The Pagan Origins of Christmas?

Etymology of Christmas

Did you know that the word Christmas is actually derived from two words? The term comes from the words "Christ" and "Mass" due to its Catholic origins. Therefore, if you consider yourself a part of the Protestant faith (Baptist, Methodist, Presbyterian, etc), you are actually celebrating a Catholic holiday when you embrace Christmas each year.


Is Celebrating Christmas a Sin?

Birthdays: Christmas is supposedly a celebration of the birth of baby Jesus. But the only birthdays mentioned in the Bible are presented in a very bad light, and the celebrants were not worshippers of God. (Genesis 40:19–22; Luke 3:19, 20) Furthermore, focusing as Jesus as a helpless baby in a manger completely misses the point of his coming to earth in the first place. (Matthew 4:17)

History: Was Jesus born on December 25th? We can answer this emphatically as no, for reasons which are very well known, so that even the church doesn’t deny them, it just ignores them. In fact, December 25th was chosen because that’s a sacred day in many pagan religions, as it’s the first day after the winter solstice on which the sun is visibly brighter. Hence its association with the birth of Horus, Tammuz, Sol Invictus and so on.

Jesus’ birth: The date of Jesus’ birth is not given in the scriptures, and we are nowhere told to celebrate it. On the other hand, the date of his death is given exactly, and we are told to commemorate that.

Materialism and excess: Christmas is characterised by greed and materialism. Companies push hard-working parents to get themselves into debt to buy expensive gifts for their children. Excess, overindulgence and drunkenness are common. The Bible counsels against all of these things. (Galatians 5:19–21; Hebrews 13:5; 1 Timothy 6:8)

False worship: The customs and symbolism of Christmas are lifted straight from pagan cults and beliefs, including worship of the embodied sun, fertility and rebirth (trees and evergreen wreaths), licentiousness and excess (which characterised the Saturnalia, also held on December 25th) and so on. God is displeased with mixing true worship with false. (Revelation 18:4, 5)

Add to this a load of nonsense about Santa, three “kings” visiting baby Jesus in a stable (in fact an untold number of astrologers showed up at Jesus’ home when he was about two years old), and what has become basically a license to print money for greedy, opportunistic companies and you have a very unholy brew.

Those who choose to celebrate Christmas and who would wish to please God would do well to examine the origins of the holiday, and measure it up against what the Bible says. God is not pleased with the rationale “I do it because everybody else does”, but rather, he expects his worshippers to take a stand for what is true, and pure, and holy. (Exodus 23:2; 1 Corinthians 10:21)

I appreciate this likely won’t be a popular answer, but I can only answer it as best I can. I tell nobody what to do or to believe. Make your own decisions.


As Jeremiah 10:2 (KJV) states: “Thus saith the Lord, Learn not the way of the heathen.” Nor are we (Christians) to mix God’s name with unholy things of the world. Ezekiel 20:39 (KJV) makes this point abundantly clear with the statement: “pollute ye my holy name no more with your gifts, and with your idols.”

Popular Videos about the Pagan Origins of Christmas

Why December 25th?

Annunciation, also called Annunciation to the Blessed Virgin Mary or Annunciation of the Lord, in Christianity, the announcement by the angel Gabriel to the Virgin Mary that she would conceive a son by the power of the Holy Spirit to be called Jesus (Luke 1:26–38). The angel’s pronouncement is met with Mary’s willing consent (“Here am I, the servant of the Lord; let it be with me according to your word”), and thus precipitates the Incarnation of Christ and his redemption of the world.

Jewish believers and December 25th

From the above information, we can piece together a possible explanation for the celebration of December 25th as the date for the birth of Jesus.

1. The 9 branch chanukiah was clearly used following the destruction of the Temple in 70 A.D., regardless of the Jewish communities lack of acknowledging this fact.

2. It is logical to believe that the Jewish believers in Jesus introduced the shamash candle and the 9 branch chanukiah in order to remember their Messiah after the destruction of the Temple.

