| The Bible does not specifically reveal the date of Jesus' birth |
For Christians worldwide, a celebratory date does not always match the celebrated day. This is why there is so
much confusion with what has come to be known as the “New Christmas” as opposed
to the “Old Christmas”.
| Not until the 4th century was Christmas officially celebrated on December 25th |
The Bible does not specifically reveal the date or even
time of year when Jesus Christ was born. It wasn’t until the 4th century when
Pope Julius I officially declared that the birth of Jesus would be celebrated
on December 25th.
There is debate as to why he chose that particular date. Some believe it was because of the
celebration of Annunciation,
| Orthodox Icon of Annunciation |
Others believe that Pope Julius I chose December 25th because
pagans at that time were already holding midwinter festivals during this month, and
since people were already accustomed to celebrating things at that time it was
convenient to work in Christmas. One such pagan festival was called the “Saturnalia”,
it honored the Roman god Saturn and was held between December 17th and
23rd. Another celebration was “Dies
Natalis Solis Invicti”, this celebrated the birthday of the Roman sun god Mithra and was held on December 25th. The Romans thought that on this date the
Winter Solstice was occurring, which is the day that has the shortest time
between sunrise and sunset, which bolstered their belief that with the days that followed becoming longer that this was proof that their sun god was unconquered. In their religion of Mithraism, the holy day
was Sunday which is the origin of our word for this day of the week.
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| Pagans already worshiped Winter Solstice on Dec. 25th, the sun winning over winter darkness. Christians saw Jesus as "light of the world", and chose same date with their different focus on "light". |
For these pagans, the Winter Solstice was especially
sacred because it meant winter was over and spring was coming; they
worshiped the sun winning over the darkness of winter. But for Christians, it has instead always been Jesus
who represents the light of the world, so it made sense to match the theme but hold their own
celebration of Jesus on this same date. These
early Christians even borrowed some of the customs of the pagan celebration,
such as Holly, Mistletoe, and even singing Carols, and gave these Christian
meanings.
The Julian calendar was used during this period. But it was flawed, not correctly matching the
solar elapse of time. It wasn’t until
1582 when Pope Gregory XIII established the “Gregorian Calendar”, which is what
we use today, adjusting the now new date of December 25th and causing Christmas
to come 10 days earlier than the December 25th date on the Julian calendar. Many in the world were not happy with this adjustment at first. Only gradually over the period of the next few centuries did this change become accepted and adopted by most of the world. But there remained some who continued to refuse the Gregorian calendar, and they persisted in celebrating their December 25th date of Christmas
on the Julian calendar which was a full 10 days behind the Gregorian calendar. These different celebrations came to be known
as the Gregorian’s “New Christmas” and the Julian’s “Old Christmas”.
| Orthodox Icon of Epiphany |
By the 19th century, due to its flawed measurement of time, the
Julian Christmas ended up falling on January 6th which not only is the date for Epiphany (the celebration of Jesus’ baptism by St. John the Baptist), but it was
also believed to be the same date when the Wise Men finally arrived in
Bethlehem to worship the baby Jesus.
This duality lent itself to the Julian Calendar’s Christians to not only
celebrate Epiphany but to do so in a way that mirrored their celebration of
Christmas.
As time went on, many of those who continued to follow the
Julian calendar began to want a separate day from Epiphany to celebrate Jesus’
birth. This caused most of them to adopt
the Gregorian’s December 25th date for Christmas.
But, to this day, there remains many of the Orthodox and
Coptic Churches that never accepted the Gregorian calendar. Due to their continued Julian calendar reference, not only do these churches still celebrate the “Old
Christmas” (which is December 25th on their Julian calendar compared to January
7th on the Gregorian), they also celebrate other Christian festivals, such as Pascha (Easter), on
different dates than most of the Western Christians.
While Christmas dates may still vary for different Christians, nevertheless all believers everywhere equally
pour out their own expression of devout and joyous worship to celebrate the day
that their Savior, Jesus Christ, came
into the world as a newborn baby.


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