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Christmas
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Q -
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What do you think about
Christmas? Is it okay to have a Christmas tree? And, what about Santa
Claus? I heard that he was connected with Baal worship. Is that right?
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Jim -
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I purposely tabled these
questions until after the holidays so I would not be introducing any
crisis of conscience into your household just as you were preparing to
celebrate.
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Briefly, Christmas is not a
Christian holiday (read: holy day), or time of observance. Jesus was
clearly not born on Dec. 25, as is widely known and admitted. Even the
details of His birth make that obvious. There are no shepherds in the
Middle East who watch their flocks by night in the mid-winter. That
alone ought to tell us something's amiss.
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Anyway, we can get a pretty
good sense of Christ's actual birth date by using Luke's gospel. John
the Baptist is said to be six months older than Christ (Luke 1:26 and
Luke 1:36). So, if we can determine John's conception date, we simply
add 15 months and we're in the right territory. John's father was a
priest who served in the temple during the course of Abijah, or Abia
(Luke 1:5). King David established the courses of the priests. There
are of 24 courses and Abijah is the eighth (1 Chron. 24:10). By comparing
those courses to the Hebrew religious calendar, we can easily deduce
the period when Zacharias, John's father, served his course and heard
that his wife was about to conceive.
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So, let's do the math. The
Hebrew calendar was lunar, not solar. It was divided into 12 months of
30 days. So, the eight course would fall during the last two weeks of
the fourth month of the Sacred calendar. That month was called Tammuz,
the tenth month of the Civil Calendar. It fell between mid-June and
mid-July on our western Calendars. Add fifteen months (or, just three
months to make it easy) and you arrive at the month of Tishri, which is
mid-September to mid-October. So, Jesus was born near the time of the
Autumn equinox, in the early Fall.
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By the way, that period is also
the time of the Feast of Trumpets, Atonement, and Tabernacles, when
every Jewish family capable of travel was required to appear before the
Lord in Jerusalem. So, even the smaller towns that bordered Jerusalem
would be overflowing with people. That would help explain why there was
"no room at the inn" in Bethlehem.
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Meanwhile, the early
Christian Church failed to record the date of Jesus' birth with any
certainty because it simply wasn't important to them. The death of
Christ is attested to in great detail in all four gospel records. But,
His birthday was of little consequence. It wasn't until the time of
Emperor Constantine's efforts to "Christianize" Rome that we
find any real attention paid to His birth.
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The Romans were steeped in
Helenized culture, which they "borrowed" from the Greeks. The
Greek pantheon of gods was inculcated into Roman mythology and simply
given new names. And, the vast majority of Greco/Roman mythological
worship finds its roots in Babylonish mystery religion, which all
revolves around "sun worship." So, one of the primary
festivals (read: holy days) that the Romans observed each year was the
Saturnalia Feast (which came to be known as the Feast of Fools in the
Nordic and Gaelic cultures). It happened on the shortest day of the calendar
year as a tribute to the sun, in order to entice the sun to return and
keep their agricultural society going. So, every year, during the
winter solstice, there was a drunken, wild, gift-giving festival that
had its roots in ancient sun worship.
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Meanwhile, during the reign
of the Roman Emperor Constantine (306 to 337 AD) there had been 150
years of unbridled torture of Christians. However, Christianity, far
from being disposed of by the Roman persecution, continued to grow and
thrive. So, when he rose to the throne of Rome, he had a huge social
dilemma. Although his personal devotions prove that he worshipped the
Roman gods Mars and Apollos, Constantine unilaterally forbid Christian
persecution throughout his realm.
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The next significant event
in Constantine's religious development occurred in 312. Lactantius -
who tutored his son, Crispus - and who therefore must have been close
to the imperial family, reports that during the night before the Battle
of the Milvian Bridge Constantine was commanded in a dream to place the
sign of Christ on the shields of his soldiers. Constantine was
victorious and he attributed his victory to "the god of the
Christians." Consequently, he began the effort to
"christianize" Rome, making it the State religion. Since every
Roman citizen was required to embrace some form of Christianity -
though it was a severely watered-down and superficial form of
Christianity - Constantine effectively established the Roman universal
(the meaning of "catholic") church and the Holy Roman Empire.
And, of course, Roman Catholicism went on to dominate Western Religion
for the next 1200 years.
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So, what doest that have to
do with Christmas? Well, in his efforts to "Christianize"
Rome, Constantine encountered considerable resistance from the heathen
Roman populace. Realizing that he could not utterly remove all of their
various feasts, orgies, bacchanalias and observances, he simply stamped
Christian names and observances onto the festivities that already
existed. For instance, the Feast of Ishtar, a Spring Fertility Feast
replete with rabbits, eggs and other symbols of fertility, occurred
close to the time of the Passover, when Christ rose from the dead. The
two were effectively mashed together, and the early-risers who went to
celebrate the rising of the sun, the rebirth of Tammuz, and his mother
Semirimus, called Ishtar, was simply "Christianized" to
celebrate the resurrection of Christ from the dead. In fact, it's
pretty spooky that the most significant religious observance of the
calendar year still bears her name - Easter! And, people in the
Christian church still run out to greet the sun as it rises - a form of
Babylonish Baal (sun god) worship.
