A Christmas card from the Ambassador of the Islamic Republic of Iran wishes us a Merry Christmas. There is nothing unusual about that. Countries with other religious traditions commonly recognise the Christian festival and share its greetings at no sacrifice to their own faith and traditions. It is only in
Editorial: Let's embrace this season of tolerance and goodwill
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Christmas is wonderfully a religious occasion, even for those who do not acknowledge it. Photo / Spike Mafford
The peace of Christmas Day seems sacred and secure.
With any luck it will be sunny. Residents of the Northern Hemisphere sometimes sympathise with those of us who have Christmas in summer. To them it is unimaginable without a chill in the air and the possibility of snow to bring the romantic Christmas images to life. But they do not know what they are missing.
A Christmas in New Zealand sunshine has a freshness and warmth of its own. Many decide it is too hot for the traditional midday roast but just as many retain that fine tradition. Lashings of turkey, sweet peas, new potatoes and the rest go down fine in midday sun, leaving a long languid afternoon to sit, talk, finish the wine and set up an evening barbecue for those whose appetite returns.
Feasting is the way people have always marked important days together. Feigning guilt is part of the fun. Christmas is a celebration of the innocent joy of living, the birth of a baby that marked the beginning of a strain of religious thought that would have a powerful influence on the character and history of Europe and the continents it colonised.
Christianity was not always a tolerant religion but it is today. It poses no threat to its resurgent monotheistic cousin, Islam, though leaders of both traditions have some work to do to remind their adherents of the fact. Christmas is the best expression of modern Christianity: open, undemanding, dedicated to peace, compassion, generosity and joy.
A large number of us, when baldly asked by the Census, declare we do not belong to it, and we do not practise it.
But when the year winds down and we feel the first heat of summer, when the bunting goes up, Santa appears and carols are in the air, we are glad of the religion's artefact. It impels everyone to acknowledge the goodness around them with the simple wish we offer our readers now: have a happy Christmas.