THE REAL
CHRISTMAS STORY
Let me say right
from the start of this piece that there is no doubt in my mind that Jesus
Christ really did exist. Flavius Josephus, a contemporary of his times who was
a Jew and also a Roman citizen and a prolific writer, stated in one of his
writings that there was a prophet in Jerusalem called Jesus who was crucified
on the orders of the Roman governor. This makes Jesus’ existence, a matter of
fact.
But the question
that has plagued historians, scientists and religious leaders is; how much of
the Christmas story is really fact and what parts are myths? It is my purpose
in this piece to give you some of the facts that we already know and compare
them with the myths.
Was Jesus born on
December 25th?
That question is the
easiest to answer. He was not born on that date. The early Christian church did
not celebrate Jesus' birth. It wasn't until 440 A.D., that the church
officially proclaimed December 25th as the birth of Christ. This was not based
on any religious evidence but on a pagan feast. Saturnalia was a tradition
inherited by the Roman pagans from an earlier Babylonian priesthood on December
25th and it was used as a celebration of the birthday of the sun god. It was
observed during the winter solstice. The early Christians were well aware of
the dangers facing them under Roman rule so they wisely decided that they would
celebrate the birth of Jesus on the same day as the pagan feast, Saturnalia.
That way, anyone else seeing them celebrating Jesus’ birth would presume that they
are really celebrating the pagan feast.
December 25th was
the winter solstice according to the old Julian calendar, and it was on that
day that Mithraism, chief rivals to Christianity during the fourth century,
celebrated the birth of their god, Mithra. The Christians figured that those
who believed in Mithraism would assume that the early Christians were also
celebrating that religion when in actual fact; they were celebrating the birth
of Jesus and wouldn’t be harassed by the non-believers.
The Bible itself
tells us that December 25th is an unlikely date for Jesus’ birth. Palestine is
very cold in December. It was much too cold to ask the Roman citizens to travel
to the city of their fathers to register for taxes. Also according to the New
Testament, the shepherds were in the fields (Luke 2:8-12). Shepherds were not
in the fields in the winter time. They were only in the fields early in March
until early October. This would place Jesus' birth in the spring or early fall.
It is also known that Jesus lived for 33.5 years and died at the feast of the
Passover, which is at Easter time. He must therefore have been born six months
prior to Easter thereby making the date of his birth around September or early
October.
John the Baptist
also helps us determine that December 25th is not the day that Jesus was born.
Elizabeth, John's mother, was a cousin of Mary. John began his ministry in the
15thyear of Tiberius Caesar. Jesus began his ministry when he was 30 years old.
As Emperor Augustus died on August 19, A.D. 14, that was the accession year for
Tiberius. If John was born on April 19-20, 2 B.C., his 30th birthday would have
been April 19-20, A.D. 29, or the 15th year of Tiberius. This would seem to
imply that the year Jesus was born was 2 B.C. Since John was 5 months older,
this implies that Jesus was born sometime in the autumn of 2 B.C.
I am however more
inclined to believe that Jesus was not born in 2 B.C., but instead, he was born
in 10 B.C. Most experts agree that Jesus was born between 12 and 4 B.C., as King
Herod, who ruled over Judea at the time, is recorded as dying in 4.B.C.
therefore his alleged murder of the babies in Bethlehem had to have obviously
occurred prior to his own death. Augustus had held a complete census of Roman
citizens three times during his rule. They were held in the years 29 B.C., 8
B.C., and 14 A.D. The reason why Joseph who was living in Narzareth at that
time, went to Bethlehem in 8 B.C., was that he always went to Jerusalem once a
year for religious purposes, not unlike Muslims going to Mecca at least once in
their lives if at all possible. The year 14 A.D. is obviously not the year of
Jesus birth and 29 B.C. simply goes too far back. This leaves us with the year
of Jesus birth as being 10 B.C. since he was already two years old when he and
his parents arrived in Bethlehem to stay while visiting Jerusalem nearby. I
will explain that later in this piece.
Matthew claims that
the birth of Jesus occurred during the reign of Herod the Great of Judea, a
puppet king of the Romans, whom we know died in 4 B.C. Luke also tells us that
Jesus birth happened during Herod's reign. Luke even adds what appears to be
detailed and historical evidence of the period. He writes that Jesus was born
during a census or registration of the populace ordered by emperor Augustus at
the time that Quirinius was Roman governor of Syria (Luke 2:1-3). In reality,
this has to be a fabrication because Quirinius was not governor of Syria and
Judea during Herod's kingship. Direct Roman rule over the province of Judea,
where Bethlehem was located, was not established until 6 A.D. In other words,
ten years separated the rule of Quirinius from Herod.
