Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
When Black Friday rolls around: A pastor’s perspective
When Black Friday rolls around: A pastor’s perspective
Dec 7, 2025 11:58 PM

There are several of verses that put me in a critical mood when es to Black Friday and, to a lesser extent, Cyber Monday: Exodus 20:17, Luke 12:15, Psalm 37:21, and Proverbs 22:7, to name a few.

In the United States, these are days devoted to shopping for holiday presents—especially Christmas. Black Friday in particular is filled with unusual consumerist antics: waking up incredibly early to wait in line at the opening of stores to secure better prices and deals, folks getting trampled in the Christmas shopper rush, and so forth.

The temptations toward greed and covetousness are clear. What’s a pastor to make of this, particularly since both are expressly forbidden by the Decalogue and our Lord Himself? One priest quipped on social media that his posture toward Black Friday is akin to a Fundamentalist Baptist’s on Halloween, and I can see why. But if we are to object, let us do so intelligently, and with principles that guide us into practical wisdom.

While there are many good ways to go about this, and much great advice to share from the mind of the Church, I came up with three principles that help me survive the Christmas shopping craze and resist the pressures of consumerism.

1. Be a good steward.

One big step is to have a budget and keep to it. Include Christmas gifts and various holiday obligations (such as travel, hospitality, and charity) as an item in your year-long household budget. Regardless of how you set apart funds, stay within your means. If you have to choose between more or better gifts and covering the necessities for your family, choose the latter. This can be hard for those with generous spirits, who find joy in seeing their loved ones’ eyes light up when receiving a great present, but it’s not worth going into the red for. That would be irresponsible stewardship.

2. Attend to the liturgy.

When we use the “l” word, we’re often talking about how the Church orders her public worship. But, as James K. A. Smithand others have pointed out, there are many liturgies within our culture. One of the big liturgical events for consumerist America is Black Friday—it’s sort of a high feast day, where much is made around the participation and reception of a sacrament (in this case, buying and selling goods). What we Christians do publicly matters; what we participate in is of spiritual significance.

Does this mean we can’t buy presents for our loved ones or prepare for good feasting? Obviously not. But we need to be careful how we go about that—what our deeds and attitudes“say” to a watching world.

Don’t let consumerist culture dictate how you “redeem the time.” If you do anything, do it all the way, and that includes the church calendar. If you’re going to celebrate Christmas, it means you’re going to celebrate Advent, which takes place during most of the consumerist-Christmas glut: the office holiday parties, the peppermint-flavored everything, and even family reunions with their rich fare. But Advent is a penitential season (the giveaway is its liturgical color of purple). It’s a time of self-examination, repentance, charity, and fasting. Yes, fasting. Like Lent, Advent interrupts our diet. Each congregation might have its own policies for that. I am typically opposed to individualist “choose your own adventure” fasts since it tempts folks to talk about them, which is exactly what you’re not supposed to do (Matt. 6:16-18). Congregation-wide policies mitigate against boasting and showmanship.

This means “clashing calendars”—a cultural consumerist liturgy that conflicts with the Church’s. I challenge you to be different, going against the socio-cultural grain on this one. It is possible to be socially engaged, economically generous, and quietly faithful to your Advent disciplines. But not everything mainstream in December is against you. A big emphasis for penitential seasons is charity, particularly to the poor. munities and organizations ramp up charitable efforts during the Advent season. Invest your time, treasure, and talents in such endeavors. It is meet and right so to do.

On the flip side, Christmas is a 12-day season that only begins on the 25th. There are big feast memorating St. Stephen the Deacon, St. John the Evangelist, the Holy Innocents(martyred by Herod), and the Circumcision of Christ. And who could forget the Twelfth Night? I can attest that that’s a lot of celebration. Keep your festal powder dry!

3. Fulfill your Christian duties.

If you can get up in the dark before dawn for a sale, you can attend a vigil or candlelight service on Christmas Eve, as well as divine services on Christmas Day. Get the family involved—your household and your Church family. It helps to be vigilant and prepared like Simeon and Anna were in the Bible, but es whether we’re ready or not, just as es whether we’re ready or not. All the prep work and planning pales parison to the gift of salvation wrought by the God made flesh. It’s truly wonderful. Rejoice!