3. If the shamash candle was a picture of Jesus bringing light to Jew and Gentile, it is understandable why the larger Jewish community would not want to be associated with the 9 branch chanukiah and the shamash candle.

4. With the Jewish people scattered in the diaspora after 70 A.D., and the use of the Julian calendar in the Gentile world, it is very possible that the Jewish believers in Jesus, prohibited by the anti-Jewish church and culture to remember events on their Jewish dates, used the parallel day of 25 used in the Gentile world. This calendar day being in the month of December. Thus, the 25th day of December was chosen to remember the Shamash of God, Jesus, coming into the world to bring light to the world as the Jewish followers of Jesus tied in the events of Chanukah with Jesus as the Shamash of God on December 25th instead of Kislev 25.

5. If December 25th was in fact introduced by Jewish believers to remember the events of Chanukah and Jesus as the Shamash, it is understandable why the 3rd and 4th century church fathers, wanting to wipe every vestige of Jewishness from the church, came up with the explanation that December 25th was the “church’s identification of God’s son with the celestial sun.” This explanation was possibly offered in order to separate the Jewish believer’s celebration of Chanukah and Jesus as the Shamash on this day from the celebration of Jesus’ birth on this day throughout the (largely) Gentile church world.

The church fathers rejected the Jewish calendar followed by Jesus, the Jewish apostles, and the first century church, comprised of primarily Jewish believers. Their rejection of the Jewish calendar and the adoption of the Julian calendar, wedded with their animosity toward all things “Jewish,” possibly resulted in the acceptance of December 25th as the birth date of Jesus as early as the late 3rd century.


Winter Solstice

Though December 25 is the day Christians celebrate the birth of Jesus Christ, the date itself and several of the customs we've come to associate with Christmas actually evolved from pagan traditions celebrating the winter solstice.

"Christmas is really about bringing out your inner pagan," historian Kenneth C. Davis told "CBS This Morning." According to Davis, Christmas was celebrated as early as the fourth century, suggesting that it had almost nothing to do with Jesus Christ.

"In ancient Rome there was a feast called Saturnalia that celebrated the solstice. What is the solstice? It's the day that the sun starts coming back, the days start getting longer. And most of the traditions that we have that relate to Christmas relate to the solstice, which was celebrated in ancient Rome on December 25. So when Christianity became the official religion in a sense, in Rome, they were able to fix this date. ... There's a little discrepancy about it but there's no question that the fact that it was celebrated in Rome as an important day with gift giving, candle lighting, and singing and decorating houses really cemented Christmas as December 25."


Winter solstice 2021 in Northern Hemisphere will be at 9:58 AM on

Tuesday, December 21

All times are in Central Time.


Yule

THE NINE MONTHS OF THE CHILD JESUS IN THE WOMB OF MARY

Each year on December 25 we celebrate the birth of Jesus Christ. For centuries the Church has also celebrated his conception on March 25, the feast of the Annunciation. Our parish Respect Life Committee invites you to a special Mass at 7:30 PM on March 25th to begin a nine month commemoration of the gestation of the Child Jesus in Mary’s womb.

Saturnalia

The first-century AD poet Gaius Valerius Catullus described Saturnalia as ‘the best of times’: dress codes were relaxed, small gifts such as dolls, candles and caged birds were exchanged.

Saturnalia saw the inversion of social roles. The wealthy were expected to pay the month’s rent for those who couldn’t afford it, masters and slaves to swap clothes. Family households threw dice to determine who would become the temporary Saturnalian monarch. The poet Lucian of Samosata (AD 120-180) has the god Cronos (Saturn) say in his poem, Saturnalia:

‘During my week the serious is barred: no business allowed. Drinking and being drunk, noise and games of dice, appointing of kings and feasting of slaves, singing naked, clapping … an occasional ducking of corked faces in icy water – such are the functions over which I preside.’

Saturnalia originated as a farmer’s festival to mark the end of the autumn planting season in honour of Saturn (satus means sowing). Numerous archaeological sites from the Roman coastal province of Constantine, now in Algeria, demonstrate that the cult of Saturn survived there until the early third century AD.

