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Wikipedia

Christmas

Christmas is an annual festival commemorating the birth of Jesus Christ, observed primarily on December 25[a] as a religious and cultural celebration among billions of people around the world.[2][3][4] A feast central to the Christian liturgical year, it is preceded by the season of Advent or the Nativity Fast and initiates the season of Christmastide, which historically in the West lasts twelve days and culminates on Twelfth Night.[5] Christmas Day is a public holiday in many countries,[6][7][8] is celebrated religiously by a majority of Christians,[9] as well as culturally by many non-Christians,[1][10] and forms an integral part of the holiday season organized around it.

Christmas
Also calledNoël, Nativity, Koleda, Xmas
Observed byChristians, many non-Christians[1][2]
TypeChristian, cultural, International
SignificanceCommemoration of the nativity of Jesus
CelebrationsGift-giving, family and other social gatherings, symbolic decoration, feasting etc.
ObservancesChurch services
Date
FrequencyAnnual
Related toChristmastide, Christmas Eve, Advent, Annunciation, Epiphany, Baptism of the Lord, Nativity Fast, Nativity of Christ, Old Christmas, Yule, St. Stephen's Day, Boxing Day

The traditional Christmas narrative recounted in the New Testament, known as the Nativity of Jesus, says that Jesus was born in Bethlehem, in accordance with messianic prophecies.[11] When Joseph and Mary arrived in the city, the inn had no room and so they were offered a stable where the Christ Child was soon born, with angels proclaiming this news to shepherds who then spread the word.[12]

There are different hypotheses regarding the date of Jesus' birth and in the early fourth century, the church fixed the date as December 25.[b][13][14][15] This corresponds to the traditional date of the winter solstice on the Roman calendar.[16] It is exactly nine months after Annunciation on March 25, also the date of the spring equinox.[17] Most Christians celebrate on December 25 in the Gregorian calendar, which has been adopted almost universally in the civil calendars used in countries throughout the world. However, part of the Eastern Christian Churches celebrate Christmas on December 25 of the older Julian calendar, which currently corresponds to January 7 in the Gregorian calendar. For Christians, believing that God came into the world in the form of man to atone for the sins of humanity, rather than knowing Jesus' exact birth date, is considered to be the primary purpose in celebrating Christmas.[18][19][20]

The celebratory customs associated in various countries with Christmas have a mix of pre-Christian, Christian, and secular themes and origins.[21][22] Popular modern customs of the holiday include gift giving; completing an Advent calendar or Advent wreath; Christmas music and caroling; viewing a Nativity play; an exchange of Christmas cards; church services; a special meal; and the display of various Christmas decorations, including Christmas trees, Christmas lights, nativity scenes, garlands, wreaths, mistletoe, and holly. In addition, several closely related and often interchangeable figures, known as Santa Claus, Father Christmas, Saint Nicholas, and Christkind, are associated with bringing gifts to children during the Christmas season and have their own body of traditions and lore.[23] Because gift-giving and many other aspects of the Christmas festival involve heightened economic activity, the holiday has become a significant event and a key sales period for retailers and businesses. Over the past few centuries, Christmas has had a steadily growing economic effect in many regions of the world.

Etymology

The English word "Christmas" is a shortened form of "Christ's Mass". The word is recorded as Crīstesmæsse in 1038 and Cristes-messe in 1131.[24] Crīst (genitive Crīstes) is from Greek Khrīstos (Χριστός), a translation of Hebrew Māšîaḥ (מָשִׁיחַ), "Messiah", meaning "anointed";[25][26] and mæsse is from Latin missa, the celebration of the Eucharist.[27]

The form Christenmas was also used during some periods, but is now considered archaic and dialectal.[28] The term derives from Middle English Cristenmasse, meaning "Christian mass".[29] Xmas is an abbreviation of Christmas found particularly in print, based on the initial letter chi (Χ) in Greek Khrīstos (Χριστός) ("Christ"), although some style guides discourage its use.[30] This abbreviation has precedent in Middle English Χρ̄es masse (where "Χρ̄" is an abbreviation for Χριστός).[29]

