This Month
Date 16-05-2008
GMTime 03:49:35
Banner header

Must all dinosaurs have laid eggs? Not even all modern reptiles lay eggs. Snakes, skinks, some amphibians and even some fish keep their eggs within themselves until birth.
Who Lies Sleeping?

Christmas 2

© Dr M D Magee
Contents Updated: Saturday, October 06, 2001
Wednesday, 20 February, 2008

Abstract

Christians never think it strange that the birth date of Jesus is the birth date of many of the incarnated gods of antiquity. That Pagans venerated the birthday of Christ as the birthday of their gods is beyond coincidence. At the winter solstice, the sun seemed to stop declining in the sky for three days. Its was at crisis point. It might die! Then it began to rise on the 25 December, the sun’s rebirth. Both the year and the day of Christ’s birth are unknown. There is no reason to suppose that Jesus the Nazarene was born on Christmas Day. The importance of 25 December to Pagans made Christians think it must have been the birthday of their messiah. When Constantine made Jesus a god, 25 December, the birthday of the sun gods and particularly that of the chief rival to Christianity, Mithras, was selected as his birthday. By celebrating at the same time as Pagan religions, the bishops accaepted Christ as a sun god, hoping to pull in Pagans worshippers. What are the origins of the various ingredients of the now traditional nativity scene?

God’s Birthday

Why was the “only true god” born on a Pagan date—25 December?

There is no reason to suppose that Jesus the Nazarene was born on Christmas Day. The birth date of Jesus is unknown. Both the year and the day of his birth are unknown. Neither the New Testament nor later tradition provide reliable evidence. The Christian world had no chronology. There is no clue in the gospels as to the date when Jesus was born, except Luke’s reference to shepherds watching their flocks by night, if that can be considered as evidence. Certainly, if shepherds were out at night watching their flocks, it could not have been in mid-winter that the birth took place. Winter is the rainy season, and even in Palestine flocks are folded at that time of the year, and not roaming about in the rain and sleet accompanied by cold and damp shepherds.

Mary forgot the date of a uniquely wonderful day or forgot to mention it. Admittedly, poor and illiterate parents in undeveloped societies do not remember the dates when their children were born and often do not even remember the year—simple people are not ruled by clocks and calendars as we are. But, if, as Acts claims, Mary, Jesus’s mother, lived with the disciples after the crucifixion, she never told them when her son was born, and this is surprising even for a poor person considering the interest shown by kings, shepherds and angels at the time.

Indeed, the traditional Christmas story stands in curious isolation from the rest of the New Testament. Neither Jesus himself, when grown up, nor his earliest followers claimed authority on the grounds of a special form of birth. The apostle Paul, in his extensive writings, discusses in detail the nature of Jesus without once mentioning a miraculous birth. It was only on later generations that the story of a miraculous baby adored in a stable by shepherds and kings began to make an impact. To this day it inspires art, poetry and a salutary humility in the lives of many, but Mary could have experienced none of it because the gospels indicate that she had no recollection of it.

Nor had the first Christians ever heard of it. Early Christians found themselves having to tell the world of the most tremendous birth there ever was on this planet not knowing when it happened. Christian scholars of the first two centuries even differed over the year Jesus was born, some believing that he was born fully twenty years before the currently accepted date. Centuries after the event, the year of Christ’s birth was determined but was determined wrongly. Nobody now holds that Jesus was born in the year 1 AD. Our calendar, which computes years supposedly from the birth of Jesus, was drawn up by a miscalculating monk in Italy in the sixth century. The miscalculation is obvious in that, on the basis of the New Testament story, Jesus must have been born by 4 BC, the year when Herod died.

Considering that an omnipotent God descended from heaven and performed astounding miracles to proof that people could now be saved in everlasting life, it seems odd that no one noted the year of his birth, even though many beings from shepherds to angels knew about it. The Holy Ghost was being his usual incompetent self. This should be sufficient to banish all faith in Christianity.

