4,000 Years of Christmas
'Tis the season for mistletoe and decorating the tree. But the origins
of Christmas may surprise you. Did you know one of the American colonies
outlawed observance of this holiday in 1659?
by Gary Petty
It's called the spirit of Christmas—the ringing of sleigh bells
on a snowy night, Tiny Tim turning the heart of Scrooge in Charles Dickens'
famous novel A Christmas Carol, Santa Claus and flying reindeer.
For many, it seems, the birth of Jesus takes a backseat to mythology,
packed shopping malls and greed. Every year, signs in front of neighborhood
churches remind people to put Christ back into Christmas—or proclaim
"Jesus is the reason for the season."
But is He?
In his book 4,000 Years of Christmas: A Gift From the Ages
(1997), Episcopal priest Earl Count enthusiastically relates historical
connections between the exchanging of gifts on the 12 days of Christmas
and customs originating in ancient, pagan Babylon. He shows that mistletoe
was adopted from Druid mystery rituals and that Dec. 25 has more to do
with the ancient Roman Saturnalia celebration than with Jesus.
Early Church celebration?
Nowhere in the New Testament do we see Jesus' disciples observing His
birthday.
In fact, as late as the third century the early Catholic theologian Origen
declared that it was a sin to celebrate Christmas, viewing it as pagan.
First-century Corinth was a Greek city filled with polytheistic religions.
Its customs included temple prostitution and priests who performed sacrifices
to the pantheon of Greek and Roman gods.
The apostle Paul writes to the Church members there in 1 Corinthians
10:19-21: "What am I saying then? That an idol is anything, or what
is offered to idols is anything? Rather, that the things which the Gentiles
sacrifice they sacrifice to demons and not to God, and I do not want you
to have fellowship with demons. You cannot drink the cup of the Lord and
the cup of demons; you cannot partake of the Lord's table and of the table
of demons."
Paul clearly warns people to avoid having anything to do with pagan religious
customs, labeling such actions "fellowship with demons"!
Familiar to early Christians was the Saturnalia, an ancient Roman festival
celebrated during the last days of December in honor of Saturn, the god
of agriculture. Many ancient religions conducted festivals at that time
of year, the time of the winter solstice in the northern hemisphere, when
days are the shortest, to appease the various gods to restore the sun
and bring an end to winter.
The Roman Saturnalia included drunkenness, debauchery and other practices
diametrically opposed to the teachings of Christ. Yet this holiday would
eventually develop into Christmas. What happened to change many Christians
from Paul's practice of abhorring and resisting pagan forms of worship
to accepting and participating in such practices in the name of Jesus
Christ?
Tremendous forces pressured early Christians away from the apostles'
original instruction to avoid mixing idolatry with the worship of the
true God. Thousands of pagans, while outwardly converting to Christianity,
refused to give up the rituals and ceremonies of their former religious
experiences.
Dr. Count sums up this historical struggle: "To the pagans, the
Saturnalia were fun.
To the Christians, the Saturnalia were an abomination in homage to a
disreputable god who had no existence anyway. The Christians, moreover,
were dedicated to the slow, uphill task of converting these roistering
pagan Romans.
"There were many immigrants into the ranks of the Christians by
this time, but the Church Fathers discovered to their alarm that they
were also facing an invasion of pagan customs. The habit of the Saturnalia
was too strong to be left behind. At first the church forbade it, but
in vain. When a river meets a boulder that will not be moved, the river
flows around it. If the Saturnalia would not be forbidden, let it be tamed"
(p. 36).
Why a Dec. 25 celebration?
The church adopted Dec. 25—the date of the Roman Brumalia, immediately
after Saturnalia—as the date of Christ's birth (even though biblical
evidence shows this cannot be the right time of this event).
This date also marked a great festival in Mithraism, the Persian religion
of the sun god. In A.D. 274 Emperor Aurelian of Rome declared Dec. 25
to be the "birthday of the invincible sun." In time the Son
of God, Jesus Christ, became indistinguishable from the pagan sun god
in the minds of hundreds of thousands of converts throughout the Roman
Empire.
Instead of standing as Christ's force for change in the world, nominal
Christianity was changed by the pagan world it was supposed to transform!
Dr. Count relates: "There exists a letter from the year 742 AD,
in which Saint Boniface ... complains to Pope Zacharias that his labors
to convert the heathen Franks and Alemans—Germanic tribes—were
being handicapped by the escapades of the Christian Romans back home.
The Franks and the Alemans were on the threshold of becoming Christians,
but their conversion was retarded by their enjoyment of lurid carnivals.