Based on the
foregoing, the birth of Jesus being the 25th of December in the first century
is a myth.
Was it a star
that drew the three wise men from the east to Bethlehem?
Ask yourself this
question. How far away is our nearest star from Earth? Proxima Centauri is the
closest star to
Earth. It is 4.2 light years from us. Sirius is the brightest star in the sky
but it is 8.6 light years from us. Neither of those two stars (other than our
own sun) are the brightest lights in the sky at night. The brightest light in
the sky (other than the sun and moon) is the planet Venus. It follows that
neither the light of these two stars or the reflection of the sun from Venus
would be sufficient enough to be lighting up Bethlehem even on the clearest of
nights.
It therefore follows
that the existence of the star we have seen countless times in paintings,
Christmas cards and in the movies showing Bethlehem being lit up by a star, is
a myth.
First of all, let me
clear up another myth right now. The three men were not kings. It had been said
that they were from the Orient. That does not mean that they were from China,
Korea or Japan. The term ‘Orient’ is derived from the Latin word ‘oriens’
meaning ‘east’. The word ‘magi’ refers to the ancient Zoroastrian priests, so
they would most likely have come from a country where the Zoroastrian religion
was widely practiced. This would be either Iran or Iraq which is obviously east
of Bethlehem. The three men were astrologers. That would justify calling them
‘wise men’. Babylonian astrologers were thoroughly familiar with the movements
of the stars and planets and that is what makes me believe that these three men
came from Babylon, Iraq.
The Bible says about
the three wise men, “And, lo, the star, which they saw in the East, went before
them, till it came and stood over where the young child was.” This would imply
that a star began moving from the east and stood on top of Bethlehem. Stars
don’t move and then suddenly stop, because when the Earth turns each day, the
position of Earth in relation to the stars in the sky shifts. For the star of
Bethlehem to stop would mean that the Earth would have stopped spinning.
Obviously the star stopping and then standing over Bethlehem is another myth.
It is also hard to
believe that the so-called star was needed as a guide to direct the astrologers
from Jerusalem to Bethlehem, a mere eight kilometers away especially since
there was a road that led directly from Jerusalem to Bethlehem and I might add,
still does. I know. I have been on it.
What then were these
three men following? They weren’t following anything because to follow
something is to follow an object, person or animal that is moving and the light
that drew them to Jerusalem was stationary. What then was the light in the sky
that made them choose to go westward to Jerusalem?
Scientists have
extrapolated the stars and planets back to 8 B.C. and have concluded that
during that year that Jesus was two years of age, there were two planets in the
western sky that caused a great light to shine from them. They were Jupiter and
Saturn. Now normally these two planets are not in line with each other however
there is an ancient Babylonian clay tablet dated at 8 BC, which describes the
celestial events for then upcoming 13 months. The tablet shows that Jupiter and
Saturn would remain together in the constellation of Pisces for eleven months
and come in close conjunction three times. This would account for the much
larger light in the sky during that time.
To the Babylonian
astrologers, Jupiter represented the star of Marduk, the supreme Babylonian
god. Saturn was the steady one of the two planets because it was the planet
Jupiter that moved in line with Saturn. The conjunction of Jupiter and Saturn
in the sky predicted from the Babylonian's viewpoint, the end of the old world
order and the birth of a new king chosen by God. To the three astrologers, this
meant that a new king was being born west of them and the only kingdom west of
them was the Kingdom of Herod. They likely had read and discussed the Messianic
prophecies and were anxious to see when this Messianic King would appear and if
so, their interpretation of the conjunction of the two planets would be correct
in foretelling of the birth of a new king in Judea.
The Bible tells
us remarkably little about the star, with only the Gospel of St Matthew
mentioning it. He records the wise men asking: “Where is he who has been born
King of the Jews? For we have seen his star in the east and have come to
worship him.” I believe that when they said that they saw Jesus’ star in the
east, they really meant that they were in the east when they saw the star. My
conclusion is based on logic because if they were heading towards it, the light
from the two planets would have been west of them.
The three Wise Men
from Babylon saw the conjunctions of Jupiter and Saturn all three times in the
eleventh-month period and by the time it occurred the third time, it was then
that they decided to go to Jerusalem to see if their theory about a new king
being born west of them was true. They would have arrived there sometime in the
autumn of 8 B.C.
