For those of us who feel that "holiday spirit"
at Xmastime has more to do with being human than
it does with the birthday of Jesus X.

http://edition.cnn.com/2008/US/11/12/godless.holiday.ap/index.html

Group's new Christmas message: Be good, not godly

WASHINGTON (AP) -- You better watch out. There is a new combatant in
the Christmas wars.

Ads proclaiming, "Why believe in a god? Just be good for goodness'
sake," will appear on Washington buses starting next week and running
through December.

The American Humanist Association unveiled the provocative $40,000
holiday ad campaign Tuesday.

In lifting lyrics from "Santa Claus is Coming to Town," the
Washington-based group is wading into what has become a perennial
debate over commercialism, religion in the public square and the
meaning of Christmas.

"We are trying to reach our audience, and sometimes in order to reach
an audience, everybody has to hear you," said Fred Edwords, spokesman
for the humanist group.

"Our reason for doing it during the holidays is there are an awful lot
of agnostics, atheists and other types of nontheists who feel a little
alone during the holidays because of its association with traditional
religion."

To that end, the ads and posters will include a link to a Web site
that will seek to connect and organize like-minded thinkers in the
D.C. area, Edwords said.

Edwords said the purpose isn't to argue that God doesn't exist or
change minds about a deity, although "we are trying to plant a seed of
rational thought and critical thinking and questioning in people's minds."

The group defines humanism as "a progressive philosophy of life that,
without theism, affirms our responsibility to lead ethical lives of
value to self and humanity."

Last month, the British Humanist Association caused a ruckus
announcing a similar campaign on London buses with the message:
"There's probably no God. Now stop worrying and enjoy your life."

In Washington, the humanists' campaign comes as conservative Christian
groups gear up their efforts to keep Christ in Christmas. In the past
five years, groups such as the American Family Association and the
Catholic League have criticized or threatened boycotts of retailers
who use generic "holiday" greetings.

In mid-October, the American Family Association started selling
buttons that say "It's OK to say Merry Christmas." The humanists'
entry into the marketplace of ideas did not impress AFA president Tim
Wildmon.

"It's a stupid ad," he said. "How do we define 'good' if we don't
believe in God? God in his word, the Bible, tells us what's good and
bad and right and wrong. If we are each ourselves defining what's
good, it's going to be a crazy world."

Also on Tuesday, the Liberty Counsel, a conservative Christian legal
group based in Orlando, Florida, launched its sixth annual "Friend or
Foe Christmas Campaign." Liberty Counsel has intervened in disputes
over nativity scenes and government bans on Christmas decorations,
among other things.

"It's the ultimate grinch to say there is no God at a time when
millions of people around the world celebrate the birth of Christ,"
said Mathew Staver, the group's chairman and dean of the Liberty
University School of Law. "Certainly, they have the right to believe
what they want, but this is insulting."

Best-selling books by authors such as Richard Dawkins and Christopher
Hitchens have fueled interest in "the new atheism" -- a more
in-your-face argument against God's existence.

Yet few Americans describe themselves as atheist or agnostic; a Pew
Forum on Religion and Public Life poll from earlier this year found 92
percent of Americans believe in God.

There was no debate at the Washington Metropolitan Area Transit
Authority over whether to take the ad. Spokeswoman Lisa Farbstein said
the agency accepts ads that aren't obscene or pornographic.



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