"When Boniface tried to turn them away from such customs, they argued
that they had seen them celebrated under the very shadow of Saint Peter's
in Rome. Embarrassed and sorry, Pope Zacharias replied ... admitting that
the people in the city of Rome behaved very badly at Christmas time"
(p. 53).
Over the centuries
Over the subsequent centuries, Christmas absorbed customs from German,
Scandinavian and Celtic paganism—such as the yule log, the decorating
of evergreen trees and the hanging of mistletoe.
In the Middle Ages, Christmas observances in Europe continued the excesses
of Saturnalia. Dr. Penne Restad, in Christmas in America: A History,
writes of the moral debate that raged during that era:
"Some clergy stressed that fallen humankind needed a season of abandonment
and excess, as long as it was carried on under the umbrella of Christian
supervision. Others argued that all vestiges of paganism must be removed
from the holiday. Less fervent Christians complained about the unreasonableness
of Church law and its attempts to change custom. Yet the Church sustained
the hope that sacred would eventually overtake profane as pagans gave
up their revels and turned to Christianity" (1996, p. 6).
Sadly, it didn't happen. Following the Middle Ages, some Protestants
tried reforming Christmas but created little real change. The English
Puritans waged a war on Christmas observance as unchristian behavior.
In 1659 the holiday was outlawed in Massachusetts, but proved so popular
that it gained official approval again in 1681.
A U.S. News & World Report cover story, "In Search
of Christmas," states: "When Christmas landed on American shores,
it fared little better. In colonial times, Christ's birth was celebrated
as a wildly social event—if it was celebrated at all . . . Puritans
in New England flatly refused to observe the holiday" (Dec. 23, 1996,
p. 60).
In more modern times many Christians have become concerned about the
commercialization of the day that is supposed to celebrate the birth of
the Son of God. With parades featuring Santa Claus sponsored by department
stores, half-price sales, and incessant TV and radio commercials, Christmas
obviously has become more about the accountant's bottom line than about
worshipping God.
Many people approach the yuletide season with a vague longing for a
Christmas that is more spiritual and less commercial. But is our fast-paced,
greed-filled rendition of Christmas the real problem, or is there something
wrong with Christmas itself?
Put Christ back in Christmas?
Christmas has become such a central holiday of American culture that
it's difficult to get anyone to step back and evaluate its Christian validity.
You be the judge.
Here are the facts: Jesus wasn't born on Dec. 25. Christ's apostles
rejected pagan ceremonies and rituals in their worship and told other
Christians to likewise avoid them. The early Church didn't observe Jesus'
birthday. The selection of Dec. 25 as Christ's supposed date of birth
was based on the dates of the Roman Saturnalia and Brumalia—a time
for worshiping the god Saturn.
Most Christmas customs—decorating the evergreen tree, use of mistletoe,
exchanging of gifts, Santa Claus—come not from the Bible but from
ancient pagan religions. For centuries Christianity tried unsuccessfully
to rid itself of the paganism of Christmas. Throughout its history Christmas
has inspired drunken parties, and the modern holiday is more about convincing
children to harass their parents to buy toys than worshipping Christ.
What is your verdict? Some say, "But we can't take Christmas away
from the children." Others: "As long as it brings people to
Jesus, what does it matter?"
Earlier we saw Paul's instructions to Christians in pagan Corinth. He
continues his instructions in his next letter to the Corinthians:
"For what fellowship has righteousness with lawlessness? And what
communion has light with darkness? . . . Or what part has a believer with
an unbeliever? And what agreement has the temple of God with idols? .
. .
"Therefore 'Come out from among them and be separate, says the
Lord. Do not touch what is unclean, and I will receive you . . .' Therefore
. . . let us cleanse ourselves from all filthiness of the flesh and spirit,
perfecting holiness in the fear of God" (2 Corinthians 6:14-18; 7:1).
Paul's point is very pertinent to Christmas. How can we claim to be
honoring God with pagan customs and traditions that He forbids in His
Word?
The crucial question is: How can we put Jesus back into the season when
He was never part of it to begin with? It's a difficult question, isn't
it? But it's one that's vitally important for you to answer. GN
Recommended Reading
Many people are shocked to discover the origins of our most popular religious
holidays. They're also surprised to find that the days God commands us to
observe in the Bible—the same days Jesus Christ and the apostles kept—are
almost universally ignored. Why? Also, why are today's supposedly Christian
holidays observed with so many rituals and customs that are not sanctioned
anywhere in the Bible? For detailed answers, be sure to request your free
copy of the booklet Holidays or Holy Days: Does It
Matter Which We Keep? or read it online
today!
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