Saturnalia grew in duration and moved to progressively later dates under the Roman period. During the reign of the Emperor Augustus (63 BC-AD 14), it was a two-day affair starting on December 17th. By the time Lucian described the festivities, it was a seven-day event. Changes to the Roman calendar moved the climax of Saturnalia to December 25th, around the time of the date of the winter solstice.

From as early as 217 BC there were public Saturnalia banquets. The Roman state cancelled executions and refrained from declaring war during the festival. Pagan Roman authorities tried to curtail Saturnalia; Emperor Caligula (AD 12-41) sought to restrict it to five days, with little success.

Emperor Domitian (AD 51-96) may have changed Saturnalia’s date to December 25th in an attempt to assert his authority. He curbed Saturnalia’s subversive tendencies by marking it with public events under his control. The poet Statius (AD 45- 95), in his poem Silvae, describes the lavish banquet and entertainments Domitian presided over, including games which opened with sweets, fruit and nuts showered on the crowd and featuring flights of flamingos released over Rome. Shows with fighting dwarves and female gladiators were illuminated, for the first time, into the night.

Sol Invicta

Saturnalia has a rival contender as the forerunner of Christmas: the festival of dies natalis solis invicti, ‘birthday of the unconquered sun’. The Philocalian calendar also states that December 25th was a Roman civil holiday honouring the cult of sol invicta. With its origins in Syria and the monotheistic cult of Mithras, sol invicta certainly has similarities to the worship of Jesus. The cult was introduced into the empire in AD 274 by Emperor Aurelian (214-275), who effectively made it a state religion, putting its emblem on Roman coins.

Sol invicta succeeded because of its ability to assimilate aspects of Jupiter and other deities into its figure of the Sun King, reflecting the absolute power of ‘divine’emperors. But despite efforts by later pagan emperors to control Saturnalia and absorb the festival into the official cult, the sol invicta ended up looking very much like the old Saturnalia. Constantine, the first Christian emperor, was brought up in the sol invicta cult, in what was by then already a predominantly monotheist empire: ‘It is therefore possible,’ says Dr Gwynn, ‘that Christmas was intended to replace this festival rather than Saturnalia.’

Gwynn concludes: ‘The majority of modern scholars would be reluctant to accept any close connection between the Saturnalia and the emergence of the Christian Christmas.’


What are the 12 days of Christmas?

The 12 days of Christmas is the period in Christian theology that marks the span between the birth of Christ and the coming of the Magi, the three wise men. It begins on December 25 (Christmas) and runs through January 6 (the Epiphany, sometimes also called Three Kings’ Day). The four weeks preceding Christmas are collectively known as Advent, which begins four Sundays before Christmas and ends on December 24.


Is Hanukkah observed on December 25th?

Hanukkah is observed for eight nights and days, starting on the 25th day of Kislev according to the Hebrew calendar, which may occur at any time from late November to late December in the Gregorian calendar.


The Legend of St. Nicholas: The Real Santa Claus

The legend of Santa Claus can be traced back hundreds of years to a monk named St. Nicholas. It is believed that Nicholas was born sometime around 280 A.D. in Patara, near Myra in modern-day Turkey. Much admired for his piety and kindness, St. Nicholas became the subject of many legends. It is said that he gave away all of his inherited wealth and traveled the countryside helping the poor and sick. One of the best-known St. Nicholas stories is the time he saved three poor sisters from being sold into slavery or prostitution by their father by providing them with a dowry so that they could be married.


Flavius Josephus

Flavius Josephus (A.D. 37 – c. 100) was a Jewish historian born in Jerusalem four years after the crucifixion of Jesus of Nazareth in the same city. Because of this proximity to Jesus in terms of time and place, his writings have a near-eyewitness quality as they relate to the entire cultural background of the New Testament era. But their scope is much wider than this, encompassing also the world of the Old Testament. His two greatest works are Jewish Antiquities, unveiling Hebrew history from the Creation to the start of the great war with Rome in A.D. 66, while his Jewish War, though written first, carries the record on to the destruction of Jerusalem and the fall of Masada in A.D. 73.