Other names

In addition to "Christmas", the holiday has had various other English names throughout its history. The Anglo-Saxons referred to the feast as "midwinter",[31][32] or, more rarely, as Nātiuiteð (from Latin nātīvitās below).[31][33] "Nativity", meaning "birth", is from Latin nātīvitās.[34] In Old English, Gēola (Yule) referred to the period corresponding to December and January, which was eventually equated with Christian Christmas.[35] "Noel" (also "Nowel" or "Nowell", as in "The First Nowell") entered English in the late 14th century and is from the Old French noël or naël, itself ultimately from the Latin nātālis (diēs) meaning "birth (day)".[36]

Koleda is the traditional Slavic name for Christmas and the period from Christmas to Epiphany or, more generally, to Slavic Christmas-related rituals, some dating to pre-Christian times.[37] It is actually used in Bulgarian.

Nativity

The gospels of Luke and Matthew describe Jesus as being born in Bethlehem to the Virgin Mary. In the gospel of Luke, Joseph and Mary traveled from Nazareth to Bethlehem for the census, and Jesus was born there and placed in a manger.[38] Angels proclaimed him a savior for all people, and shepherds came to adore him. The gospel of Matthew adds that the magi followed a star to Bethlehem to bring gifts to Jesus, born the king of the Jews. King Herod ordered the massacre of all the boys less than two years old in Bethlehem, but the family fled to Egypt and later returned to Nazareth.[39]

History

 
Eastern Orthodox icon of the birth of Christ by Saint Andrei Rublev, 15th century
 
Nativity of Christ, medieval illustration from the Hortus deliciarum of Herrad of Landsberg (12th century)
 
Adoration of the Shepherds (1622) by Gerard van Honthorst depicts the nativity of Jesus

The nativity sequences included in the Gospels of Matthew and Luke prompted early Christian writers to suggest various dates for the anniversary.[40]

At the time of the 2nd century, the "earliest church records" indicate that "Christians were remembering and celebrating the birth of the Lord", an "observance [that] sprang up organically from the authentic devotion of ordinary believers."[41] Though Christmas did not appear on the lists of festivals given by the early Christian writers Irenaeus and Tertullian,[24] the Chronograph of 354 records that a Christmas celebration took place in Rome eight days before the calends of January.[42] This section was written in AD 336, during the brief pontificate of Pope Mark.[43]

In the East, the birth of Jesus was celebrated in connection with the Epiphany on January 6.[44][45] This holiday was not primarily about the nativity, but rather the baptism of Jesus.[46] Christmas was promoted in the East as part of the revival of Orthodox Christianity that followed the death of the pro-Arian Emperor Valens at the Battle of Adrianople in 378. The feast was introduced in Constantinople in 379, in Antioch by John Chrysostom towards the end of the fourth century,[45] probably in 388, and in Alexandria in the following century.[47]

The first recorded Christmas celebration was in Rome on December 25, AD 336.[48] In the 3rd century, the date of the nativity was the subject of great interest. Around AD 200, Clement of Alexandria wrote:

There are those who have determined not only the year of our Lord's birth, but also the day; and they say that it took place in the 28th year of Augustus, and in the 25th day of [the Egyptian month] Pachon [May 20] ... Further, others say that He was born on the 24th or 25th of Pharmuthi [April 20 or 21].[49]

Various factors contributed to the selection of December 25 as a date of celebration: it was nine months after the date linked to the conception of Jesus—March 25, which also marked the vernal equinox (celebrated as the Feast of the Annunciation) and it was the date of the winter solstice on the Roman calendar.[17] Adam C. English, Professor of Religion at Campbell University, writes:[41]