Why didn’t the
three Wise Men go directly to Bethlehem?
I don’t know how
much the three Wise Men knew about the history of the kings that ruled west of
them but I think I am safe in saying that they at least knew that King Herod
ruled Judea and that his palace was in Jerusalem, hence their journey to Jerusalem
was to confirm their belief that a new king was in Jerusalem.
According to the Gospel
of Mathew, the three Wise Men, from the East are said to have visited Jesus
after his birth, bearing gifts. They are mentioned only in the Gospel of
Matthew, which says that they came “from the east to Jerusalem to worship the
Christ, “born King of the Jews”.
I don’t see how
these three men could have possible suspected that a baby called Jesus would
eventually be called the King of the Jews many years after his birth so that
part of the Gospel is a myth.
Why did they then
after being in Jerusalem, go directly to Bethlehem?
King Herod always
feared that he would be usurped. That is why he ordered the deaths of two of
his own sons. When he learned that there were three men from the east making
enquires as to where the new born king was, he had his soldiers search for them
and bring them to him.
The text describes
the three Wise Men explaining to Herod about the purpose of their visit by use
of a quote from a prophet: “But you, Ephrathah (it was an earlier name for
Bethlehem) though you are little among the thousands of Judah, out of you will
come for me one who will be ruler over Israel, whose origins are from of old,
from ancient times. ― Micah 5:1-3
Let me quote from
the Gospel of Mathew. “When Herod the king heard this, he was troubled,
and all Jerusalem with him and assembling all the chief priests and scribes of
the people, he inquired of them where the Christ was to be born. They told him,
‘In Bethlehem of Judea; for so it is written by the prophet: `And you, O
Bethlehem, in the land of Judah, are by no means least among the rulers of
Judah; for from you shall come a ruler who will govern my people Israel.’ Then
Herod summoned the wise men secretly and ascertained from them what time the
star appeared; and he sent them to Bethlehem, saying, ‘Go and search diligently
for the child, and when you have found him bring me word, that I too may come
and worship him.’
Of course, it is
conceivable that the prophet was referring to King David who was born a
thousand years earlier. In any case, Matthew's introduction of the three Wise
Men gives the reader no reason to believe that they were present on the day of
the Jesus’ birth. It is conceivable that they found Jesus around two years
after his birth, rather than on the exact day of his birth. This may explain
why later in the scripture, Herod allegedly ordered that all babies in
Bethlehem who were two years old or younger were to be killed. If he thought
the so-called new king had just been born, he would have ordered only the
newborns to be killed.
Herod must have
concluded that if there was a new king having been born within the previous two
years, he would have been born in that small town just four miles southeast of
Jerusalem. Now who better to send to Bethlehem than the three men who
proclaimed that their purpose for the visit to Herod’s kingdom was to find the
new king? They wouldn’t raise any suspicions.
According to Mathew,
King Herod told the three Wise Men to go to Bethlehem and find the new king and
to then report to him where the new king was so that he too can worship the new
king. Of course, he had no intentions of worshiping anyone other than God. He
hoped to kill the young usurper.
Did the three
wise men arrive in Bethlehem on the night of Jesus’ birth?
Matthew's
introduction of the three Wise Men gives the reader no reason to believe that
they were present on the day of the Jesus’ birth. It is common knowledge
nowadays that they found Jesus around two years after his birth, rather than on
the exact day of his birth. This may explain why later in the scripture, Herod
allegedly ordered that all babies in Bethlehem who were two years old or
younger were to be killed. In the words of Matthew 2:16-18: “Herod perceiving
that he was deluded by the wise men, was exceeding angry; and sending
(soldiers), killed all the men children that were in Bethlehem, and in all the
borders thereof, from two years old and under.”
I have to accept the
common belief that the three Wise Men found a baby they believed may have been
the new king and that baby was Jesus when he was two years old. Why they chose
him rather than another is beyond my comprehension. By the way, they were not kings. If they were
kings, they wouldn’t have come alone.
Did King Herod really order the murder of the infants in Bethlehem?
