Is Christmas Pagan or Christian?

by whyhideit 16 Replies latest jw friends

  • Nickey
    Nickey

    jgnat,

    Really? I had no clue they were doing that. My family and I have been away for nearly 2 years. A special meeting on Christmas... now that's somethin' new to me.

  • gumby
    gumby

    kenesson,

    Gumby,

    I see you're from Christmas Island

    What made you think I was from there? I don't know anything about the place, but it would be intresting to know how it got it's name.

  • Xander
    Xander

    For a really, REALLY amazing read, check out snopes (as usual):

    http://www.snopes.com/weddings/customs

    Wedding customs.

    Quite a lot of interesting information. Some similar to what's posted above, some conflicting (but I think the snopes version is more correct - it parallels information I've read elsewhere), but always an interesting read.

  • jgnat
    jgnat

    I can't resist a good mystery.

    Captain William Mynors of the East India Ship Company vessel, the Royal Mary, named the island when he arrived on Christmas Day, 25th December, 1643.

    Link to Christmas Island

  • freedom96
    freedom96

    My understanding is that the Christians took a day that the pagans celebrated and had their own holiday, not to join in because they felt they were being left out, but to say to the pagans, In your face. We will celebrate the birth of Christ that day.

  • Xander
    Xander

    http://www.snopes.com/holidays/christmas/jesus.asp

    Origins: The

    biblical narrative of Jesus' birth gives no date for the event, though it more likely occurred in spring than in winter. Saint Luke tells us that shepherds were "abiding in the field, keeping watch over their flocks by night" -- shepherds guarded their flocks day and night only at lambing time, in the spring; in winter, the animals were kept in corrals, unwatched. Happy birthday to me . . .

    It is important to note that for two centuries after Christ's birth, no one knew, and few people cared, exactly when he was born. Birthdays were unimportant; death days counted. Besides, Christ was divine and his natural birth was deliberately played down. In fact, the Church even announced at one point that it was sinful to contemplate observing Christ's birthday "as though He were a King Pharoah."

    The idea of celebrating the Nativity on December 25 was first suggested early in the fourth century CE, a clever move on the part of Church fathers who wished to eclipse the December 25 festivities of a rival pagan religion, Mithraism, which threatened the existence of Christianity.

    On December 25 (the date of the winter solstice) pagan Romans, still in the majority, celebrated Natalis Solis Invincti, "Birthday of the Invincible Sun God," Mithras. The Mithras cult originated in Persia and rooted itself in the Roman world in the first century BCE, but by the early 300s CE the rising religion of Christianity was posing a formidable challenge to the sun worshipers, especially after the Edict of Milan issued by the Roman emperor Constantine I in 313 CE allowed Christians to practice their faith in the Roman Empire.

    In those tenuous early days of Christianity, however, Church fathers debated strategies for supplanting the Mithras cult with their own religion. Since it was well known that Roman patricians and plebians alike enjoyed festivals of a protracted nature, Christians recognized that they needed an alternative to the December celebration of Natalis Solis Invincti. They needed a celebration in which all participants -- Mithraists, Christians, and those inbetween -- could take part with pride. Accordingly, the Church officially recognized Christ's birth, and to offer head-on competition to the sun worshipers' popular feast, the Church located the Nativity on December 25. The mode of observance would be characteristically prayerful: a Mass. In fact, Christs's Mass. As one theologian wrote around 320 CE:

    We hold this day holy, not like the pagans because of the birth of the sun, but because of him who made it.

    Although centuries later, social scientists would write of the psychological power of group celebrations -- the unification of ranks, the solidification of collective identity, the reinforcement of common objectives -- the principle had long been intuitively obvious. Christianity took permanent hold in the Western world in 337 CE when Constantine I was baptized on his deathbed, uniting for the first time the Crown and the Church.

  • Xander
    Xander

    It is, of course, worth noting that in setting up a celebration in direct contest with the pagan holiday, they certainly did not HAVE to add all the trappings that had been associated with said holiday. Indeed, the church never did (officially, anyway).

    What happened was, as the celebration spread to the outer reaches of 'civilization', people, either through laziness or confusion, started combining elements of both pagan and christian traditions together (perhaps it started simply enough as people wanted to celebrate both the 'old' holiday on that date and the 'new,' christian, one).

    The end result, of course, is the christmas we have today - just as much pagan trapping as christian (and, of course, it's worth nothing that what christian details there ARE in the holiday were arbitrarily assigned to Dec 25th strictly to contest with a pagan holiday.)

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