First, we should examine the biblical evidence regarding the timing of the conception. … The angel Gabriel appeared to Zechariah, husband of Elizabeth and father of John the Baptizer, on the day he was chosen by lot to enter the sanctuary of the Lord and offer incense (Luke 1:9) Zechariah belonged to the tribe of Levi, the one tribe especially selected by the Lord to serve as priests. Not restricted to any one tribal territory, the Levite priests dispersed throughout the land of Israel. Nevertheless, many chose to live near Jerusalem in order to fulfill duties in the Temple, just like Zechariah who resided at nearby Ein Karem. Lots were cast regularly to decide any number of priestly duties: preparing the altar, making the sacrifice, cleaning the ashes, burning the morning or evening incense. Yet, given the drama of the event, it would seem that he entered the Temple sanctuary on the highest and holiest day of the year, the Day of Atonement, Yom Kippur. There, beside the altar of the Lord, a radiant angel gave news of the child to be born to Elizabeth. The date reckoned for this occurrence is September 24, based on computations from the Jewish calendar in accordance with Leviticus 23 regarding the Day of Atonement. According to Luke 1:26, Gabriel's annunciation to Mary took place in the "sixth month" of Elizabeth's pregnancy. That is, Mary conceives six months after Elizabeth. Luke repeats the uniqueness of the timing in verse 36. Counting six months from September 24 we arrive at March 25, the most likely date for the annunciation and conception of Mary. Nine months hence takes us to December 25, which turns out to be a surprisingly reasonable date for the birthday. … In Palestine, the months of November mark the rainy season, the only time of the year sheep might find fresh green grass to graze. During the other ten months of the year, animals must content themselves on dry straw. So, the suggestion that shepherds might have stayed out in the fields with their flocks in late December, at the peak of the rainy season, is not only reasonable, it is most certain.[41]

The early Church Fathers John Chrysostom, Augustine of Hippo, and Jerome attested to 25 December as the date of Christmas.[41] The primitive Church connected Jesus to the Sun through the use of such phrases as "Sun of righteousness."[40][50] The early Christian writer Lactantius wrote "the east is attached to God because he is the source of light and the illuminator of the world and he makes us rise toward eternal life." It is for this reason that the early Christians established the direction of prayer as being eastward, towards the rising sun.[41] In the Roman Empire, in which many Christians resided, the winter solstice was marked on December 25.[16]

In 567, the Council of Tours put in place the season of Christmastide, proclaiming "the twelve days from Christmas to Epiphany as a sacred and festive season, and established the duty of Advent fasting in preparation for the feast."[5][51] This was done in order to solve the "administrative problem for the Roman Empire as it tried to coordinate the solar Julian calendar with the lunar calendars of its provinces in the east."[52][53][54]

Christmas played a role in the Arian controversy of the fourth century. After this controversy ran its course, the prominence of the holiday declined for a few centuries. The feast regained prominence after 800 when Charlemagne was crowned emperor on Christmas Day.

In Puritan England, Christmas was banned, with Puritans considering it a Catholic invention and also associating the day with drunkenness and other misbehaviour.[55] It was restored as a legal holiday in England in 1660 when Puritan legislation was declared null and void, but it remained disreputable in the minds of some.[56] In the early 19th century, Christmas festivities and services became widespread with the rise of the Oxford Movement in the Church of England that emphasized the centrality of Christmas in Christianity and charity to the poor,[57] along with Washington Irving, Charles Dickens, and other authors emphasizing family, children, kind-heartedness, gift-giving, and Santa Claus (for Irving),[57] or Father Christmas (for Dickens).[58]

Various theories have been offered with respect to the establishment of the dates on which the Christian Churches came to celebrate Christmas:[41][59]

Calculation hypothesis

 
Mosaic in Mausoleum M in the pre-fourth-century necropolis under St Peter's Basilica in Rome, interpreted by some as Jesus represented as Christus Sol (Christ the Sun).[60]

The calculation hypothesis suggests that an earlier holiday, the Annunciation (which celebrated the conception of Jesus), held on March 25 became associated with the Incarnation.[61] Christmas was then calculated as nine months later. The calculation hypothesis was proposed by French writer Louis Duchesne in 1889.[62][63] The Bible in Luke 1:26 records the annunciation to Mary to be at the time when Elizabeth, mother of John the Baptist, was in her sixth month of pregnancy (cf. Nativity of Saint John the Baptist).[64][65] Thus, the ecclesiastical holiday to commemorate the Annunciation of the Lord was created in the seventh century and was assigned to be celebrated on March 25; this date is nine months before Christmas, in addition to being the traditional date of the equinox.[65] It is unrelated to the Quartodeciman, which had been forgotten by this time.[66]