This cruel deed of
Herod is not mentioned by the Jewish historian Flavius Josephus or any other
historian of those times, including the writer Luke although Josephus relates
quite a number of atrocities committed by the king during the last years of his
reign. If he did order the slaughter of the small children in Bethlehem, the
number of these children would have been so small that this crime would have
appeared as being insignificant amongst the other misdeeds of Herod and
subsequently not mentioned at all. Further, King Herod needed Roman authority
to kill that many people since he needed that kind of authority when he asked
the Roman emperor for permission to execute his own grown sons. There doesn’t
appear to be any record of him asking for Roman authority to kill the babies in
Bethlehem.
This then raises the
likelihood that the reported massacre and its association with King Herod were
introduced into the scriptures by the writer of Matthew in order to give Jesus
at least as high a human standing within emerging Christianity as Moses held
within Judaism.
If the massacre did
take place, it does not make sense that the Herod's surviving son later recalls
nothing about Jesus nor his importance later as he was preaching to the
multitudes. If his father had ordered the murder of the babies in Bethlehem in
order to eliminate any possible usurper taking his kingdom from him, Herod's
son wouldn't be oblivious of a man called Jesus. Moreover, if Herod and all the
people of Jerusalem knew of Jesus’ birth (Matt. 2:3), why is it that later in
Jesus' career, the same author of Matthew claims that people had not heard of
his miraculous origin and still questioned his miracles and his teachings
(Matt. 13:54-56)? I think Herod got a bum rap for a crime he didn’t commit.
Was Jesus really
born in Bethlehem as we know it?
Surprisingly, Luke
knows nothing about the star, nor the three Wise Men, nor the exact place Jesus
was born other than it was in a manger, but note that there is also no
reference to a stable and animals surrounding the birth of Jesus. This scene is
a product of later Christian imagination based on a text from Isaiah,
“......the ox knows its owner and the donkey its master's crib (manger), but
Israel, does not know, my people do not understand.” Isaiah 1:3).
Luke's reference to
the baby being wrapped in swaddling clothes is copied from the birth of
Israel's famous King Solomon, son of David. This sign of identification sends
an important message to Luke's Jewish-Christian readers that Jesus was to be
even greater than Israel's wisest king. Luke's gospel describes the
visitors to the baby Jesus as shepherds, not the Wise Men. According to the
later writers of the gospels, the shepherds hear of the birth from an
extraterrestrial, which the Bible calls an angel. That version would even make
Jesus’ birth appear as if divine when in fact it was simply a normal birth. I
should add that many Roman emperors tried to convince the populace that their
births were also divine.
The Bible mentions
two Bethlehems. The one most familiar to Christians is Bethlehem south of
Jerusalem. (Micah 5:2) It is one of the oldest towns in Palestine, and was
already in existence at the time of Jacob’s return to the country. Its earliest
name was EPHRATAH, OR EPHRATH or EPHRATAH. (Genesis 35:16,19; 48:7) After the
conquest, Bethlehem appears under its own name, BETHLEHEM-JUDAH. (Judges 17:7;
1 Samuel 17:12; Ruth 1:1,2) The book of Ruth is a page from the domestic
history of Bethlehem. It was the home of Ruth, (Ruth 1:19) and of David.
(1 Samuel 17:12) It was fortified by Rehoboam. (2 Chronicles 11:6) It
was here that Jesus was supposedly born, (Matthew 2:1) and here that he
was visited by the shepherds, (Luke 2:15-17) and the Magi. (Matthew 2.)
The other Bethlehem
lies 71 miles north of Bethlehem-Judah. After Israel’s entry into the Promised
Land, when the land was being divided up among Jacob’s twelve sons, Bethlehem
is listed as one of the cities given to Zebulun, not Judah. (Joshua 19:15) This
Bethlehem is in Galilee and is located 6 miles north west of Nazareth and north
east of Tivon, on the northwest side of the Jezreel valley not far from Mount
Carmel. That is the area where Jesus grew up as a child and as a young man.
We know that there
was a Roman census two years after the time of Jesus birth and all heads of
Roman families and their families were to report to the towns of their births.
Luke got his facts wrong about the census of Augustus. Such an imperial census
would only apply to Roman citizens of the empire, not to the Jews and since Joseph
was a Galilean, he was not under direct Roman rule. That being as it is, it is
beyond me as to why Joseph, who was not an ignorant man, would take his wife
and child on a long journey to Bethlehem for the census taking which didn’t
apply to him. Now he did visit Jerusalem each year and he knew that to do so at
the time of the census taking, it would be crowded in the Bethlehem that was close
to Jerusalem, so I am wondering why he
chose that particular time to go there when he would have had to know that
village would be overcrowded. But go there he did nevertheless and as to be
expected, he couldn’t find any decent place to stay at so he ended up spending
the night in one of the many caves
surrounding the village.
