The leader of one of the largest evangelical Christian bodies in the UK has called on Christians and non-Christians to be tolerant of each other this Christmas season.
In his 2007 Christmas message, the Rev. Joel Edwards general director of the Evangelical Alliance addressed the question of how believers embrace and worship Christ while living in multi-faith communities.
Tolerance means people who are free not to worship should avoid making life difficult for those who do, he said. At the same time, he also called on Christians not to respond aggressively.
We must resist the urge to react to any belittling of our belief or our intellect with aggression, he said.
This years holiday season has again drawn out anti-Christian sentiment as believers feel an increasing aggression toward the celebration of Christmas.
Conservative MP Mark Pritchard held a debate earlier this month addressing the assault on Britains Christian heritage and traditions, including Christmas. He attributed the marginalization of Christian traditions to the politically-correct brigade, fundamentalists, atheists, and militant secularists.
Christians seem to encounter a Herodian attitude which takes offense at the Christmas story and demonstrates a passionate intolerance to faith, Edwards said.
But calling Christians to follow the way of Jesus, Edwards said, In his birth, which drew the poor and the rich, the frail and the strong, the Jew and the Gentile, we see the pattern for the rest of Jesus life, typified by a gracious and welcoming tolerance of diversity, but with a forthright and outspoken intolerance of narrow mindedness. He would walk with sinners, touch lepers and mingle with the poor.
Our acceptance and welcome of those who do not think or look like us is surely to our credit, he added. Even if we disagree with secular humanists we can at least acknowledge their starting point: a genuine passion of including those on the margins of power and influence.
Edwards also praised the tolerance evident in people of other faiths.
Although people of other faiths may not bow down and worship Jesus, in the UK they have never attempted to prevent Christians from doing so, he said.
In a tolerant Britain which truly embraces diversity, freedom means the liberty to worship Christ the King. Christmas was never meant to be an imposition: it is an invitation to worship.





Comments
Jesus said " I am knocking at the door" not kicking. The gospel of Jesus Christ has dynamic
power when shared in love and peace because the Holy Spirit is doing the job. When any
pressure is used to bring somebody to Christ, that is pure flesh. Jesus is calling everybody
so tenderly to come to Him. let the Christians do the same and we can change the world.
mikeymike885
Thank you. Very well stated.
That's the kind of agressiveness I'm talking about.
i have a voice and i wont stand by why Jesus Christ gets shoved into a box and put on a shelf at walmart and satan destroys our young people. we have a voice and we are to speak the truths of God with boldness, but in sincerity, not self righteously, thats the key.
"but we also need to learn when it is time to become aggressive."
Who do we learn from? Jesus? It seems whenever scripture records Jesus getting aggressive (verbally or turning over tables) it was directed at religious individuals or it happened inside the Church.
Maybe once the western Church gets aggressive with herself - when she demands accountability from leaders, tithes appropriately, gives to the poor more than to herself, etc. - we can get aggressive with the world. Let's remove the beam from our own eye first.
Although people of other faiths may not bow down and worship Jesus, in the UK they have never attempted to prevent Christians from doing so, he (Edwards) said.
That could change, since recent statistics showed that Muhammad was the second most popular boys name in Britain.
http://www.worldnetdaily.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=59289
So once the real reason for celebrating Christmas fades away in Christian humility, then the enemy will say that Christians didn't stand and fight for it.
I agree that we need to learn when to pick our arguments, but we also need to learn when it is time to become aggressive.