Christmas : The Pagan Holiday

 

It’s funny when I hear people say “Keep Christ in Christmas” or “I put Christ not an X in Christmas” which is a whole other stupid argument. But given that Christ was never part of Christmas season. Jesus of the Christ or Jesus of Nazareth was not born anywhere in December, especially the 25th at all. He was born sometime in the summer between July and August.

People need to stop thinking that Christmas is a Christian holiday, since everything that is considered a tradition for the holiday come from other pre-Christian holidays. When the early Christians started their missionary travels, they had a soft spot for the Classical Pagans. These Christian missionaries were all fascinated with many of the traditions they had seen.

People who believe that this is Jesus’s birthday because faith says so are the same people who think Jesus was white, blonde hair and blue eyed. Which we[ all know that he was not, especially coming from the Middle East during the time of the Roman Empire.

Christmas wasn’t even a major holiday for the early Christians, Christianity took hold in the 5th Century around 436 DCE, and then Christianity didn’t become a major religion of the Roman Empire in 523 DCE.

Originally Christmas was not a slumber holiday it was noisy ruckus and all around none “Christian”, and it didn’t become an official holiday in the U.S. until June 26th 1870. Before that Christmas didn’t become a major Christian Festival until the 7th century. Romans celebrated Saturnalia in December to mark the end of their harvest season. There was gambling, singing, small orgies and even cross dressing.

In Europe, Yule was celebrated by the Celts, Gauls, Scandinavians and other cultures. Yule was celebrated for the Birth of the Sun, and with this tradition people would burn logs and dance around evergreen tree, sometimes naked to ward of the winter depression that people would have during deep weather conditions.

Another interesting fact about Saturnalia was where everything was okay to do, the laws were suspended during the celebration it was like the “Original Purge”.

As Christianity spread throughout Europe in the 6th and 7th century, most people didn’t give up their Pagan Traditions, so monks transformed these Pagan parties and traditions to reflect the birth of Jesus. The inserting of the Christ figure into the Winter figure and holiday was a way the church and community compromised.

Christmas stayed these party and debauchery festival for nearly a thousand years. In England the common people in the towns along with the rich would get drunk, wear costumes, then crown a bum the “Lord of Misrule” during the festival. People would go door to door demanding food and wine from the rich or they would cause violence to them.

Oliver Cromwell banned Christmas when he took power after dethroning Charles I. It was banned from 1653-1658, he ordered soldiers to patrol the streets, seizing any food they discovered being prepared for Christmas. When the Puritans came to the colonies, they banned Christmas in all the colonies, because Christmas had no place in a Christian place. Most towns made you pay a fine if you did anything that remotely linked to Christmas.

Christmas has never been the Christian Celebration that we have come to think of, until the late 19th century and Mr. Macy wanted to commercialize on the holiday. It was when Immigrants brought their traditions to The United States and the rest of North America.

These 6 Christmas Traditions Are Actually Pagan Customs

1. Gift-giving and Saturnalia

Not only is December a time to celebrate winter solstice, but between the 17th and 24th of the month, the Romans also celebrated Saturnalia. This was a pagan holiday in honour of the agricultural god, Saturn. Romans would spend the week of Saturnalia much like how we spend Christmas holidays today – feasting, drinking, giving gifts, and being joyful.

These days we fork out lots of money on Christmas gifts, but back then the Romans exchanged small gifts for the sake of good luck. The idea was to give a gift in the hope of bringing in a bountiful harvest the next year. Rather than have huge lists of gifts to give, the Romans also shared only one gift with one other person. Somewhere along the line, giving gifts for luck and prosperity became a multimillion-dollar business… isn’t that funny?

2. Santa’s image & Christmas stockings

Our current modern day image of Santa Claus, clad in red fur with a big white beard, was largely developed by Coca-Cola in the 1930s. But the idea of an old man giving gifts to children dates much earlier than that, back to the time of the pagans.

Father Christmas, otherwise known as St. Nicholas, was a patron saint of children, the poor, and prostitutes. Living around 4th century AD, St. Nicholas was a generous bishop who was known for giving gifts to the poor, sporting a big beard and a long cloak much like the Santa we know and love.

But even before St. Nicholas, there was another bearded old man called Odin. This deity was worshipped by early Germanic pagan tribes, traditionally portrayed as an old man with a long, white beard with an 8-legged horse called Sleipnir who he would ride through the skies (just like Santa’s reindeer). During the winter, kids would fill their booties with carrots and straw and leave them by the chimney for Sleipnir to feed on. Odin would fly by and reward the children with little presents in their booties, much like we do with Christmas stockings today.

The Santa Claus we all imagine in our heads today is a mishmash of the generous St. Nicholas, the god Odin and Sleipnir, and Coca-Cola’s iconic red-dressed character.

3. Christmas carols

While the carols we sing for Christmas are undeniably Christian, the tradition itself of going door-to-door singing to your neighbours comes from another pagan tradition called wassailing. The rather funny word comes from the Anglo-Saxon phrase of ‘waes hael’, translating to ‘good health’. Every year, wassailers would roam through their villages in small groups, singing loudly with the aim of banishing evil spirits and wishing good health to those around them.

No wassailing group was complete without their traditional drink on hand – made from mulled ale, curdled cream, roasted apples, eggs, spices, and sugar. In the 13th century, St. Francis took inspiration from these happy choirs and started the tradition of Christmas carolling.

4. Kissing under a mistletoe

Ever wondered about the correlation between mistletoe and kissing? Well, funnily enough, the tradition goes all the way back to the pagans. Everyone from the Romans and Celts to the Druids and the Norse had a thing about mistletoe. It was considered to be a highly sacred plant, involved in several pagan rituals.

In the Roman world, mistletoe honoured the god Saturn. To keep him happy, they would perform fertility rituals underneath sprigs of mistletoe – yes, that’s exactly what it sounds like! We’ve certainly toned it down as far as mistletoes are considered, and left it with just a simple kiss – probably a good idea since family is always around.

In the world of the Druids, mistletoe symbolised peace and joy. In times of war, if enemies were to meet underneath woodland mistletoe then they would drop their weapons and form a truce until the next day. In a way, kissing is a form of truce…

5. Decking the halls with holly

Mistletoe wasn’t the only sacred plant for pagans. Holly was another holy plant connected with the god Saturn. During the Saturnalia holiday, Romans made holly wreaths to exchange as gifts for good luck. At the time of Saturnalia, early Christians began to celebrate Christmas, however they were often persecuted for practicing their new religion. It was lucky that Christmas coincided with Saturnalia as it allowed Christians to harbour a cover for their Christmas celebrations.

To avoid detection and make it look like they were celebrating Saturnalia, Christians started hanging holly wreaths around their homes. This allowed them to recognize other Christians and still do something nice to celebrate their sacred holiday. Eventually, as pagans decreased, holly became a symbol of Christmas instead of Saturnalia.

6. Christmas tree decorating

We sure have taken a lot of inspiration from the Romans, and tree decorating is just another borrowed tradition! Besides feasting, drinking, and exchanging gifts during Saturnalia, Romans also hung small metal ornaments on trees outside their homes. Each of these little ornaments represented a god, either Saturn or the family’s personal patron saint.

Early Germanic tribes practiced a similar tree decorating tradition, this time with fruits and candles to honour the god Odin throughout winter solstice. Christians seemed to have merged the tree decorating with ornaments, candles, and fruits to make Christmas tree decorating one extravagant tradition.


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