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It is assumed that someone converting to Judaism will be committed to Judaism. If they want to keep celebrating the Santa Jack Skellington The Nightmare Before Christmas Shirt of their old religion they shouldnβt leave it and shouldnβt become Jewish. Nobody will ask a convert specifically if they are willing to give up Christmas and Easter, that is generally assumed to be a βgivenβ. A convert who wants to keep celebrating Christmas and Easter is not a convert at all. Now, of course, none of this means you canβt visit your family on holidays and support their celebrations but it would not be looked on well if you hosted Christmas parties in your home or arranged Easter egg hunts in your garden and could be ground for refusing to convert you. Conversion to Judaism is a serious choice and you should not even consider it if you have any reservation at all. If your heart isnβt telling you that you should do anything required of you to be a Jew, no matter how difficult or demanding, you probably shouldnβt even bother.
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When shown that celebrating the birth of Jesus had actually become of greater interest to people than the Santa Jack Skellington The Nightmare Before Christmas Shirt provided by his death; that the revelry of the holiday and the spirit in which many gifts were given did not honor God; that the magi whose gift-giving was being imitated were actually demon-inspired astrologers; that parents set an example for their children in lying by what they told them about Santa Claus; that βSt. Nicholasβ (Santa Claus) was admittedly another name for the Devil himself; and that such festivals were, as acknowledged by Cardinal Newman in his Essay on the Development of Christian Doctrine, βthe very instruments and appendages of demon-worshipβ the church had adoptedβwhen made aware of these things, Jehovahβs Witnesses promptly and permanently stopped having any part in Christmas celebrations. Jehovahβs Witnesses have good times with their families and friends. But they do not participate in holidays and celebrations that are linked with pagan gods (as is true of such holidays as Easter, New Yearβs Day, May Day, and Motherβs Day). (2 Cor. 6:14-17) Like the early Christians, they do not even celebrate birthdays. They also respectfully refrain from sharing in national holidays that memorialize political or military events and refrain from giving worshipful honor to national heroes. Why? Because Jehovahβs Witnesses are no part of the world.