Showing posts with label History-Religion. Show all posts
Showing posts with label History-Religion. Show all posts

Wednesday, 29 December 2010

Did the Germans invent Christmas?

Super Santaby Rebecca K. Morrison

Roast goose and red cabbage, bratwurst, gingerbread, candles, hand-crafted wooden figures from the Erzgebirge, blown-glass baubles for the Christmas tree, The Nutcracker and “Silent Night”: these are some of the ingredients that create Gemütlichkeit (a kind of jovial cosiness), Geborgenheit (snug security) and Innigkeit (an inner warmth, awareness of soul) – three words treacherous to translate yet integral to a mood that sees millions flock to the Christmas markets of Berlin, Nuremberg, Dresden and Cologne. German Christmas receives uncharacteristically good press, capturing a lost world of innocence, some argue, a holiday celebrated thus since time immemorial.


Read full article here

Friday, 24 December 2010

Was Jesus Born on December 25Th?

Was Jesus born on December 25th? No. The Roman Catholic Church adopted this date to take away from the worship of the pagan myth Saturn on this date (among other false gods that were supposedly born or celebrated on this date). It wasn't until A.D. 440 that they officially proclaimed December 25th as the birth date of Christ. 
Jesus's Birth Pictures, Images and PhotosBut could Christ have been conceived on that date? Yes. The evidence to His birth date remains with the shepherds, who were keeping watch of their flocks. "And there were in the same country shepherds abiding in the field, keeping watch over their flock by night." (Luke 2:8) Shepherds, watching over their flocks in fields just east of Bethlehem, were the first people told of the birth of Jesus. In December Palestine is very cold. Shepherds were not in the fields during the winter time. They are in the fields early in March until early October. This would place Jesus' birth in the spring or early fall. It is agreed upon by most scholars 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 the other side of Easter - making the date around the September/October time frames.