DWise1
Well-Known Member
cornutt said:Merry Christmas and Happy Hanukkah!
(DWise1: Do we now start the discussion about Julian vs. Gergorian calendars and what day and year Jesus might have actually been born on?)
In my Winter Solstice thread, I named the solstice as being "The Reason for the Season". Somebody finally bit.
First, I do not believe that anyone who has given the matter much serious thought still believes that Jesus was born 24/25 December in the Year One (note, there was no year zero, so the 21st century started on 01 Jan 2001, not in 2000 -- see my Millennium page at http://members.aol.com/dwise1/trivia/dennis.html) -- though I have been surprised before and no doubt will again. There is no biblical basis for that date, unlike Easter whose date does have a biblical basis. It has been suggested that, based on the practice of shepherding, Jesus would have been born some time in the Spring.
And it has also been suggested, based on historic records of Tiberius' census, that when Shorty Dennis (Dionysius Exiguous -- pardon the play on "Shorty" George, but this is a dance forum after all [grin]), created the Anno Domini reckoning of the years circa 525 CE, he made an error which threw it off by about 4 years, so that Jesus would have been born circa 4 BCE and not in 1 CE.
I'll let others argue those points (as well as whether that birth actually occured at all), because the actual date and actual event have nothing to do with the date on which Christmas is celebrated.
The Winter Solstice was an important time of year for Sun-god worshippers, because it marks the turning-point in the battle between the Sun and the Darkness and so it has become the date of the birth (or re-birth) of the Sun god. Celebration of this date and its importance and symbolism had become nearly universal by the time of the Roman Empire in the myriad of sun-god religions in the Northern Hemisphere. This led to the official Roman establishment circa 274 CE of a holiday dedicated to Sol Invictus, "The Unconquered Sun", and celebration of the birth of the Sun, Natalis Invicti, on 25 December (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sol_Invictus). For whatever reason(s), that date was adopted by early Christians and later was codified by the Church.
So, if the Winter Solstice is on 21/22 Dec, why then would it be celebrated on 24/25 Dec? Anyone out there know that answer?
[not wanting to give everything away]