No event of Christian history was marked by justifiable dates for nearly four hundred years. For these first three or four hundred years, various Churches celebrated the birthday of Jesus on different dates. The day chosen as the birthday of Christ was the day which best fitted the doctrines of that Church, not the day upon which Jesus had actually been born. No one knew what day that was, but nobody cared. What was important was to select an auspicious and a suitable date. The eastern Churches kept it on 6 January, now the Epiphany. The Basilidians celebrated Christ’s birthday on the 24 or 25 April. Other Christian sects celebrated it, so Clement of Alexandria informs us, on the 25 May.

Perhaps they believed that Jesus’s birth date was irrelevant—only his divine life was relevant and that began at his baptism. Sadly, they did not know the date of the baptism either and arbitrarily chose 6 January. Why? Because that date had long been associated with people bathing in blessed water. Followers of the god Osiris, the deity of the Nile, had held a festival, the “Festival of the Immersion”, on the river on 6 January from time immemorial. Christian Copts celebrate it still. The Hierophant poured holy water into the river and blessed it, then people bathed in it. The Greeks identified Dionysos with Osiris and so on 6 January the sacred waters were blessed in both the religions of Osiris and Dionysos! Epiphany is a continuation of these Pagan rites.

The Egyptian Gnostics known as Basilidians, seeing the immersion ceremonies as a symbol of the baptism of Jesus, celebrated it on 6 January and gradually Christians elsewhere adopted this date as the anniversary of the Jesus’s baptism. By 386 AD the two great Christian festivals were Easter, the festival of the crucifixion, and Epiphany when rivers and springs were blessed and water was drawn and saved for baptisms throughout the year. Aristides Rhetor in about 160 AD tells us that water drawn from the Nile at the “Festival of the Immersion” is at its purest. Stored in wine jars, he says, it improves with time just like wine. And so does the myth! Two centuries later Epiphanius writes that the stored water actually changes into wine! In Dionysos worship, water turns to wine on 6 January. The miracle at Cana when Jesus turned water into wine is celebrated in the Christian calendar on 6 January!

Today the Epiphany celebration is most closely associated with the visit of the Magi at Jesus’s birth and has been since the fourth century AD. Magi were Persian priests so it seems likely that the legend was introduced from Mithras worship, originally a Persian religion. The Epiphany of Mithras was observed by shepherds who brought gifts, as in the Luke version of Jesus’s birth. Rather than merely equalling a rival, the editor who inserted the birth narrative into Matthew took a more positive tack. He aimed to show the superiority of Christianity over the other eastern religions—the divine baby Jesus is superior to the divine Mithras whose priests bring gifts to the new god. So the three Zadokites who officiated at Jesus’s rebirth were adapted into Magi from Persia appearing at his actual birth to prove that even the priests of Mithras worshipped the Christian God.

Cassian at about the beginning of the fifth century says the Egyptian provinces regarded Epiphany as being the birth date of Jesus. This was because Jesus was thought to be exactly 30 years old on his baptism. Note also that the Persian law-giver Zoroaster was exactly thirty when the spirit of god descended on him, and the Egyptian Pharaohs held a celebration called Sed exactly 30 years after the day they had been chosen by their father as his successor, their spiritual birthday. As many Churches commemorated the birth and the baptism of Christ on the same day, the festivals will have originated before any birth story was known, when the gospels began, like Mark, with the baptism of Jesus. On the day that Jesus was baptized, Christ was born.

Christmas

The chief mythical constituents of the life of Jesus were known all over the cosmopolitan Græco-Roman world, most particularly in the overlapping fringe of the Græco-Roman and the Persian-Egyptian worlds—the eastern coast of the Mediterranean—where the gospels were certainly composed. Whatever city we may favour as the cradle of the gospels, Alexandria or Antioch, Smyrna or Ephesus, every myth and ritual representation mentioned was familiar there. Mithraism spread from Persia to Britain. Roman soldiers prayed to Mithras in the towers in which they guarded the north of England from the marauding Scots. The religion of Isis and Horus was even more familiar round the Mediterranean. The legend and ritual of Dionysos were hardly less familiar.