Image: pxhere, CC0 Public Domain

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Fossil Fuels: The Best Hope for the World’s Poor
Writing for The Federalist blog last week, American Energy Alliance Vice President of Strategic Initiatives Dan Ziegler remarked: The environment isn’t getting worse—it’s rapidly improving, even as our economy grows and our energy use increases. The EPA recently released new data on air quality showing that total emissions of the six major air pollutants have dropped by 68 percent since 1970. This is all the more impressive considering that during this same period, America’s population has grown by 54 percent,...
The Surrogacy Industry And Human Trafficking
Supporters of surrogacy tend to believe it is a win-win situation. Someone who desperately wants a child is given the opportunity to be a parent by someone who can have a baby, and is willing to do so either for money or out of benevolence (such as a sister acting as a surrogate for a sibling.) The truth is that the majority of surrogacy cases are ones where money changes hands. And when money changes hands, and the very lives...
Argentina’s Dysfunctionality
President Cristina Kirchner and Oliver Stone (Wikimedia Commons/Presidencia de la Nación Argentina) Earlier this month, Acton and Instituto Acton Argentina hosted a daylong conference exploring the relationship between religious and economic freedom. Scholars from around the world, including Acton’s director of research Samuel Gregg, traveled to Buenos Aires, Argentina to discuss the ways in which Christianity has contributed to building the foundations of freedom. In a new article for the American Spectator, Gregg discusses some issues he observed while visiting...
Radio Free Acton: Burt & Anita Folsom on Uncle Sam’s Subsidy Problem
On this week’s edition of Radio Free Acton,Burt and Anita Folsom discuss their latest book, Uncle Sam Can’t Count.Weexamine whether the government has a good track record in subsidizing industry and innovation, and look at some of the unforeseen consequences of subsidies in society. You can listen via the audio player below, and then be sure to check out the video of Burt’s Acton Lecture Series address as well. ...
ISIS And Human Traffickers: Prey On The Vulnerable, Recruit With Lies
In the wild, a lion does not chase down the strong animal at the front of the pack; the lion chooses its prey by doing the least amount of work. The lion picks off the weak, the young, the vulnerable. ISIS and human traffickers are animals, and they choose their prey accordingly. They seek out the vulnerable, the lonely, the searching. The internet is a fine hunting ground. There have been several stories of late of teen girls being lured...
Women Of Liberty: Mercy Otis Warren
It is not often that women of the American Revolutionary War era are described as “formidable” and “intellectual,” but Mercy Otis Warren is such a woman. Born to wealthy Cape Cod family in 1728, Warren received no formal education but was tutored by her uncle. In 1754, she married James Warren, who became a Massachusetts state senator. It was the murder of her brother at the hands of colonial revenue officers that drove Warren to political writings and action. Combining...
Our American Children And Poverty
Robert Putnam says our children are in a state of crisis. Those who live in poverty or near-poverty seemed to be doomed to stay there. Those born into families with money will likely go on to enjoy the lives that money affords. His book, Our Kids: The American Dream in Crisis, follows a number of individuals, tracking a list of factors, including the ability to move up or down the economic spectrum. One pivotal factor is marriage: Highly correlated is...
What Does Human Dignity Look Like?
It monplace in Christian circles, whether Orthodox, Roman Catholic, or Protestant, to appeal in public discourse to the inviolable good of human dignity. Today at Ethika Politika, I seek to answer the question, “What does human dignity look like in real life?” It is fine to talk about it in the abstract, but what does it look like on the job or as a parent? I write, Real, flesh-and-blood human persons do not evoke our respect as naturally as an...
Can We End Extreme Poverty by 2030?
Can the world put an end to extreme poverty within the next 15 years? That’s the current goal of the World Bank, and its expected that the United Nations will adopt that same target later this year. In 1990, the UN’s Millennium Development Goals included a target of halving poverty by 2015. That goal was achieved five years early. In 1990, more than one-third (36 percent) of the world’s population lived in abject poverty; by 2010 the number had been...
The Pro-Easter vs. Anti-Easter Response to Levi Pettit
Former Oklahoma University student Levi Pettit and his friends did a terrible thing. The frustration and anger at the very racist chant about the lynching of African Americans by the Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity is understandable and justified. However, in light of Levi Pettit’s act of public repentance, our response reveals how we understand a key aspect of Easter. Those who painfully forgive Pettit demonstrate a central pillar of the Passion of Christ whereas those who refuse to forgive Pettit...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved