Wednesday, 26 November 2025

Is It OK for Christians to Celebrate Christmas?

As we come towards the end of each year, most Christians start making preparations to celebrate Christmas. The vast majority of believers just celebrate this festival without thinking twice about it.

There are, however, some Christians who refuse to celebrate Christmas. They claim that doing this is against the will of God, and they give a number of arguments to try to make their case.

I am someone who sides with the majority in believing that there is nothing wrong with celebrating Christmas. In what follows, I will give some objections that are sometimes made to doing this, along with my responses.

When I have done that, I will then say a few words about some problems that are often connected with how Christmas is celebrated.

Objection:

The word ‘Christmas’ derives from the words ‘Christ’ and ‘mass’. ‘Mass’ here refers to the Roman Catholic rite that wrongly claims that the bread and wine eaten at the Lord’s Supper literally become the body and blood of Christ. So in times gone by ‘Christmas’ referred to an occasion when the problematic Catholic rite of mass was performed.

The bad origins of what this word referred to show that it is wrong for Christians to celebrate Christmas today.

Response:

It is true that the word ‘Christmas’ used to mean this. And it is also true that there are serious problems with the Roman Catholic rite of mass.

Importantly, however, the meanings of words often evolve away from their root meanings. What is important is what words mean today, not what they used to mean.

There are actually some striking biblical examples of where words that once referred to something evil are used to refer to something else.

For example, in Revelation 20:13 John uses the Greek word ‘hades’ to refer to the realm of the dead. However, at an earlier time (and actually also sometimes still in the first century AD) this Greek word was used to refer to Hades, the pagan god of the underworld, i.e., a false god of a false religion.

Clearly, John had no problem with using this word, despite its history. At the time when John wrote Revelation, this word could be used to refer to the realm of the dead, and that was good enough for him. And it was obviously also good enough for the Holy Spirit who inspired his words.

In the same way, the fact that the word ‘Christmas’ used to refer to mass is irrelevant. Today, when people refer to ‘Christmas’, they are not using this word to refer to mass, and that is what counts.

Objection:

In ancient times the pagan festival of Saturnalia, which involved worship of the false god Saturn, was celebrated on 25 December. Then Christians, influenced by Saturnalia, started celebrating Christmas on that date.

There is therefore a connection between Christmas and the demonically inspired Saturnalia. So Christians should steer clear of Christmas.

Response:

First, although Saturnalia was celebrated in mid-late December, it seems mostly not to have been celebrated specifically on 25 December.

Second, it is actually debated whether Christians started celebrating Christmas on 25 December because they were influenced by the timing of Saturnalia.

Third, even if Christians were influenced by the timing of Saturnalia, the choice of date for celebrating Christmas could have been intended to rival Saturnalia rather than because Christians were compromising on their values.

Fourth, even if some Christians did compromise on their values at that time, it is what people understand Christmas to mean today that counts. And today Christmas has nothing whatsoever to do with Saturnalia.

Objection:

The Bible knows nothing of celebrating Christmas. In the absence of any biblical instruction to do this, it is a mistake.

Response:

First, Christians who celebrate Christmas are, above all else, celebrating the coming of Jesus to earth, and the Bible obviously does celebrate this.

Second, as far as celebrating Jesus’ coming to earth on a certain day of the year is concerned, this objection, to a certain extent, misunderstands the nature of the Bible.

The Bible was never designed to give us a complete list of things to avoid or not avoid. Life is too complex with too many variations. If Scripture had been intended to do this, it would need to be many, many times longer than it is, and it would be unusable.

As far as Christian living is concerned, the Bible gives us principles that we need to build into a healthy, God-honouring way to live our lives. So the fact that Scripture gives no specific instruction to take a day of the year to celebrate the birth of Jesus Christ is beside the point.

Third, a verse that is relevant for this topic is Romans 14:5, where Paul writes:

One person esteems one day as better than another, while another esteems all days alike. Each one should be fully convinced in his own mind.’ (ESV)

It is true that here Paul is referring first and foremost to days of the seven-day week. But we can certainly expand what he says to include days that occur just once a year. And Paul clearly thinks that whether or not to treat a day as special is down to an individual Christian’s conscience.

Objection:

The practice of bringing trees inside the home stems from pagan customs that celebrated evergreen trees in some superstitious way.

Therefore, Christians should keep away from this aspect of Christmas, because of its pagan roots.

Response:

Again, it is what things symbolise today that counts, and today Christmas trees are typically just ornamental with no deeper meaning.

Problems connected with how Christmas is often celebrated

None of the arguments that I have listed leads us to think that it is wrong for Christians to celebrate Christmas.

That said, there are certainly some highly relevant moral issues to do with the way that Christmas is celebrated in Western countries.

For a start, the way that Christmas is commercialised is nothing short of horrendous. Many people, in effect, use remembering Jesus’ coming to earth in self-sacrifice as a means of making as much money for themselves as they can. There is a real irony in this.

One thing I personally hate is when anything to do with Christmas appears in the shops before December. Sadly, however, this often happens several months before December. And the motive is all about making money. It really is bad.

Christmas is also used by many as an excuse for immoral behaviour. Workplace Christmas parties, for example, often lead to drunkenness and sexual immorality. And at Christmas time many people allow their greed for food to go unchecked. There is no doubt that these are things that deeply grieve the Lord.

Another thing I think is problematic is the whole idea of Santa. It doesn’t seem right for parents to lie to their children to make them think that some supernatural figure has travelled through the air to give them presents.

It is absolutely right that parents should want their kids to have a great time at Christmas. But there are many ways to do this that don’t involve creating a deceptive story in which a character behaves supernaturally without any reference to God.

Doing it right

Celebrating Christmas is all well and good. It’s not compulsory for Christians to do this, but it’s not wrong either.

But for those of us who do celebrate it, we need to remember that it is mainly about how God humbled Himself to become Man for our sake.

It isn’t wrong to meet up with family and friends, give and receive presents, eat plenty of good food, take some time to rest, etc., etc. But at its heart, Christmas is a story of the ultimate gift of Jesus Christ Himself.

 

See also:

Christians Need to Put Everything to the Test

The Bible, God’s Voice and Useful Information

Should Christians Treat One Day of the Week as a Special Day?

Nothing Is Sinful Because It Is Pleasurable

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