The Gospels do not,
unfortunately, give the date and place of Joseph's birth nor his death so we
have no idea for sure as to whether or not Joseph was born in the Bethlehem
near Nazareth or the one near Jerusalem but for some reason for which I do not
understand, he chose to take himself and his betrothed, Mary to the Bethlehem
near Jerusalem unless it was to stay there during one of their annual visits to
Jerusalem.
All that is known
from the canonical Gospels is that Joseph lived at times in Nazareth in Galilee
and also stayed for a couple of years in Bethlehem in Judea. This may be proof
that Jesus was born two years previous to the visit by the three Wise Men since
according to the gospel of Mathew; Joseph would have fled Bethlehem shortly
after the visit by the three Wise Men in 8 B.C.
It was important,
however, for the authors of both of these gospels, (Mathew and Luke) that Jesus
be born in Bethlehem because it was the city of David from where, it was
prophesied, Israel's ruler would come (Micah 5:2). Even so, John's gospel,
contrary to Matthew and Luke, relates the common knowledge that Jesus was not
born in Bethlehem, and that he was not a descendant of David (John 7:41-42).
Was Joseph a descendant of King David?
One of the first
examples of things not ringing true can be found in the attempts by the authors
of Matthew and Luke to trace the ancestry of Jesus back to the Jewish king,
David. It was from the royal house of David that the messiah was expected.
However, upon close examination, the tables of descent in these gospels become
transparently artificial, with many errors and downright contradictions. For
example, the two gospels cannot agree on the lineage of Joseph, the father of
Jesus. Matthew has 28 generations between David and Jesus, while Luke has 41
for the same period of about 1,000 years. In Matthew's gospel, Joseph's father
(i.e. Jesus' grandfather) is said to be Jacob, while in Luke it is claimed that
he is Heli. They cannot both be right. I guess we will never know the answer to
that question.
The claims in the
early chapters of Matthew and Luke that Jesus was of royal lineage are further
weakened by the fact that elsewhere in all four gospels, there is no indication
during the ministry of Jesus that he and his father were of noble descent.
Rather, he appears as a man of humble background from an obscure rural village
in Galilee. Furthermore, according to Mark, Jesus himself appears to reject the
belief that his messiahship was dependent on Davidic descent (Mark 12:35-37).
Was Jesus conceived by a holy spirit?
The apostle Paul
makes no reference to the virginal conception by the mother of Jesus when
speaking of Jesus' origins and divinity. His epistles were written during the
50's A.D. and predate all of the four gospels. Although Paul never met Jesus
(who died about 30 A.D.), he personally did know James, the brother of Jesus
and yet, despite this eye-witness link to Jesus, Paul apparently knew nothing
of the virgin birth, for he states only that Jesus was ‘born of a woman’
(Galatians 4:4) and was ‘descended from David, according to the flesh’ (Romans
1:3), thereby implying a normal birth. Why then does the Bible say that Jesus
was conceived by a holy spirit?
Mary and Joseph were
betrothed at the time Jesus was conceived and being betrothed in those days
meant that a man and woman could live together but they could not sleep
together until they were married. That meant in simplest terms; no sex until
they were married. When it became apparent that Mary was pregnant, this created
a great problem for Joseph. The law of the land at that time was that if a
woman who was betrothed became pregnant as a result of having sex with another
man who was not her betrothed; the betrothed man was obligated to stone his
betrothed wife to death. Joseph was very much in love with his wife and the
last thing he wanted to do was to kill Mary, his betrothed.
I am convinced that
Joseph impregnated Mary but since it was considered a sin for him to do so
while they weren’t married, he and Mary had no other choice but to declare that
a holy spirit impregnated her. Nowadays, if a man told us that was how his wife
became pregnant, we would say he was nuts. But in those days, the people were
highly superstitious and such a claim would be believed it if was uttered by
someone who was highly respected. The doctrine of the virgin birth of Jesus, so
central to the traditional Christmas story, was not part of the teachings of
the first Christians, whom it should be remembered, also remained within the
Jewish faith in those early years of Christianity.
The silence of the
earliest Jewish-Christian authors about the miraculous birth of Jesus seems
strange, given that they were trying to convince their readers that Jesus was
divine. This silence raises doubts about the authenticity of the later nativity
stories with which we are so familiar.
