Most Protestant churches will meet in some fashion on Christmas, but an increasing number appear to be opting out. (Photo by Joanna Kulesza, The New York Times) |
Timothy Beal, a professor of
religious studies at Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland, told Graham, "Christmas morning and Sunday morning are
sort of in tension with each other. Most people who
are churchgoers think of Christmas morning not as a religious time but
as a family time: stockings and brunches and staying in your pajamas
until midday or later." Beal's wife, a Presbyterian pastor, plans a "more relaxed" Sunday service in a smaller sanctuary, perhaps because she expects fewer congregants to attend, and that seems to be the approach of many Protestant congregations; others are dropping Sunday school and other activities.
"The Catholic Church considers attendance at Sunday Mass nonnegotiable,
and the same goes for Christmas Day, no matter the inconvenience of the
calendar," Graham notes. "Among nondenominational evangelical pastors, who tend to be informal and pragmatic in their approach to church matters,
the numbers hosting Christmas Day services are significantly lower:
Only 61 percent say they will do so, according to Lifeway research survey."
Some pastors disagree with canceling Christmas Day services. Kevin DeYoung, the pastor of Christ Covenant Church in Matthews, N.C., told Graham, "If anything, with an extra-special day we ought to be more eager to worship, not less eager. It’s one more time to sing those Christmas songs before they go away for a while.”
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