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This is long (had to break it up into 5 posts) and contains a lot of info.... some of which may already be known. The site this (a transcript from a radio broadcast) originally came from, miltontimmons.com, (I've had the link saved for close to 10 years) is now defunct, so I don't think anyone will mind if I post all of the content here.
1/5
Every December we experience the greatest media blitz of nonsense and balderdash outside of a presidential election. Newspapers and broadcasters repeat their obligatory editorials about the deplorable "commercialization" of Christmas. They moan that "we seem to have lost the true meaning of Christmas and perverted it into a pagan holiday," and so on.
The pope prays for peace. Charlie Brown again goes in search of the "true meaning" of Christmas. Tiny Tim again leads old Scrooge on the path to righteousness. And we are treated to the further adventures of Rudolph, the Littlest Angel, the Grinch, and the Little Drummer Boy. If Christmas had not existed, Walt Disney would have created it.
We have been told hundreds of times that Christmas is a celebration of the beginning of Christianity and that it all started on the evening of December 24, exactly one thousand, nine hundred and eighty-five years ago, in a stable in the little town of Bethlehem – and everything will be slanted to convey the impression that Eyewitness News was there to cover it.
There isn't a word of truth in any of this mythology. So how did this winter celebration called "Christmas" actually come about?
If it didn't originate nineteen-hundred and eighty-five years ago, when did Christmas start? It goes all the way back to the formation of our solar system. It just happens that our little planet – the third one out from a minor star named Sol – spins on an axis that's tilted at a slight angle to its orbital plane around the sun. This means that for half of the orbit the upper half of the planet faces the sun, and during the other half of the orbit the lower half faces the sun. This causes our solar year to have four seasons. When the Northern Hemisphere tilts toward the sun, we have summer here in America, while those in the Southern Hemisphere are having winter, and so on. From our point of view, as summer approaches, the sun comes up a little earlier each morning, moves a little farther north each noon, and sets a little later each evening. Finally, at some point, the sun stops its northward migration and turns around and begins heading south for the winter. When the sun reaches the northernmost apogee, that is called the summer solstice, and it is the longest day of the year. The word solstice comes from two ancient words: Sol, which was the name of a sun god, and stice, which meant "still". So it is the day when the sun stands still. The winter solstice, therefore, is the shortest day of the year. It naturally follows that midway between the summer and winter solstices, there comes a time when days and nights are equal in length. And these are called the equinoxes. "Equi" means "equal", and "nox" means "nights". These celestial points give the year four corners. It takes about six weeks for changes in the sun's position to have an effect on the weather systems of the world. So, instead of the winter solstice marking the middle of winter, it is used to designate the beginning of cold weather. The vernal equinox marks the beginning of the spring thaw. The summer solstice marks the beginning of hot weather, and the autumnal equinox marks the beginning of harvest.
Ancient people were very dependent on the seasons. That is why all cultures in all parts of the world have held their major religious festivals on these four occasions.
In the days of the Roman republic, the calendar was numbered from the founding of Rome – which, according to the present calendar, would be 753 B.C.E. And March 15, called the Ides of March, was designated as New Year's Day. However, this was a lunar calendar rather than a solar calendar, so the months rotated throughout the year. One year March 15 might be in the summer, and a few years later it would be in the winter.
Greece, and all of northern Europe, operated on a solar calendar, with the new year starting on the winter solstice. When the Romans invaded Greece in the fifth century B.C.E., they realized the advantages of a solar calendar. In 153 B.C.E., New Year's Day was moved to January first, since Janus was the two-faced god of doorways and new beginnings.
Finally, in 46 B.C.E., Julius Caesar switched from a lunar to a solar calendar. He divided the year into 365 and one-quarter days, with twelve "moons", or months, all of which had either 30 or 31 days, except February, which had 28 – and 29 every fourth year. New Year's Day was still on January first.
The major festival of the year in ancient Rome was called the "Saturnalia", and it centered on the winter solstice. When the Julian calendar was first devised, the solstice fell on December 25. But the Julian calendar had an error of eleven minutes. The year is actually 365 days, 6 hours, 11 minutes and a few seconds. So by the third century C.E. the solstice had crept backwards to approximately December 23.
At this time, the emperor Aurelian established an official holiday called "Sol Invicti" – meaning unconquered sun, in honor of the Syrian sun god "Sol", and also in honor of himself, since the emperors were regarded as the divine incarnation of Apollo. This holiday was held on December 24 and 25. And it more or less established December 25 as the official solstice.
