TBH without it appearing on here, i'd have missed it totally.
Thing is, no one is stopping Christians from giving up food and alcohol and looking miserable, if that's what it means to them. No one forces them to drink beer or cider.
But they can't expect everyone else to be prepared to accept it with the same gravity.
Good Friday, the whole weekend, is now just a longer break from work for some people. For them Good Friday is Good because it's the first day of that break. So chances are those that feel TGIF ( thank God it's Friday) just go and buy some cans in to celebrate the free time.
Therefore Tesco's advert for those people is spot on.
It's them it's aimed at, not your miserable looking Christians who want to control others. No one is stopping them doing what they do to mark easter in their own way.
I'm afraid my view is that Christians need to stop expecting the rest of the world to conform to their religious beliefs.
Easter can also be a celebration of the return of light evenings, flowers, green returning to the trees and warmth. This can also involve drinking beer and cider if someone so wishes.
Perhaps some Christians need to respect what it means to others, with its eggs and bunnies and chicks and a time for a short holiday from work.
No one has to see public holidays in a religious setting, in some ways it might be better to have Easter 🐣 as a fixed public holiday separate from the Christian one which moves each year. Why not just have the public holiday in April every year while the Christian one can move as it usually does?
Then perhaps everyone will be happy.
But then some Christians will be offended because it won't involve us all learning about their religion.
I would like to see the public holiday fixed to a set time and separate from the religious one, you get a better chance of nice weather in April.
Eggs, bunnies, chicks don't have much to do with Christianity either.
We could just leave Christianity to do it's own thing.
Whatever that is.