Early Christians celebrated the life of Jesus on a date considered equivalent to 14 Nisan (Passover) on the local calendar. Because Passover was held on the 14th of the month, this feast is referred to as the Quartodeciman. All the major events of Christ's life, especially the passion, were celebrated on this date. In his letter to the Corinthians, Paul mentions Passover, presumably celebrated according to the local calendar in Corinth.[67] Tertullian (d. 220), who lived in Latin-speaking North Africa, gives the date of passion celebration as March 25.[68] The date of the passion was moved to Good Friday in 165. According to the calculation hypothesis, the celebration of the Quartodeciman continued in some areas and the feast became associated with Incarnation.[69]

The calculation hypothesis is considered academically to be "a thoroughly viable hypothesis", though not certain.[70] It was a traditional Jewish belief that great men were born and died on the same day, so lived a whole number of years, without fractions: Jesus was therefore considered to have been conceived on March 25, as he died on March 25, which was calculated to have coincided with 14 Nisan.[71] A passage in Commentary on the Prophet Daniel (204) by Hippolytus of Rome identifies December 25 as the date of the nativity. This passage is generally considered a late interpolation. But the manuscript includes another passage, one that is more likely to be authentic, that gives the passion as March 25.[72]

In 221, Sextus Julius Africanus (c. 160 – c. 240) gave March 25 as the day of creation and of the conception of Jesus in his universal history. This conclusion was based on solar symbolism, with March 25 the date of the equinox. As this implies a birth in December, it is sometimes claimed to be the earliest identification of December 25 as the nativity. However, Africanus was not such an influential writer that it is likely he determined the date of Christmas.[73]

The treatise De solstitia et aequinoctia conceptionis et nativitatis Domini nostri Iesu Christi et Iohannis Baptistae, pseudepigraphically attributed to John Chrysostom and dating to the early fourth century,[74][75] also argued that Jesus was conceived and crucified on the same day of the year and calculated this as March 25.[76][77] This anonymous tract also states: "But Our Lord, too, is born in the month of December ... the eight before the calends of January [25 December] ..., But they call it the 'Birthday of the Unconquered'. Who indeed is so unconquered as Our Lord...? Or, if they say that it is the birthday of the Sun, He is the Sun of Justice."[24]

Solstice date hypothesis

December 25 was considered the date of the winter solstice in the Roman calendar,[16][78] though actually it occurred on the 23rd or 24th at that time.[79] A late fourth-century sermon by Saint Augustine explains why this was a fitting day to celebrate Christ's nativity: "Hence it is that He was born on the day which is the shortest in our earthly reckoning and from which subsequent days begin to increase in length. He, therefore, who bent low and lifted us up chose the shortest day, yet the one whence light begins to increase."[80]

Linking Jesus to the Sun was supported by various Biblical passages. Jesus was considered to be the "Sun of righteousness" prophesied by Malachi: "Unto you shall the sun of righteousness arise, and healing is in his wings."[50]

Such solar symbolism could support more than one date of birth. An anonymous work known as De Pascha Computus (243) linked the idea that creation began at the spring equinox, on March 25, with the conception or birth (the word nascor can mean either) of Jesus on March 28, the day of the creation of the sun in the Genesis account. One translation reads: "O the splendid and divine providence of the Lord, that on that day, the very day, on which the sun was made, March 28, a Wednesday, Christ should be born".[24][81]

In the 17th century, Isaac Newton, who, coincidentally, was born on December 25, argued that the date of Christmas may have been selected to correspond with the solstice.[82]

Conversely, according to Steven Hijmans of the University of Alberta, "It is cosmic symbolism ... which inspired the Church leadership in Rome to elect the southern solstice, December 25, as the birthday of Christ, and the northern solstice as that of John the Baptist, supplemented by the equinoxes as their respective dates of conception."[83]