Was Jesus born in
a manger?
According to the
Bible, Jesus was born in a manger in Bethlehem in Judea. As I said earlier,
Jesus was born in 10 B.C. and his birth wasn’t in Bethlehem, Judea. Further, I
don’t believe that he was born in the Bethlehem near Nazareth since Joseph
already had a home in Nazareth as that was where his carpenter shop was
located.
A manger was a
stable or what we now call a barn where animals were kept. I don’t question the
fact that Joseph and his wife and child went to Bethlehem in Judea for their
annual visit but when they arrived, they had no other choice but to spend their
initial time in such a shelter. Many Roman citizens living in Jerusalem also
were born in Bethlehem and had to go there and stay there temporarily while the
census was being taken. Bethlehem was terribly overcrowded at that time.
My wife and I have
visited the so-called birth place of Jesus and when I saw it, I realized then
that it was not possible that Jesus was born in that exact location. Bethlehem
is rife with caves and it follows that the holy family would have had no other
choice but to stay in a cave until they could get better lodgings. It was the
practice in those days that the shepherds would keep many of their sheep inside
the caves at night because of the cold weather.
The so-called
birthplace of Jesus is on flat terrain and it is not conceivable that it was
previously a cave. Admittedly, there is a nearby hill but that could have had
caves in it but that is not where the church says that Jesus was born. The holy
family could have been in a cave in that hill or another nearby hill where they
stayed. The road to Jerusalem from Nazareth was a long one and if Joseph didn’t
have enough money to rent lodgings in Jerusalem, it would cost them nothing to
sleep in one of the many caves surrounding Bethlehem which was only four miles
from Jerusalem.
Did Joseph really
flee to Egypt?
According to the Gospel
of Mathew, Joseph had a dream that told him to flee to Egypt soon after
Jesus was born. I don’t doubt that Joseph may have had a dream to flee
Bethlehem but it wasn’t right after Jesus was born since Jesus was born
approximately four years earlier. Remember that he was born in 10 B.C., and in
8 B.C., his father Joseph took him to Bethlehem with his mother during one of
their annual visits to Jerusalem. Then the three of them stayed in Bethlehem
for two years before he had his dream and left that town and headed back to
Nazareth.
It is also
impossible to reconcile Luke's account of the family of the newborn Jesus soon
returning to Nazareth in Galilee, with Matthew's assertion that the family of
Jesus immediately fled to Egypt for several years to escape Herod's wrath (Matthew
2:13-14). Luke has Joseph and Mary present with Jesus in the temple in
Jerusalem when he was forty days old, and then returns straightaway to Nazareth
(Luke 2:22,39). Also, Luke records that each year the family went to
Jerusalem for the Feast of Passover (Luke 2:41) this does not tally with
Matthew's claim that they were hiding out in Egypt. Matthew, with his
predilection that Old Testament prophecies be fulfilled in the life of
Jesus, appears to have invented the massacre of the innocents to fulfill a
prophecy of Jeremiah (31:15), and the consequential flight to Egypt to
fulfill Hosea's prediction that “out of Egypt I have called my son.” (Hosea
11:1).
I don’t believe that
Joseph took his family to Egypt. The journey would have been a fairly long one.
They would have had to have traveled to the coast and then south along the
coast to the border of Egypt. The distance would be at least 80 miles. Then to
get to an Egyptian city the size of Jerusalem in Egypt would be Qantara el
Sharqiya which is another 120 miles. That means he would have chosen to go 200
miles into a country he knew nothing about. If he wanted to flee, he would take
his family directly back to Nazareth which was his original home and which was
only about 70 miles north of him along a route he was familiar with. He would
be safe in Nazareth.
Matthew's stories of
the Wise Men's visit to Herod and Jesus and Herod's massacre of the innocents
which caused the holy family to flee to Egypt; are all historically improbable.
Moreover, it should be noted that Luke also got his facts wrong about the
census of Augustus. As I said earlier, such an imperial census would only apply
to Roman citizens of the empire, not to the Galileans such as Joseph because
the Galileans were not under Roman rule at that time.