1/5
Every December we experience the greatest media blitz of nonsense and balderdash outside of a presidential election. Newspapers and broadcasters repeat their obligatory editorials about the deplorable "commercialization" of Christmas. They moan that "we seem to have lost the true meaning of Christmas and perverted it into a pagan holiday," and so on.
The pope prays for peace. Charlie Brown again goes in search of the "true meaning" of Christmas. Tiny Tim again leads old Scrooge on the path to righteousness. And we are treated to the further adventures of Rudolph, the Littlest Angel, the Grinch, and the Little Drummer Boy. If Christmas had not existed, Walt Disney would have created it.
We have been told hundreds of times that Christmas is a celebration of the beginning of Christianity and that it all started on the evening of December 24, exactly one thousand, nine hundred and eighty-five years ago, in a stable in the little town of Bethlehem – and everything will be slanted to convey the impression that Eyewitness News was there to cover it.
There isn't a word of truth in any of this mythology. So how did this winter celebration called "Christmas" actually come about?
If it didn't originate nineteen-hundred and eighty-five years ago, when did Christmas start? It goes all the way back to the formation of our solar system. It just happens that our little planet – the third one out from a minor star named Sol – spins on an axis that's tilted at a slight angle to its orbital plane around the sun. This means that for half of the orbit the upper half of the planet faces the sun, and during the other half of the orbit the lower half faces the sun. This causes our solar year to have four seasons. When the Northern Hemisphere tilts toward the sun, we have summer here in America, while those in the Southern Hemisphere are having winter, and so on. From our point of view, as summer approaches, the sun comes up a little earlier each morning, moves a little farther north each noon, and sets a little later each evening. Finally, at some point, the sun stops its northward migration and turns around and begins heading south for the winter. When the sun reaches the northernmost apogee, that is called the summer solstice, and it is the longest day of the year. The word solstice comes from two ancient words: Sol, which was the name of a sun god, and stice, which meant "still". So it is the day when the sun stands still. The winter solstice, therefore, is the shortest day of the year. It naturally follows that midway between the summer and winter solstices, there comes a time when days and nights are equal in length. And these are called the equinoxes. "Equi" means "equal", and "nox" means "nights". These celestial points give the year four corners. It takes about six weeks for changes in the sun's position to have an effect on the weather systems of the world. So, instead of the winter solstice marking the middle of winter, it is used to designate the beginning of cold weather. The vernal equinox marks the beginning of the spring thaw. The summer solstice marks the beginning of hot weather, and the autumnal equinox marks the beginning of harvest.
Ancient people were very dependent on the seasons. That is why all cultures in all parts of the world have held their major religious festivals on these four occasions.
In the days of the Roman republic, the calendar was numbered from the founding of Rome – which, according to the present calendar, would be 753 B.C.E. And March 15, called the Ides of March, was designated as New Year's Day. However, this was a lunar calendar rather than a solar calendar, so the months rotated throughout the year. One year March 15 might be in the summer, and a few years later it would be in the winter.
Greece, and all of northern Europe, operated on a solar calendar, with the new year starting on the winter solstice. When the Romans invaded Greece in the fifth century B.C.E., they realized the advantages of a solar calendar. In 153 B.C.E., New Year's Day was moved to January first, since Janus was the two-faced god of doorways and new beginnings.
Finally, in 46 B.C.E., Julius Caesar switched from a lunar to a solar calendar. He divided the year into 365 and one-quarter days, with twelve "moons", or months, all of which had either 30 or 31 days, except February, which had 28 – and 29 every fourth year. New Year's Day was still on January first.
The major festival of the year in ancient Rome was called the "Saturnalia", and it centered on the winter solstice. When the Julian calendar was first devised, the solstice fell on December 25. But the Julian calendar had an error of eleven minutes. The year is actually 365 days, 6 hours, 11 minutes and a few seconds. So by the third century C.E. the solstice had crept backwards to approximately December 23.
At this time, the emperor Aurelian established an official holiday called "Sol Invicti" – meaning unconquered sun, in honor of the Syrian sun god "Sol", and also in honor of himself, since the emperors were regarded as the divine incarnation of Apollo. This holiday was held on December 24 and 25. And it more or less established December 25 as the official solstice.