Peter Friedman
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Ruling Imagination: Law and Creativity

December 24th, 2008 | legal history, problem solving, Uncategorized

MERRY Christmas!

It’s not my holiday, but it’s a holiday, and to everyone I wish a merry day. We need merriness as often as we can get it.

Incidentally, there is no “war on Christmas,” though it is true that the Puritans themselves banned the celebration of Christmas in Boston for 22 years. They frowned on merriness:

The Puritans who immigrated to Massachusetts to build a new life had several reason for disliking Christmas. First of all, it reminded them of the Church of England and the old-world customs, which they were trying to escape. Second, they didn’t consider the holiday a truly religious day. December 25th wasn’t selected as the birth date of Christ until several centuries after his death. Third, the holiday celebration usually included drinking, feasting, and playing games – all things which the Puritans frowned upon. One such tradition, “wassailing” occasionally turned violent. The older custom entailed people of a lower economic class visiting wealthier community members and begging, or demanding, food and drink in return for toasts to their hosts’ health. If a host refused, there was the threat of retribution. Although rare, there were cases of wassailing in early New England. Fourth, the British had been applying pressure on the Puritans for a while to conform to English customs. The ban was probably as much a political choice as it was a religious one for many.

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