History of religions hypothesis

The rival "History of Religions" hypothesis suggests that the Church selected December 25 date to appropriate festivities held by the Romans in honor of the Sun god Sol Invictus.[61] This cult was established by Aurelian in 274. An explicit expression of this theory appears in an annotation of uncertain date added to a manuscript of a work by 12th-century Syrian bishop Jacob Bar-Salibi. The scribe who added it wrote:

It was a custom of the Pagans to celebrate on the same 25 December the birthday of the Sun, at which they kindled lights in token of festivity. In these solemnities and revelries, the Christians also took part. Accordingly, when the doctors of the Church perceived that the Christians had a leaning to this festival, they took counsel and resolved that the true Nativity should be solemnised on that day.[84]

In 1743, German Protestant Paul Ernst Jablonski argued Christmas was placed on December 25 to correspond with the Roman solar holiday Dies Natalis Solis Invicti and was therefore a "paganization" that debased the true church.[85] However, it has been also argued that, on the contrary, the Emperor Aurelian, who in 274 instituted the holiday of the Dies Natalis Solis Invicti, did so partly as an attempt to give a pagan significance to a date already important for Christians in Rome.[86]

Hermann Usener[87] and others[24] proposed that the Christians chose this day because it was the Roman feast celebrating the birthday of Sol Invictus. Modern scholar S. E. Hijmans, however, states that "While they were aware that pagans called this day the 'birthday' of Sol Invictus, this did not concern them and it did not play any role in their choice of date for Christmas."[83] Moreover, Thomas J. Talley holds that the Roman Emperor Aurelian placed a festival of Sol Invictus on December 25 in order to compete with the growing rate of the Christian Church, which had already been celebrating Christmas on that date first.[59] In the judgement of the Church of England Liturgical Commission, the History of Religions hypothesis has been challenged[88] by a view based on an old tradition, according to which the date of Christmas was fixed at nine months after March 25, the date of the vernal equinox, on which the Annunciation was celebrated.[76] Adam C. English, Professor of Religion at Campbell University, writes:[41]

We have evidence from the second century, less than fifty years after the close of the New Testament, that Christians were remembering and celebrating the birth of the Lord. It is not true to say that the observance of the nativity was imposed on Christians hundreds of years later by imperial decree or by a magisterial church ruling. The observance sprang up organically from the authentic devotion of ordinary believers.[41]

With regard to a December religious feast of the deified Sun (Sol), as distinct from a solstice feast of the birth (or rebirth) of the astronomical sun, Hijmans has commented that "while the winter solstice on or around December 25 was well established in the Roman imperial calendar, there is no evidence that a religious celebration of Sol on that day antedated the celebration of Christmas".[89] "Thomas Talley has shown that, although the Emperor Aurelian's dedication of a temple to the sun god in the Campus Martius (C.E. 274) probably took place on the 'Birthday of the Invincible Sun' on December 25, the cult of the sun in pagan Rome ironically did not celebrate the winter solstice nor any of the other quarter-tense days, as one might expect."[90] The Oxford Companion to Christian Thought remarks on the uncertainty about the order of precedence between the religious celebrations of the Birthday of the Unconquered Sun and of the birthday of Jesus, stating that the hypothesis that December 25 was chosen for celebrating the birth of Jesus on the basis of the belief that his conception occurred on March 25 "potentially establishes 25 December as a Christian festival before Aurelian's decree, which, when promulgated, might have provided for the Christian feast both opportunity and challenge".[91]

Relation to concurrent celebrations

Many popular customs associated with Christmas developed independently of the commemoration of Jesus' birth, with some claiming that certain elements are Christianized and have origins in pre-Christian festivals that were celebrated by pagan populations who were later converted to Christianity; other scholars reject these claims and affirm that Christmas customs largely developed in a Christian context.[92][22] The prevailing atmosphere of Christmas has also continually evolved since the holiday's inception, ranging from a sometimes raucous, drunken, carnival-like state in the Middle Ages,[93] to a tamer family-oriented and children-centered theme introduced in a 19th-century transformation.[94][95] The celebration of Christmas was banned on more than one occasion within certain groups, such as the Puritans and Jehovah's Witnesses (who do not celebrate birthdays in general), due to concerns that it was too unbiblical.[96][55][97]

