Origins of the Christmas holiday
World's biggest festival has varied roots:
by David Johnson
From its modest beginnings, Christmas has evolved into the biggest
celebration in the world.
Christmas is the fourth most important Christian date after Easter,
Pentecost, and Epiphany, a feast held January 6 to commemorate the
manifestation of the divinity of Jesus. Roman Catholics and Protestants
celebrate the birth of Jesus on December 25. Many Orthodox Christians
use the Julian calendar, which places Christmas around January 6.
Early Christians, however, did not celebrate Christmas. There was
disagreement about when Jesus was born and some early Christians opposed
celebrating his birthday. In the fourth century Christmas was added to
the Church calendar as a feast day.
A common date
December 25 was a significant date for various early cultures.
The ancient Babylonians believed the son of the queen of heaven was
born on December 25. The Egyptians celebrated the birth of the son of
the fertility goddess Isis on the same date, while ancient Arabs
contended that the moon was born on December 24.
The Romans celebrated Saturnalia, a feast named for Saturn, god of
agriculture, on December 21, the winter solstice in the northern
hemisphere. They believed the shortest day of the year was the birthday
of the sun. The Roman emperor Constantine was a member of the sun-cult
before converting to Christianity in 312.
Some scholars suspect that Christians chose to celebrate Christ's
birth on December 25 to make it easier to convert the pagan tribes.
Referring to Jesus as the "light of the world" also fit with existing
pagan beliefs about the birth of the sun. The ancient "return of the
sun" philosophy had been replaced by the "coming of the son" message of
Christianity.
Joyful and religious
Gradually, Christmas celebrations began to adopt the joyful, often
boisterous, holiday traditions of pagan cultures.
The story of the nativity was told through music, art, and dance.
Some Medieval Christians objected, however, maintaining that
Christmas should be a somber religious day, not a secular festival.
After the Reformation, certain Protestant groups opposed Christmas
celebrations. Oliver Cromwell banned them in England. King Charles II
restored Christmas when he ascended the throne.
In the American colonies, Puritans, Baptists, Quakers, and
Presbyterians opposed the festivities, while Catholics, Anglicans
(Episcopalians), Dutch Reformed, and Lutherans approved.
Christmas celebrations became more common in America during the
mid-1800s.
The introduction of Christmas services in Sunday schools reduced
religious opposition, while the Charles Dickens novel A Christmas Carol
popularized the holiday as a family event.
- infoplease
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