Melora
Disney Dreaming
- Joined
- Jun 26, 2003
- Messages
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As many people know, and many many more do not Christmas was not originally on Dec 25th. There are several speculations as to why it was moved and from where, but most scholars do agree that it was not the actual day of his birth. Many place his birth in the spring months (pointing to the lambs often shown in the nativity, and that the bible speaks of shepherds tending the fields).
The reasons for the move? Well, at the time it was not a common occurance to celebrate birthdays within the religious community and it was associated with pagan rituals. In order for the religious factions (who desired to celebrate his birth) to be able to do so without being viewed pagans themselves, they chose December 25 which already hosted two other related festivals: natalis solis invicti (the Roman "birth of the unconquered sun"), and the birthday of Mithras, the Iranian "Sun of Righteousness" whose worship was popular with Roman soldiers. The winter solstice, another celebration of the sun, fell just a few days earlier. Seeing that pagans were already exalting deities with some parallels to the true deity, church leaders decided to commandeer the date and introduce a new festival.
Western Christians first celebrated Christmas on December 25 in 336, after Emperor Constantine had declared Christianity the empire's favored religion. Eastern churches, however, held on to January 6 as the date for Christ's birth and his baptism. Most easterners eventually adopted December 25, celebrating Christ's birth on the earlier date and his baptism on the latter, but the Armenian church celebrates his birth on January 6. Incidentally, the Western church does celebrate Epiphany on January 6, but as the arrival date of the Magi rather than as the date of Christ's baptism.
Another wrinkle was added in the sixteenth century when Pope Gregory devised a new calendar, which was unevenly adopted. The Eastern Orthodox and some Protestants retained the Julian calendar, which meant they celebrated Christmas 13 days later than their Gregorian counterparts. Mostbut not allof the Christian world now agrees on the Gregorian calendar and the December 25 date. (See where we get the 12 days of Christmas... Dec 25 - Jan 6?)
Anyway, thought some of you might enjoy or at least be surprised at the information.
The reasons for the move? Well, at the time it was not a common occurance to celebrate birthdays within the religious community and it was associated with pagan rituals. In order for the religious factions (who desired to celebrate his birth) to be able to do so without being viewed pagans themselves, they chose December 25 which already hosted two other related festivals: natalis solis invicti (the Roman "birth of the unconquered sun"), and the birthday of Mithras, the Iranian "Sun of Righteousness" whose worship was popular with Roman soldiers. The winter solstice, another celebration of the sun, fell just a few days earlier. Seeing that pagans were already exalting deities with some parallels to the true deity, church leaders decided to commandeer the date and introduce a new festival.
Western Christians first celebrated Christmas on December 25 in 336, after Emperor Constantine had declared Christianity the empire's favored religion. Eastern churches, however, held on to January 6 as the date for Christ's birth and his baptism. Most easterners eventually adopted December 25, celebrating Christ's birth on the earlier date and his baptism on the latter, but the Armenian church celebrates his birth on January 6. Incidentally, the Western church does celebrate Epiphany on January 6, but as the arrival date of the Magi rather than as the date of Christ's baptism.
Another wrinkle was added in the sixteenth century when Pope Gregory devised a new calendar, which was unevenly adopted. The Eastern Orthodox and some Protestants retained the Julian calendar, which meant they celebrated Christmas 13 days later than their Gregorian counterparts. Mostbut not allof the Christian world now agrees on the Gregorian calendar and the December 25 date. (See where we get the 12 days of Christmas... Dec 25 - Jan 6?)
Anyway, thought some of you might enjoy or at least be surprised at the information.
I mean really, the Bible is nothing but God's word, so why would he chose to not to mention for us to take a set apart day and celebrate his son's birthday??
If I'm wrong then I will humbly apologize, but I want someone to show me in the Bible, any version, where it say's Christ's birthday is on December 25th. I've been all through it and I don't see it. The Father is perfect and his word never comes back null and void. He sent his son to die for us on the cross, so why would he forget to mention his birth in December?? Does that make sense to anyone? I just wanted to throw that any there also.
