| Some Complex Answers to Simple
Questions
:-)
A Historical Trivia
compiled for
YOU by only-4-u-Kids.com
|
Don't bet the farm
First off, they
didn't exactly keep birth records of the common folk in 0
or 1 or 2 AD (this is not to say that Jesus was common, but
well, you know the story.) Secondly, even if they did,
there's the problem of leap year. Every four years the
powers that be add an extra day to compensate for a less
than perfect rotation of the earth. The Romans even didn't
know about that, convoluting time and calendars even
more.
To complicate matters a bit more, some people back then
used a lunar calendar and some used the solar version that
we use today. Finally, the authors of the Gospels (Mathew
and Luke particularly) either didn't know or didn't think
it was important enough to mention the date of Jesus'
birth. Who even knows if they recognized birthdays in
ancient Judea?
The bottom line is that nobody knows the exact date of
Jesus' birth, but the smart money is betting that it was
sometime in early spring. There's some historical data, but
the best hint is that famous story about shepherds tending
their flocks by night. Shepherds tend to only stay up with
the sheep during lambing season, and lambing season is in
spring. But since no one knows, you might as well go along
with the spirit of the season and enjoy all the cheer and
good will towards men.
Hat Tricks
There is,
however, some interesting history to the day we choose to
remember the birth of the Christ child. It's not just some
random date that somebody pulled out of a hat you know.
There have been festivals of every sort around the winter
solstice going back to the Babylonians. But it was the
Roman Emperor Aurelia who fixed the actual date. He called
December 25th "The Birthday of the Unconquered Sun", and
put it right in the middle of the feast of Saturnalia. (The
Romans really knew how to have a feast: Saturnalia lasted a
week.)
This was a always a time a great merry making there were
big dinners, halls bedecked with laurels and green trees,
people carrying lighted candles through the streets, and
the giving of gifts was a common practice. In fact, you
might say that the Christmas spirit is really the spirit of
Saturnalia passed on over time.
Enter the Christians
The Christians,
in the meantime, were having the "Mass of Christ" at
various times and places. This wasn't a commemoration of
the birth of Jesus so much as it was a time to reflect on
His life and acts. So, when Constantine made Christianity
the religion of Rome, the Catholics needed a way to convert
the pagans running around the streets of Rome with their
candles and presents to Christian practices.
One imagines it went a little something like this: "You
have an unconquered sun, we have an unconquered Son. You
give gifts -- we have wise men bringing gifts. You have
bonfires and lamps and candles -- we have a new star. It's
not really all that hard put the two together." Or
something like that.
So, the pagans became Christians, and everybody got a day
to celebrate selflessness, joy, and light.
***In
association with www.MyMerrychristmas.com***
|
|
|