In ancient times it
was often claimed that important people had miraculous births. Plato was said
to have been born by the union of the god Apollo with his mother. Likewise,
Alexander the Great was said to have been conceived when a thunderbolt fell
from heaven and made his mother Olympias pregnant before her marriage to Philip
of Macedon. In the Book of Genesis we read that sons of gods had
intercourse with women to produce heroes (Genesis. 6:4). Even the
recently discovered Dead Sea Scrolls tell of the miraculous birth of
Noah and how his father Lamech was suspicious that his wife had been made
pregnant by an angel. Also the writings of Philo of Alexandria, who was born
about 20 B.C., contain evidence that some Jews of the period were speculating
about miraculous births of religious heroes. Philo relates how Hebrew notables
such as Isaac and Samuel were conceived by barren women by the intervention of
the divine Spirit.
Fundamental
Christians believe that the Bible is the ‘word of God’, an infallible record of
the Almighty's influence on his creation, and therefore to be taken at face
value. The Bible is definitely the word of Man and the last interpretation of
it took place in the Sixteenth Century when King James ordered that the Gospels
were to be rewritten into one final book. A careful study of the nativity
narratives of Matthew and Luke indicate that the supposedly unerring ‘word of
God’ is full of contradictions and inventions. The most plausible conclusion is
that the familiar Christmas stories in Matthew and Luke are religious myths,
awkwardly grafted onto an earlier non-miraculous tradition about Jesus' birth.
They appear to be legends recorded by later Jewish-Christian writers who were
attempting to explain the origins of a man whom they considered divine.
None of what I have
written here is intended to belittle the man called Jesus. He existed and his
teachings which have been passed down to us for almost two thousand years; are
still as valid now as they were when he told them.
Christmas has always
been a great time of the year for me and my family and no doubt millions of
people around the world. But as time has moved on, there have been attempts at
trying to push Christmas aside. For example, In Texas, a fight has erupted over
whether to remove a nativity scene from a courthouse. In England, the idea of
replacing “Christmas” in some areas with the term “Winterval” has provoked
outrage and rightly so. Many people disagree over whether it’s a time of
religious observance or as an alternative, a commercialized revel. What really
pisses me off is the many stores around the country commercializing Christmas
in November. They could at least wait until the beginning of December.
The early Christian
church, as it did with many things, kind of appropriated or co-opted the
holidays or festivities that were already going on, that had nothing to do with
Christ or with the Christian church. They finally chose December 25th as the
day of Jesus’ birth.
Although the
so-called wise men brought gifts to the baby Jesus, this didn’t bring about
Christmas gifts for centuries after that particular time in history. For many
centuries, Christmas was celebrated by feasts and revelry and of course, much
drinking of alcoholic beverages. Of course, times haven’t changed anything.
That still goes on nowadays also. that aspect was maintained in the Christmas
festivities in Britain and in much of Europe well into the late Renaissance,
even into the 18th century. You have in the Renaissance all kinds of partying
and every court, every household, would appoint a “Lord of Misrule” who was a
master of the party for the 12 days of Christmas. His job was to stir up the
revelry, stir up the disobedience, and play with the idea that this was a time
to break from the ordinary routines of their lives. The church didn’t like that
aspect, but that’s how people celebrated the days before and on Christmas in years
past.
How then did
Christmas re-emerge as a quiet family event in the home?
That was really a
19th-century development. By the beginning of the 19th century, a lot of the
Christmas festivities had gone out of fashion. The Puritans completely turned up
their noses at the Christmas revelry. They felt it was inappropriate for the
occasion. They passed laws against the public celebration of Christmas. Various
invested parties in the 1830s, 1840s started to revive interest in Christmas.
They were reviving a nostalgic vision of merry old England, a vision that never
really existed, but it was attractive — this idea of the family getting
together. At this point Britain was getting increasingly urban, so there was
this movement the cities, that advocated bringing the celebration of Jesus’
birth into the house rather than a public celebration in the streets or in the
village.
There wasn’t a lot
of gift giving associated with Christmas at all during those years. The
gift-giving event was on New Year’s. Christmas wasn’t declared a bank holiday
until 1834. In the late 17th century, when the Puritans had a lot of sway,
there were years there when Parliament sat on Christmas Day. It was a workday.
And even after it was declared an official holiday in Britain in 1834, a lot of
people preferred to take New Year’s as their holiday. You may recall that in
Charles Dicken’s A Christmas Carol, Scrooge wanted his clerk working in his
office all Christmas Day. Dickens in the manuscript wrote about Scrooge’s clerk
wanting Christmas Day off so he could be with his family that day.
"You'll want
all day to-morrow, I suppose?" said Scrooge. "If it's quite
convenient, Sir." "It's not convenient," said Scrooge, "and
it's not fair.”
