Jeremiah 10:2-5; II Cor. 6:17; I John
2:15-16
It is
generally believed by many that Christmas, according to the Bible officially
commemorates the birth of Jesus. Did the apostles, who knew Jesus personally
and were taught by him, celebrate His birthday on December 25? Did they
celebrate it at all? If Christmas is the chief of the Christian holidays, why
do so many non-Christians observe it?
The word
“Christmas” means “Mass of Christ,” or, as it came to be
shortened, “Christ-Mass.” It came to non-Christians and Protestants from the
Roman Catholic Church. And where did they get it? Not from the Bible or the
apostles of Jesus, but was adopted by the Roman Catholic Church in the fourth
century from paganism.
Since the
celebration of Christmas has come to the world from the Roman Church, and has
no authority but that of the Catholic church, let's examine the Catholic
Encyclopedia, 1911 edition, published by that church.“Christ-mass was not
among the earliest festivals of the Church… the first evidence of the feast is
from Egypt.” “Pagan customs centering around the January calends gravitated to
Christmas.” The Catholic Encyclopedia (vol. III p. 724) declares that
Irenaeus and Tertullian do not make mention of this festival and they lived
during the second century. It also states that by the time of Jerome and
Augustine, the fourth century, the christmas festival was already
established.
The
Encyclopedia Britannica, 1946 edition, “Christmas (i.e., the Mass of
Christ)… Christmas was not among the earliest festivals of the Church…”
The
Encyclopedia Americana, 1944 edition, “Christmas… it was, according to
many authorities, not celebrated in the first Centuries of the Christian
church, as the Christian usage in general was to celebrate the death of
remarkable persons rather than their birth. (The “communion,” which is
instituted by New Testament Bible authority, is a memorial of the death of
Christ.)… A feast was established in memory of this event (Christ’s birth) in
the fourth century. In the fifth century the Western Church ordered it to be
celebrated forever on the day of the old Roman feast of the birth of Sol, as no
certain knowledge of the day of Christ’s birth existed.”
These
recognized historical authorities show Christmas was not observed by Christians
for the first two or three hundred years. It got into the Western or Roman
Church by the fourth century A.D. It was not until the fifth century
that the Catholic Church ordered it to be celebrated as an official Christian
festival!
We do not
know the exact date as to when Christmas began to be celebrated on December 25th.
Before this date, the Church did not celebrate the birth of Christ. The
writings of the New Testament indicate that Jesus was not born in that time of
the year; the Historical data appear to indicate that He was born in the fall.
We do not know the exact date because the Word of God does not declare it,
neither does it make mention that the Primitive Apostolic Church celebrated the
birth of Christ.
Jesus was
not born in the winter season! When Jesus was born, the bible says there were
shepherds in the field, watching over their sheep (Luke 2:8). This
could have never occurred in Judea in the month of December. The shepherds
always brought their flocks from the mountainsides and fields and corralled
them no later than October 15th, to protect them from the cold,
rainy season that followed that date (Song of Solomon 2:11; Ezra 10:9,
13) winter time is a rainy and cold season it does not permit
shepherds to abide in open fields at nigh. (Adam Clarke Commentary, vol. 5
p.370: N.Y. ed.)
“It was
an ancient custom among Jews of those days to send out their sheep to the
fields and deserts about the Passover (early spring), and bring them home at
commencement of the first rain. During the time they were out, the shepherds
watched them night and day. As… the first rain began early in the month of
Marchesvan, which answers to part of our October and November (begins sometime
in October), we find that sheep were kept out in the open country during the
whole summer. And, as there shepherds had not yet brought home their flocks, it
is a presumptive argument that October had not yet commenced, and that,
consequently, our Lord was not born on the 25th of December,
when no flocks were out in the fields; nor could He have been born later than
September, as the flocks were still in the fields by night. On these very
grounds, the nativity in December should be given up. The feeding of the flocks
by night in the fields is a chronological fact… See the quotations from the
Talmudists in Lightfoot.”
The exact
date of Jesus’ birth is entirely unknown. If Jesus had wished us to observe and
celebrate His birthday, He would not have hidden completely the exact date.
The New
Schaff-Herzog Encyclopedia of Religious Knowledge explains it clearly, in its
article on Christmas:“How much the date of the festival depended upon the
pagan Brumalia (Dec. 25th) following the Saturnalia (Dec. 17th –
24th), and celebrating the shortest day of the year and the “new
sun”… cannot be accurately determined. The pagan Saturnalia and Brumalia were
too deeply entrenched in popular custom to be set aside by Christian influence…
The pagan festival with its riot and merrymaking was so popular that Christians
were glad of an excuse to continue its celebration with little change in
spiritual and in manner. Christian preachers of the West and the Near East
protested against the unseemly frivolity with which Christ’s birthday was
celebrated, while Christians of Mesopotamia accused their Western brethren of
idolatry and sun worship for adopting as Christian this pagan festival.”
The Roman
world had been pagan. Prior to the fourth century, Christians were few in
number, though increasing, and were persecuted by the government and by pagans.
But, with the advent of Constantine as emperor, who made his profession of
Christianity in the fourth century, placing Christianity on an equal footing
with paganism, people of the Roman world began to accept this now popular
Christianity.
These people
had grown up in pagan customs, chief of which was this idolatrous festival of
December 25th. It was a festival of merrymaking, with its special
spirit. They enjoyed it! They didn’t want to give it up! This is how
“Christmas” became fastened on our Western World! We may call it by another
name, but it’s the same old sun-worshipping festival still!