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Anyway (you can see this
coming), rather than try to stop the mid-winter Saturnalia feast, called
"birthday of the unconquered sun," Constantine simply imposed
the birth of Christ onto that date in order to give it significance for
every citizen of Rome, regardless of their personal depth of Christian
commitment. It was a small matter to change "the sun" to
"the Son." And, in keeping with their penchant for mixing and
matching heathen and Christian names and concepts, that holiday came to
be known as the Christ-mass. The English word "mass" is
derived from the Latin "masse," which is derived from the
Greek "maza," which were small, round barley cakes baked to
honor Semirimus as the "queen of heaven." That name was
carried into the Catholic worship service, with its veneration of Mary
as "queen of Heaven." So, when the Mass was performed to
honor her child, it was designated the yearly "Christ-mass."
We just call it Christmas.
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And, Christmas doesn't have
the sort of illustrious American history that modern folk assume. It
was understood to be a pagan practice by the earliest pilgrims and
settlers. In fact, Christmas was generally outlawed in America until
the end of the last century. Up until 1870, the city of Boston
proclaimed that anyone missing work on Christmas Day would be fired.
Factory owners required employees to come to work at 5 a.m. on Christmas
in order to insure they would not go to church that day. And any
student who failed to go to school on December 25 was summarily
expelled. Alabama was the first state of the union to recognize
Christmas as a legal holiday, but that was late in the nineteenth
century. It's amazing how times have changed; now that Christmas is a
staple in our national economy.
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While there's some debate as
to where the various traditions and observances of Christmas started,
it's clear that most of them pre-date Christ Himself. They were simply
carried over from their heathen roots into the "christian"
culture. And, Santa Claus is one of those traditions. If you do a
simple search on the Internet on the History of Christmas, or the
history of Santa Claus - remember that "Santa" comes from the
Latin word for "saint" - you'll find a wealth of debate and
information. But, it's clear that a fat man in red coming down the
chimney to give gifts to children has nothing to do with the birth of
Christ.
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The reason I referred to him
as Baal, is because of the ancient mid-east and European wood carving
that depict Baal as an old man with a long white beard, usually holding
a fir, or evergreen, tree as a sign of eternal life. That exact
imagery, by the way, appeared on this year's Christmas stamps from the
US postal service. Spooky.
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It's funny how inculcated
this essentially heathen custom has become in our society, though. I
once told a woman that I didn't care for Christmas and she accused me
of being an atheist! But, it's just the opposite. I don't like
Christmas because I am a committed Christian! Certainly, Jesus was
right when He said, "Thus have ye made the commandment of God of
none effect by your tradition." (Mat. 15:6)
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However, I am not a complete
killjoy where Christmas is concerned. We give our kids gifts and we
enjoy the time the family. But, we have never taught our children Santa
Claus. I mean, they know who he is, but they know he is fictitious, on
the level of Bugs Bunny and Ronald McDonald. We never wanted to ascribe
God-like attributes to anyone but God. Only God "sees you when
you're sleeping and knows when you're awake." And, only God
rewards and judges people, not some mythological fat man from the North
Pole. Libbie and I agreed early in our marriage that we would not lie
to our kids. That way, they would always know that whatever we told
them was true. And, they would trust us to guide them in the pathways
of truth and honesty.
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When my parents - who really
played the Santa Claus thing to the hilt - told me that he was not
real, I was crushed. And, the very next question I asked (according to
my mom) was, "Then is there really a God?" Of course, they
instantly went into recovery mode and did their best to convince me
that the God I had never seen, never felt, seldom talked to and who
never seemed to actually do anything for me, was really, genuinely
alive and significant. But, the man who had entered my home every year,
brought me gifts, ate our cookies, drank our milk, who I wrote letters
to and who loved me for being good, was fake. I hated it. So, as a
parent, I will never take my children through that crisis. When I tell
them about God - whom they have heard about from their earliest years -
they know I'm telling the truth and that I will never recant.
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A couple of years ago we
even stopped putting up a tree. The tree had bothered me, but my wife
did not share my conviction, originally. But, after a while it even
bothered her. Like I've said, revelation of God is progressive and we are
responsible to the truth we know. So, we asked the kids if they would
prefer a tree each holiday, or if we spent that extra fifty bucks on
gifts. You can imagine their reply. Bingo - no tree.
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Thanks for your question. I
know plenty of Christians struggle with the holidays and how to
properly observe them. My opinion is that we all react in accordance
with our level of understanding, in keeping with the truth revealed to
us as individuals. Some folk with less knowledge of Christmas history
and traditions may celebrate the holidays in all their detail without a
pang of conscience. And, I would never condemn them. They are a perfect
example of Paul's "weaker brethren." I will continually
strive to teach God's word until we all come to the knowledge of the Lord
and worship Him in Spirit and in truth. Then, each Christian must work
out the details between them and God. My job, and our job as a church,
is to expose the truth and promote the worship of Christ and Him only.
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Fair enough?
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Yours for His sake,
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Jim
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