Prior to and through the early Christian centuries, winter festivals were the most popular of the year in many European pagan cultures. Reasons included the fact that less agricultural work needed to be done during the winter, as well as an expectation of better weather as spring approached.[98] Celtic winter herbs such as mistletoe and ivy, and the custom of kissing under a mistletoe, are common in modern Christmas celebrations in the English-speaking countries.[99]

The pre-Christian Germanic peoples—including the Anglo-Saxons and the Norse—celebrated a winter festival called Yule, held in the late December to early January period, yielding modern English yule, today used as a synonym for Christmas.[100] In Germanic language-speaking areas, numerous elements of modern Christmas folk custom and iconography may have originated from Yule, including the Yule log, Yule boar, and the Yule goat.[101][100] Often leading a ghostly procession through the sky (the Wild Hunt), the long-bearded god Odin is referred to as "the Yule one" and "Yule father" in Old Norse texts, while other gods are referred to as "Yule beings".[102] On the other hand, as there are no reliable existing references to a Christmas log prior to the 16th century, the burning of the Christmas block may have been an early modern invention by Christians unrelated to the pagan practice.[103]

In eastern Europe also, pre-Christian traditions were incorporated into Christmas celebrations there, an example being the Koleda,[104] which shares parallels with the Christmas carol.

Post-classical history

 
The Nativity, from a 14th-century Missal; a liturgical book containing texts and music necessary for the celebration of Mass throughout the year

In the Early Middle Ages, Christmas Day was overshadowed by Epiphany, which in western Christianity focused on the visit of the magi. But the medieval calendar was dominated by Christmas-related holidays. The forty days before Christmas became the "forty days of St. Martin" (which began on November 11, the feast of St. Martin of Tours), now known as Advent.[93] In Italy, former Saturnalian traditions were attached to Advent.[93] Around the 12th century, these traditions transferred again to the Twelve Days of Christmas (December 25 – January 5); a time that appears in the liturgical calendars as Christmastide or Twelve Holy Days.[93]

The prominence of Christmas Day increased gradually after Charlemagne was crowned Emperor on Christmas Day in 800. King Edmund the Martyr was anointed on Christmas in 855 and King William I of England was crowned on Christmas Day 1066.

 
The coronation of Charlemagne on Christmas of 800 helped promote the popularity of the holiday

By the High Middle Ages, the holiday had become so prominent that chroniclers routinely noted where various magnates celebrated Christmas. King Richard II of England hosted a Christmas feast in 1377 at which 28 oxen and 300 sheep were eaten.[93] The Yule boar was a common feature of medieval Christmas feasts. Caroling also became popular, and was originally performed by a group of dancers who sang. The group was composed of a lead singer and a ring of dancers that provided the chorus. Various writers of the time condemned caroling as lewd, indicating that the unruly traditions of Saturnalia and Yule may have continued in this form.[93] "Misrule"—drunkenness, promiscuity, gambling—was also an important aspect of the festival. In England, gifts were exchanged on New Year's Day, and there was special Christmas ale.[93]

Christmas during the Middle Ages was a public festival that incorporated ivy, holly, and other evergreens.[105] Christmas gift-giving during the Middle Ages was usually between people with legal relationships, such as tenant and landlord.[105] The annual indulgence in eating, dancing, singing, sporting, and card playing escalated in England, and by the 17th century the Christmas season featured lavish dinners, elaborate masques, and pageants. In 1607, King James I insisted that a play be acted on Christmas night and that the court indulge in games.[106] It was during the Reformation in 16th–17th-century Europe that many Protestants changed the gift bringer to the Christ Child or Christkindl, and the date of giving gifts changed from December 6 to Christmas Eve.[107]