Romans had celebrated this festival for centuries as Pagans. Every Roman was familiar from childhood with the great midwinter festival, and in the earliest days of the Christian era the religions of Persia and Egypt, with similar festivals, had spread over the Empire. So, from end to end of the Roman Empire, 25 December was the birthday of the unconquered sun, of the saviour Mithras, and of the divine Horus, and they and the others were represented almost exactly as the birth of Christ was described in the gospels and is depicted in Catholic churches today.

The Roman emperor, Constantine—popularly considered the embodiment or incarnation of the supreme Roman sun god—Sol Invictus—later presided over the council of Nicea (325 AD) which lead to the official Christian recognition of the Trinity as the true nature of God. The importance of 25 December to Pagans made Christian converts think it must also be important to their newly adopted religion. They easily supposed it must have been the birthday of their messiah. Since his birth date had been forgotten, when Constantine made Jesus a god, 25 December was selected as his birthday, because it was the birthday of other gods, and particularly that of the chief rival to Christianity in the Roman Empire, Mithras. The bishops were typically opportunistic. By celebrating at the same time as Pagan religions they hoped to offer the same benefits and pull in some Pagan punters. Christmas remained the start of a new year up to the tenth century.

In 336 or 354 AD, hoping to counteract the Manichaean heresy—that Jesus was never born at all but was a phantasm—the Christians took the date of the solar birth as the birthday of Jesus. The solar celebration was so widespread and popular that the church could neither ban it, nor stop it being identified in the popular mind with Jesus’s birth anyway. Almost all religions have some root in primitive sun worship, and the Christians merely acknowledged a custom which the adherents of most of the contemporary religions had carried on for many centuries before that time. Jesus was identified with the sun by both Cyprian and Ambrose. Jesus and Mithras had become almost identical in the minds of the western populace.

Church leaders moved the date of Jesus’s birth “after the flesh” from 6 January to the birthday of the Unconquerable Sun. No evidence was quoted, nor any tradition appealed to, to show that the 25 December was the actual birthday. The only attempt made to show that Jesus was actually born upon 25 December, and that the origin of Christmas Day was not Pagan, was based on the Annunciation being the 25 March. From that date—itself selected upon doctrinal and not upon historical grounds—nine months leads to the 25 December, which would, if the Annunciation was a physiological process identical in its working with sexual conception, be the correct date for the birth. As the 25 March was itself a date inherited from Paganism, and not a date supported by evidence of any kind whatsoever, the theory has not gained acceptance even among theologians.

There was no universal agreement upon the 25 December as Christmas Day. The churches of the Eastern Empire accused the Western Church of idolatry and sun worship, and for long continued to observe Christmas Day on the 6 January. The Egyptians did the same until the year 431 AD. But even the 6 January was connected with the birthday of God. Epiphanius argued the birthday of Christ must be the 13th day after the 25 December, corresponding to days for the twelve apostles and Jesus himself, and bringing Christmas Day to the Epiphany, a day observed in Egypt as a festival of the Virgin, Kore Kosmou. 25 December was still listed as the “Birthday of the Unconquerable Sun” in the calendar of Philocalus in 336 AD, the year before Constantine died and a quarter of a century after he had supposedly made the empire Christian, and the Emperor Honorius (395 to 423) could still speak of 25 December as being a “new” festival, yet a text of about the same time says it was one of the three great Christian festivals so holy that theatres had to close by law.

Saint Augustine was one who did not approve of this particular concession to Paganism. Christians were never too keen on following the instructions of their holy texts though they usually made a great show of studying them. Had they taken notice they could not have taken these Pagan practices into the divine religion of Essenism. The scriptures warned against it quite explicitly:

Take heed to thyself that thou be not snared by following them, after that they be destroyed from before thee; and that thou inquire not after their gods, saying, How did these nations serve their gods? even so will I do likewise.
Deut 12:30

It was hard for the gentile Christian converts though. They had lately been celebrating these festivals and all their friends still were. So they thought—“What does it matter?” New religions inherit or copy the doctrines and festivals of the old. The Moslem month of Haj is celebrated at the time of the year when pre-Moslem Pagan festivals had previously been held, and the ancient Pagan rites are still carried out during the Haj celebrations. The ritual remains, the explanation of it changes. The clergy tell us the explanation is a myth in Paganism, but the revealed truth in their patriarchal religion! Christian ministers have been so flexible in the face of serious rivalry as to be unprincipled. Yet in the face of weak or isolated rivals, it has applied the devil’s own punishments as if they were the guardians of hell not heaven.

