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Taking Christ Out Of Christmas
Contributed by Denn Guptill on Dec 2, 2023 (message contributor)
Summary: If Christmas has become a "cultural" holiday, This message looks at what happens when we try and take out all of the religious elements.
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Have you noticed that every year, people seem more intent on secularizing Christmas? They wish you a “Happy Holiday” or “Seasons Greetings” and then have presentations at school that make no mention of the Manger or the Wise Men, let alone the Christ Child. Now, I may be a little overly sensitive, but somehow, I think that if the school tried to secularize Muslim or Jewish Holidays in the same fashion, that just wouldn’t be right.
Anyway, maybe they are right.
Maybe, just maybe, Christmas itself has become more of a cultural holiday and should have the various religious elements removed so as not to offend those who might not practice the Christian faith.
This morning, we are going to take a look at what happens when we take Christ out of Christmas.
Well, the obvious thing is that we won’t be able to say Merry Christmas anymore.
If we are going to do this right, the first thing we need to do is take his name out of the holiday. That’s why we had Christmas in the first place, to celebrate the birth of Christ.
Most people realize the date of Christmas was originally used in pagan celebrations in Rome to celebrate the passing of the winter solstice. The ancients knew that by this time in December, the shortest day and longest night had passed, and with that came the promise of longer days, shorter nights and eventually spring. Around AD 270, Emperor Aurelia capitalized upon the heathen worship of the sun and declared December 25th as the birthday of the Unconquered Sun.
The date of December 25th as the celebration of Christ’s birth was first seen in a Roman calendar dating from approximately AD 336 in AD 354 at the beginning of the reign of Liberius as the bishop of Rome, the 25th of December had become the official date for the celebration of the birth of Christ in the church.
But really. You know as well as I do that it is very unlikely that Christ was born during the winter months of Israel. Those cold and wet winter nights. Why not?
Good question. We are told in Luke 2:8 That night there were shepherds staying in the fields nearby, guarding their flocks of sheep.
Now we are told, by those who should know, that the usual time for the sheep to be kept in the fields surrounding Bethlehem is after the last of the winter rains in April and before the rains start up again in November.
But December wasn’t always the choice for celebrating Christ’s birthday, in the two hundred years after the death of Christ, Christians celebrated his birth on January 6, April 19, May 20 and several other dates.
A number of years ago, a British physicist and astronomer, David Hughes, calculated that the date of Christ’s birth was September 17th, 7 B.C. He based this on various scientific evidence, including that of a conjunction of two planets, Jupiter and Saturn, in the constellation of Pisces on that date.
He concludes that this extraordinary celestial display was the “star” seen by the distant wise men. But the truth is that we really don’t know when Christ was born. Historically, it would have had to have been before 4 BC, which was the death of Herod the Great.
Because of the weather patterns, it is doubtful if it would have happened outside of that seven-month spread between April and November.
But it really doesn’t matter, does it? The fact is that if we are going to take all of the religious symbolism out of Christmas, we have to start by getting rid of the Christ in Christmas.
So, you may think that leaves us with wishing people a Merry X-Mas.
Not! You see, according to Wikipedia, The ‘X’ comes from the Greek letter Chi, which is the first letter of the Greek word Christós, which became Christ in English.
If we drop the Christ and the X, that leaves us wishing people a Merry ----mas.
And that really doesn’t work either because the word Christmas was a combination of the words Christ and Mass, and while the word Mass comes from the Latin Missa, which simply means “The Meeting,” historically, it has referred to the public celebration of the Eucharist in the Catholic Church.
Or, very simply, mass means church service, which, of course, is rife with religious symbolism.
So, I guess we’ll just have to wish people a Merry ------, and we’ll have to hope that people don’t get confused and think that we are talking about Mary, the mother of Christ. So, we leave them with Merry because of the different spellings.
So where does that leave us? We won’t call it Christmas we’ll have to simply refer to it as the Holidays, and even that’s wrong because the word holiday is simply the diminutive of the words, Holy Day.