Selective Silence
If you’ve spent any significant time in the pews of a traditional Church of Christ (COC), you know the rhythm of the calendar. Every December and every April, like clockwork, a familiar and predictable cadence echoes from the pulpit. It’s the season of the “anti-holiday” sermon. These sermons are built upon a specific, rigid interpretive framework historically championed by the COC: CENI (Command, Example, Necessary Inference) and a strict view of the Regulative Principle of Worship. The overarching motto of this hermeneutic is famous: “Speak where the Bible speaks, be silent where the Bible is silent.” In theory, this sounds like a noble pursuit of biblical purity. However, a glaring problem emerges when we see how this standard is applied in practice. This strict framework is aggressively applied to condemn the celebration of Easter and Christmas. Yet it’s completely abandoned when it comes to actual, explicit biblical commands that are culturally inconvenient for the modern church. While many COC preachers vehemently condemn the religious observance of Christmas and Easter based on the “silence” of scripture, their simultaneous dismissal of explicit commands (such as women’s headcoverings) alongside their ignorance of historical context exposes a deep hermeneutical hypocrisy and an inconsistent application of their own rules. The “Unspeakable” Holidays The traditional arguments against Christmas and Easter are well-worn. Preachers will argue that no specific day is authorized in scripture for celebrating Christ’s birth. They’ll insist that the Lord’s Supper, observed every Sunday, is the only authorized memorial of His death and resurrection. Therefore, observing a yearly religious holiday like Easter or Christmas is deemed a “sin,” a “tradition of men,” or “adding to the scripture.” This argument rests entirely on a demand for proof. “Give me book, chapter, and verse,” the preacher challenges. The logic dictates that if there’s no explicit command authorizing a practice, the practice is inherently forbidden by God’s silence. Yet, in their zeal to police the calendar, these same preachers routinely shirk the plain reading of the Apostle Paul’s instructions on Christian liberty regarding days. In Romans 14:5, Paul writes: “One person esteems one day above another; another esteems every day alike. Let each be fully convinced in his own mind.” There’s a staggering irony here. COC preachers will frequently (and often quite harshly) accuse other denominations of “ignoring the plain reading of the text” regarding topics like baptism or instrumental music. Yet, when faced with the plain, literal reading of Romans 14, which explicitly grants individual believers the liberty to observe special days to the Lord, they suddenly find ways to creatively explain it away or ignore it entirely. The Irony of Ignorance Compounding this scriptural blind spot is a frequent, glaring lack of historical education. Condemning these holidays often reveals just how uninformed many of these preachers are regarding the actual history of the Christian calendar. Instead of engaging with legitimate church history, pulpits are often used to attack straw men, repeating debunked internet myths about the pagan origins of these days, such as falsely linking Easter to the goddess Ishtar or Christmas to Nimrod. The core issue isn’t simply that they misjudge modern believers’ “intent” in celebrating. The issue is a fundamental lack of understanding of the historical reasons for the dates of these holidays and the actual reasons they’re celebrated. Many are entirely unaware of complex ancient historical realities, such as the early church’s nuanced methods for calculating the date of Pascha (Easter) alongside the Jewish Passover, or the early theological and historical reasoning early Christians utilized to date the incarnation and birth of Christ. Because they don’t know the actual historical facts behind the calendar, they substitute real church history with empty rhetoric and uncharitable assumptions. It’s perfectly acceptable for a preacher not to know everything about historical theology, the ancient Christian calendar, or Byzantine dating calculations. However, as the old adage goes: “It is better to remain silent and be thought a fool than to speak and to remove all doubt.” If one is factually uninformed about the actual origins and historical reasoning behind these holidays, they should refrain from commenting on them from the pulpit rather than aggressively condemning what they don’t understand. 1 Corinthians 11 and Headcoverings The hypocrisy of the anti-holiday sermon comes into sharpest relief when contrasted with the deafening silence regarding explicit commands that the modern church simply ignores. Consider the Apostle Paul’s instructions regarding women’s headcoverings. Contrary to what some would have you believe, this isn’t some obscure reference to a strange cultural practice; it’s a sustained...
Download
0 formatsNo download links available.