Xmas Decoded (the Origin of Christmas)
Every year millions of Christians around the world are
busy decorating their homes with Christmas trees, lights, and candles. Malls
and shops are in full steam competing with selling and marketing strategies
through seasonal advertisements, dramatic window decorations, and anything that
would give the consumers a feeling of warmth, in other words, to attract and
make a sale. Whether you like it or not, whether you have a commercial or
religious point of view of it; Christmas season is in the Air. According to
Odon, my younger brother, the smell of Christmas is the smell of burned out
Christmas light bulbs and gift wrappers. But there is something more to unwrap
about Christmas, behind the festive lights, the truth of Christmas is
forgotten, mostly untold.
The holiday that unite Christians to celebrate the birth of Jesus Christ, all
customs of it, existed long before Jesus Christ was born.
The Romans converted this pagan legacy to a celebration of the god Saturnus,
and the rebirth of the sun god during the winter solstice period. Solstice
means “sun stands still”. In the northern hemisphere it is the shortest day and
longest night of the year, occurring on the 20th, 21st or 22nd of December.
The winter holiday became known as Saturnalia and was characterized by
gift-giving, feasting, and singing.
Time
went by, more Christians observed these celebrations, and as Christianity
spread, the Church became alarmed by the continuing practice among its members to
indulge in pagan customs and celebrate the festival of Saturnalia. The futile
attempts of the Church to prohibit these practices made them eventually decide
to adopt the customs and make them better suited to honor Jesus Christ.
Five years later, Constantine the Great (the first Christian Roman emperor)
changed the ancient solstice celebrations into Christmas, an immovable feast
celebrating the nativity of Christ.
Besides of the Shepherds, there are other references to the possible birth date
of Jesus Christ. In the 6th Century, the Roman monk-mathematician-astronomer
Dionysis Exeguus unintentionally committed what has become “history's greatest
numerical error in terms of cumulative effect”. In reforming the calendar (as
we know it) to revolve around the birth of Christ, he miscalculated the
Nativity by at least 5 years off. Thus, the reference to the Birth of Jesus
“2000 years ago” is wrong. Knowing this and considering the star that the Magi
followed, also known as the Star of Bethlehem, which could be any of the astral
markers that appeared in 6, 5 and 4BC, Jesus was born in or before 4BC.
Merry Christmas Everyone!

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