This makes me
suspect that in England and elsewhere, Everyone who had a job had to go to work
on Christmas day as if it was simply another work day. Of course, if Christmas
fell on a Sunday, they wouldn’t have to go to work.
So singing carols
and a quiet night with the family — that never existed? Well, that existed
among the middle class. So if you had the money to have a household staff to
run that, then you would have done that. It cost a lot to acquire all the
accessories to create that kind of scene, to bring in the food, to create all
of that glamorous elegance.
It was Queen
Victoria's German-born husband, Albert who popularized the Christmas tree in
Britain after their marriage in 1841, the first Christmas card in 1843, and a
revival in carol singing. However, it turns out that according to the rules of
polite English behavior, Christmas trees shouldn’t be put in in the home until
Christmas Eve. I for one and I sure that I speak for millions of people, would
like to see my tree up for at least a week before Christmas and at least a
couple of days after Christmas.
Some families open
their presents after a late supper on Christmas Eve. My family opens their
presents after breakfast on Christmas Day. Some people believe that Christmas
presents should not be placed under the tree. My family members place the
presents under the tree. It’s fun watching my grandchildren prowling under the
Christmas tree to see if any presents have been left behind. One thing I have
noticed about Christmas trees is that rarely does anyone buy the ‘icicles’
(thin strips of silver paper) to throw onto the trees anymore. They were hard
to remove for the next year.
Boxing Day was a far
more charitable day than Christmas was. It referred to the literal boxes that
might be given by a landowner to his workers. Boxes were also given to the
poor. By the 19th century those boxes would eventually be given to your
household staff. They’d be working like dogs on Christmas Day to support your
party, and on Boxing Day they might have a half-day off or a full holiday, and
they might be given a little box of money, small tokens, some biscuits or
homemade wine.
I have always loved
Christmas. The carols and other Christmas songs certainly bring cheer to
Christians everywhere and no doubt many non-Christians also. When I lived in
the small town of Wells in the middle of British Columbia, a group of singers
would go up and down the small streets singing carols on Christmas Eve. I would
get all goose pimply when I would hear I’m Dreaming of a White Christmas because
in Wells, during every Christmas Eve and Christmas Day, soft snow was always
falling to the ground.
As a child, I always
believed in Santa Claus. I was never convinced however that he only brought
toys to good children. I think even us bad children got toys at Christmas. When
I lived in that small mining town in British Columbia as a young child
during World War II, the two mines bought toys for every child in the town and
Santa was there at the community centre handing them out to our outstretched
hands when our names were called. When my two daughters were of an age when
they would no longer believe in Santa Claus, my wife and I told them that we
would stop hanging the stockings from the mantel of our fireplace. I said
however that if they still believed in Santa Claus, he would visit us and fill
their stockings. My daughter’s weren’t stupid. They told us they believed in
Santa Claus even when they were in their late teens and Santa always filed
their stocking at the mantel above the fireplace year after year.
How did the kindly
Christian saint, good Bishop Nicholas, become a roly-poly red-suited symbol for
merry holiday festivity and commercial activity? History tells the tale.
The year 1821
brought some new joys of Christmas with publication of the first lithographed
book in America, the Children's Friend. This ‘Santa Claus’ arrived from the
North in a sleigh with a flying reindeer. The anonymous poem and illustrations
proved pivotal in shifting imagery away from a saintly bishop. Santa Claus fit
a didactic mode, rewarding good behavior and punishing bad, leaving a long,
black birchen rod, directs a parent's hand to use when virtue's path his sons
refuse. Gifts were safe toys, pretty doll, peg-top, or a ball; no crackers,
cannons, squibs, or rockets to blow their eyes up, or their pockets. No drums
to stun their mother's ear, nor swords to make their sisters fear; but pretty
books to store their mind with knowledge of each various kind. The sleigh
itself even sported a bookshelf for the pretty books. The book also notably
marked Santa Claus' first appearance on Christmas Eve, rather than December
6th.
The jolly elf image
received another big boost in 1823, from a poem destined to become immensely
popular, A Visit from St. Nicholas, now better known as The Night
Before Christmas.
One year, I gave my
grand children a special gift that was in book form. It was The Night Before
Christmas. Except, I read the story and my voice was recorded in the book
and when they turned each page, music would follow and then my voice would
continue reading them the story.
I sincerely hope
that your Christmas was an enjoyable time for you and your families. To those
of you who don’t celebrate Christmas, I wish you seasons greetings.
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