Christian, would you?
O.
"Borrowing" names is not hypocritical - fool.
When you do it, or when it's days of the week that's fine. When I do it, or when it's Christmas it isn't?
Am I a hypocrite for not following the Christian parts of Christian but following the social ones because I'm not a Christian but I am social?
Are you a hypocrite for complaining about people 'misusing' your religion's terminology, but being perfectly happy to co-opt other people's religions' terminology?
If only we could still run a poll...
O.