For Christians, Christ was the real sun that had risen upon the world. Why not boldly pinch the birthday of the unconquered sun? The masses could then be told they were celebrating Jesus. The ribaldry, license and fooling were contrary to Essenic, now Christian, prudery, but despite attempts to stop it all, it thankfully persists until today.

When we celebrate Christmas we continue the practice of hundreds of generations of our remote ancestors, who held festivals at that season every year for many centuries before Christianity had ever been heard of. The harmless festivities of Christmastide, and the spirit of peace and goodwill with which they are traditionally associated, are customs and feelings which it would be sad to see forgotten or eradicated. Peace and goodwill reign more easily when the followers of all the religions join together and celebrate the return of the sun and the beginning of a new year, than when theologians assemble to decry the idolatry of others and to wrangle about which of the gods were really born on the 25 December.

Christmas is not the only Christian festival which ignored the warning of Deuteronomy, and was stolen from ancient Paganism and adapted to the Essenism of Jesus. There is also Easter. Easter, roughly corresponding with the vernal equinox was also a time of festival for the followers of many ancient religions, but the period of the year in which Easter is celebrated does correspond with the biblioal story, as the crucifixion is said to have taken place at the time of the Passover, the two events being theologically parallel. Yet Christians spilt torrents of each other’s blood in quarrels about the fixing of the date of Easter, and accepted Christmas Day without much demur.

The Feast of S John, the Holy communion, the Annunciation of the virgin, the assumption of the virgin, and many others have their roots in ancient Pagan worship. Midsummer Day is the Feast of S John the Baptist and is dedicated also to saints Philip and James. Saints Peter, James, Andrew and Paul were given unimportant days even though we are told they were Christ’s Apostles.



Page Tags: Christmas Origins, Jesus, Christmas, Christianity, Virgin, Mystery, Christ, Star, Saviour, Birthday, Christians, Christmas, Mithras, Pagan, Astronomical Origin, Sun God, God’s Names, Horus

Last uploaded: 19 April, 2008.

Blog Back

Here you can give short responses and suggestions.

 Anything spam-like will be rejected




New. No Blogs Back posted here yet. Be the first one!

If you are having trouble with this form, read this helpful comment From Amelia on Sunday, 6 April 2008

I filled out the comment section below this page… More…

Visitors

website stats   Visitor Map
Google
Web askwhy
adelphiasophism askwhy-science

The Secret Histories of the Bible

Topics

Themes

Exodus

The Resurrection

Evolution

Who Lies Sleeping? cover
Who Lies Sleeping?
The Dinosaur Heritage and the Extinction of Man
ISBN 0-9521913-0-X £7.99

Mystery of Barabbas cover
The Mystery of Barabbas.
Exploring the Origins of a Pagan Religion
ISBN 0-9521913-1-8 £9.99

Hidden Jesus cover
The Hidden Jesus.
The Secret Testament Revealed
ISBN 0-9521913-2-6 £12.99
Sign my Guestbook from Bravenet.com
Free Guestbook from Bravenet.com

Speak! Put your view on the forum
Free Message Forums from Bravenet.com

IP Address Lookup
Open Standards Add Feed to Google

Before you go, think about this…

The large herbivorous dinosaurs probably had to allow their food to ferment in their stomachs because the cycads and ferns they ate were tough and fibrous. Their droppings would therefore be effectively pre-digested food for the infants. Many smaller creatures live on the dung of larger ones and some, like rabbits and mole rats, eat their own to make sure no nutrition is wasted.
Who Lies Sleeping?