The
Encyclopedia Britannica: “Certain Latin’s, as early as 354, may have
transferred the birthday from January 6th to December 25th,
which was then a Mithraic feast… or birthday of the unconquered Sun… The
Syrians and Armenians, who clung to January 6th, accused the Romans
of sun worship and idolatry, contending… that the feast of December 25th had
been invented by disciples of Cerinthus…”
THE REAL
ORIGIN OF CHRISTMAS
If we got
Christmas from the Roman Catholics, and they got it from paganism, where did
the pagans get it? Where, when and what was its real origin? It is a chief
custom of the corrupt system denounced all through Bible prophecies and
teachings under the name of Babylon, and it started and originated in the
original Babylon of ancient Nimrod! It stems from roots whose beginning was
shortly this side of the Flood!
Nimrod,
grandson of Ham, son of Noah, was the real founder of the Babylonish system
that has gripped the world ever since. Nimrod built the tower of Babel, the
original Babylon, ancient Nineveh and many other cities. The name Nimrod, in
Hebrew, is derived from “Marad,” meaning “he rebelled.”
From many
ancient writings, much is learned of this man. Nimrod was an evil man; he
married his own mother, Semiramis. After Nimrod’s untimely death, his
mother-wife propagated the evil doctrine of the survival of Nimrod as a spirit
being. She claimed a full grown evergreen tree sprang overnight from a dead
tree stump, which symbolized the springing forth unto new life of the dead
Nimrod. On each anniversary of his birth, she claimed, Nimrod would visit the
evergreen tree and leave gifts under it. December 25th was the
birthday of Nimrod. This is the real origin of the Christmas tree.
Some
countries that celebrated festivals on the 25th of December
centuries before the birth of Christ were England, Syria and Babylon. The Roman
Empire (Christianized) adopted this day, the 25th of December
like a Christian festival in the year 354 A.D. by pope Liberius 357 years after
the birth of Christ. Until that year only the Roman pagans celebrated festivals
on that day.
For more
then 250 years after the birth of Christ the Romans worshiped many gods, the
main deity being Jupiter. His festival was celebrated in September. In the year
273 A.D. Jupiter was dethroned and another deity was put in his place, who was
the supreme god of Rome, it was the god of the sun,
Bel or Baal.
The Roman Emperor who was responsible for this change was Aurelia’s. He declared
the Babylonian Baal the supreme god of the Roman Empire under the name of the
Invictus sun “Invisible God”.
What was it
that caused the Emperor Aurelia’s to change gods? It was that during his life
he had become interested in the religions of Persia and Babylon and at the same
time there was many Romans that considered that Jupiter was out of style and
they didn’t serve him with much dedication and this is also what influence the
Emperor to look for a more attractive religion for the Roman populace. Another
thing that influenced in this was that through the years, many people had
migrated to the oriental countries and the majority of them worshiped the
deities, that represented the sun and also Romans that had returned form those
countries brought the doctrines of that religion that adored the sun with them.
Why did the
pagan Romans worship the sun on the 25th of December? According
to the Julian calendar it was accepted that the 25th day of
December was the birth of the sun, for it was when the sun began to expand and
it increased its power or force, it turned on its axis. It was a time for
festivals, great idolatry joy, and ended in a general drunkenness with sensual
pleasures. During that time the Persians also introduced the Roman soldiers to their
system of worshiping the sun. Their Festival was in honor of Mitra the god of
the sun. The participants would enter some special chapels and at midnight they
would come out shouting in high voice “The virgin has conceived!” “The light is
shining!”
The
Egyptians represented the birth of the sun with the image of a child and on the
25th of December they would present the image of the child to
the people. It was believed that the virgin that conceived that child (the sun)
on that day was the oriental goddess whom the Semites called the celestial
virgin or the celestial goddess. (Golden Rough page 358 abr.) Notice that the
pagans observed a festival on December 25th many years before
Jesus was born. They also worshiped a “mother and child.” The deferent’s was
that for them the mother was the queen of the heaven and the child was the god
of the reincarnated sun.
Why was this
day chosen (Dec. 25) by the Christians to celebrate the birth of Christ? About
half a century after the worship of the sun god Baal was introduced to the
Romans, Constantine was converted. The church encouraged him to discard all the
pagan festivals and the one on December 25th was one of them,
but there were no results, because the pagans didn’t want to leave their
festivals. Consulting with the Emperor the leaders of the church influenced the
Emperor to sign a decree that all those prisoners that would get baptized would
be given their freedom. It was believed that by doing this it would encourage
those who were baptized to stop worshiping the sun god. It resulted contrary to
their belief, because the pagans that got baptized continued every year
worshiping the god of the sun on the 25th of December.
The church
was in a dilemma but Constantine had the answer and told the leaders of the church
that they arrive at a compromise with the baptized pagans and that they allow
them to retain their festivals. The advice of Constantine was this “Don’t make
it more difficult so that the pagans are converted without making it easier,”
and the church accepted his advice. The historians of those centuries wrote
that the church was very willing to arrive at a compromise with the pagans and
permit them to retain their festivals which they were accustomed to celebrating
and give them a “Christian dress” or giving them a “Christian meaning”. (The
Bible for Learners vol. III – page 67).
Not being
able to abolish the customs of the pagans the church tried to “purify” these
festivals and customs that the pagans loved so much. The church tried to
distract the attention of the Christians from the pagan festivals with
celebrating festivals on the same day. So that the pagans should no longer
worship the god of the sun, Baal, on the 25th of December, but
rather now they should worship the Son of God on that day, but still using some
customs and pagan methods.
December 25th is
not the birthday of Jesus! The apostles and early Apostolic Church never
celebrated Christ’s birthday at any time. There is no command or instruction to
celebrate it in the Bible. However, we are commanded to observe, not celebrate,
the date of His death (I Cor.11:24-26; John 13:14-17).
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