Not even the best Biblical scholars or archeologists can say
with any certainty the precise day of the birth of Jesus Christ. There are
strong arguments and historical record that, for whatever reason, that day has
been celebrated on or near pagan holidays. Sol Invictus (the day of the
unconquered sun) is a Roman Saturnalia day of celebration occurring on what is
now December 25 of our calendar. The Winter Solstice occurs on December 21, and
was a day of celebration long before Jesus was born.
Is it mere coincidence that these dates were chosen to
celebrate His birth, or did the Catholic Church pick these Pagan holidays to
give recent converts an alternate reason to celebrate the day? Since sometime
around the 16th century, celebration of the day Christ was born has
grown in nature from a pious religious observance to the crescendo in the 20th
century of joy and good tidings surrounding His birth.
Here in the 21st century, we are seeing
increasing trends toward secularism and yes, even atheism. Separation of church
and state is becoming separation from church by the state. Today we have
recently manufactured celebrations for the season such as Kwanza and Festivus
(yes folks, there are actually people who have adopted the ridiculous holiday
made up for the Seinfeld comedy show). Christmas is increasingly replaced with
X-mass, Christmas carols sung in school can not contain references to God or
Jesus, some stores no longer play Christmas music, and Nativity scenes can no
longer be displayed on public grounds. They have all but taken Christ out of
Christmas.
Maybe the downward slide toward a secular holiday began in
the last century when the drive was on to give bigger and more expensive
presents each year – not just to your
kids, but an ever-expanding list of others. Retailers began to rely on the
Christmas season for their entire year’s profit. Christmas music was timed to
get people in the mood not to merely celebrate the birth of Christ, but to buy. Thanksgiving and Christmas became “the holidays.”
Christmas music is piped throughout stores and malls beginning on Thanksgiving.
Mailboxes are stuffed with catalogs, and television commercials inculcate
children with the latest gotta have
toys and Christmas goodies, although that is not the limit of their
brainwashing. These days, even adults are imprinted with big ticket items such
as luxury cars as gifts.
We have reached the point where the day after Thanksgiving,
aka “Black Friday,” is a major highpoint marked on every calendar. And now even
one day of incessant spending is not enough. They have an entire week of “Black
Friday” sales and the stores are even open on Thanksgiving! What a day to be
thankful for. We can gorge ourselves on Turkey, Yams and cranberries then go
right out and splurge on junk and trinkets you never would have bought at any
other time of year – and for people you haven’t given even the time of day the
rest of the year.
Secularists have even managed to re-name the holiday so
those not of the Christian faith won’t feel like they are celebrating the birth
of a religion they don’t believe in by buying presents. That is sure to help
the bottom line of retailers.
Okay, let’s get back to the “reason for the season.”
Presents? Sure, the Magi brought the newborn Christ presents of Gold,
Frankincense, and Mir. The baby Jesus was destined to become the founder of the
largest religion on earth, and as many believe the salvation of our souls. For
someone like this you give presents (I’m not sure what Mir is, though, but a
hotel room might have been more appreciated that night). For your grouchy old Aunt Henrietta and
Uncle Charles, you don’t spend money you don’t have on your credit card to buy
presents they would never appreciate. They can’t save your soul and probably
won’t even leave you in their will.
Some people say we are recovering from the “great
recession.” Maybe someone might be doing a little better than they had been the
last few years. I’m not one of those fortunate people, and I’m not likely to
shower gifts on hoards of people at Christmas time.
I will celebrate December 25th as the birth of
Jesus Christ, and wish everyone a merry Christmas, while I forgo the Festivus
pole and Kwanza festivities. And just so I don’t alienate all the secularists
and atheists, I wish you a prosperous season and a happy Sol Invictus (be sure
to wear sunscreen for the celebration).
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