By Charles Colson
LifeLine News Commentary from BreakPoint
While shopping for Christmas gifts this year, I visited a
Christian bookstore to buy a gift for my grandson. Being an
inveterate bookstore browser, I couldn't leave without looking at
everything. What I found in church supplies shocked me.
The church bulletins many of us see each Sunday morning are
purchased with the printed cover and run through a copier with the
order of worship. Among the bulletin shells for Advent, Christmas,
and other days, I found one for Kwanzaa. I was stunned.
Then a few days after Christmas I came across a newspaper article
entitled, "Many churches wrap Kwanzaa into their Christmas
services." The article quoted several pastors who favored
including Kwanzaa celebrations in their holiday worship. This
further jarred me.
Kwanzaa is a seven-day holiday that runs from December 26 to
January 1. It has no roots in antiquity, but is the invention of Dr.
Maulana Karenga, who heads the Department of Black Studies at
California State University, Long Beach. Dr. Karenga created Kwanzaa
in 1966, mixing elements of African harvest festivals with sixties
radicalism and the civil rights movement. The seven principles of
Kwanzaa set forth by Karenga include unity, self- determination,
cooperative economics, and faith. And faith, by the way, is defined
as, "To believe with all our heart in our people, our parents,
our teachers, our leaders, and the righteousness and victory of our
struggle."
Dr. Karenga's official Kwanzaa website states that while
celebrating Kwanzaa includes "special reverence for the
creator," and is "spiritual," ". . . it is
important to note Kwanzaa is a cultural holiday, not a religious
one."
The site goes on to say that "you should not mix Kwanzaa
holiday or its symbols, values, and practices with any other
culture." That's in part because Kwanzaa was established as an
alternative to Christmas which was viewed as a western holiday.
Christian worship would seem to violate the intent of Kwanzaa's
promoters. But if public schools and civic ceremonies are any
indication, Kwanzaa is gaining equal standing as a third holiday
alongside Christmas and Hanukah. And most folks have no idea it is
not an ancient African ritual, but rather the invention of a sixties
activist.
When I contacted some of my African-American friends, I was
encouraged. One inner-city pastor said that Kwanzaa had all the
trappings of a manufactured holiday and that most people he knew --
Christian and non-Christian -- had no interest. Another friend said
that it was an issue in a few churches in his area, but that pastors
were dealing with it by making a clear distinction between a
celebration of ethnic and cultural heritage and the celebration of
the birth of Christ. Good -- these pastors are right.
But Christians need to be on guard. As the bulletin shells in the
bookstore indicate, politically correct Kwanzaa is working its way
into worship.
And the church is always vulnerable to syncretism. Santa kneeling
at the manger, church Easter egg hunts, inviting an Iman to speak
from the pulpit, and dozens of other examples show how easily we mix
cultural rituals with our Christian faith. Let us be reminded
worship is not for a cultural celebration, but for the celebration
of the one eternal God who created and rules all cultures.
Charles Colson is chairman of Prison
Fellowship Ministries. His daily commentary can be heard on
radio stations throughout the United States, and at the Breakpoint
web site.
From BreakPoint. Copyright 2001, Prison
Fellowship Ministries. Reprinted with the permission of Prison
Fellowship Ministries, PO Box 17500, Washington, DC 200041-0500. All
rights reserved. May not be reproduced or distributed without the
express written permission of Prison Fellowship Ministries.
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