Modern history

17th and 18th centuries

Following the Protestant Reformation, many of the new denominations, including the Anglican Church and Lutheran Church, continued to celebrate Christmas.[108] In 1629, the Anglican poet John Milton penned On the Morning of Christ's Nativity, a poem that has since been read by many during Christmastide.[109][110] Donald Heinz, a professor at California State University, states that Martin Luther "inaugurated a period in which Germany would produce a unique culture of Christmas, much copied in North America."[111] Among the congregations of the Dutch Reformed Church, Christmas was celebrated as one of the principal evangelical feasts.[112]

However, in 17th century England, some groups such as the Puritans strongly condemned the celebration of Christmas, considering it a Catholic invention and the "trappings of popery" or the "rags of the Beast".[55] In contrast, the established Anglican Church "pressed for a more elaborate observance of feasts, penitential seasons, and saints' days. The calendar reform became a major point of tension between the Anglican party and the Puritan party."[113] The Catholic Church also responded, promoting the festival in a more religiously oriented form. King Charles I of England directed his noblemen and gentry to return to their landed estates in midwinter to keep up their old-style Christmas generosity.[106] Following the Parliamentarian victory over Charles I during the English Civil War, England's Puritan rulers banned Christmas in 1647.[55][114]

Protests followed as pro-Christmas rioting broke out in several cities and for weeks Canterbury was controlled by the rioters, who decorated doorways with holly and shouted royalist slogans.[55] The book, The Vindication of Christmas (London, 1652), argued against the Puritans, and makes note of Old English Christmas traditions, dinner, roast apples on the fire, card playing, dances with "plow-boys" and "maidservants", old Father Christmas and carol singing.[115] During the ban, semi-clandestine religious services marking Christ's birth continued to be held, and people sang carols in secret.[56]

 
The Examination and Tryal of Old Father Christmas, (1686), published after Christmas was reinstated as a holy day in England

The Restoration of King Charles II in 1660 ended the ban, and Christmas was again freely celebrated in England.[56] Many Calvinist clergymen disapproved of Christmas celebration. As such, in Scotland, the Presbyterian Church of Scotland discouraged the observance of Christmas, and though James VI commanded its celebration in 1618, attendance at church was scant.[116] The Parliament of Scotland officially abolished the observance of Christmas in 1640, claiming that the church had been "purged of all superstitious observation of days".[117] Whereas in England, Wales and Ireland Christmas Day is a common law holiday, having been a customary holiday since time immemorial, it was not until 1871 that it was designated a bank holiday in Scotland.[118]

Following the Restoration of Charles II, Poor Robin's Almanack contained the lines: "Now thanks to God for Charles return, / Whose absence made old Christmas mourn. / For then we scarcely did it know, / Whether it Christmas were or no."[119] The diary of James Woodforde, from the latter half of the 18th century, details the observance of Christmas and celebrations associated with the season over a number of years.[120]

As in England, Puritans in Colonial America staunchly opposed the observation of Christmas.[97] The Pilgrims of New England pointedly spent their first December 25 in the New World working normally.[97] Puritans such as Cotton Mather condemned Christmas both because scripture did not mention its observance and because Christmas celebrations of the day often involved boisterous behavior.[121][122] Many non-Puritans in New England deplored the loss of the holidays enjoyed by the laboring classes in England.[123] Christmas observance was outlawed in Boston in 1659.[97] The ban on Christmas observance was revoked in 1681 by English governor Edmund Andros, but it was not until the mid-19th century that celebrating Christmas became fashionable in the Boston region.[124]

At the same time, Christian residents of Virginia and New York observed the holiday freely. Pennsylvania Dutch settlers, predominantly Moravian settlers of Bethlehem, Nazareth, and Lititz in Pennsylvania and the Wachovia settlements in North Carolina, were enthusiastic celebrators of Christmas. The Moravians in Bethlehem had the first Christmas trees in America as well as the first Nativity Scenes.[125] Christmas fell out of favor in the United States after the American Revolution, when it was considered an English custom.[126]George Washington attacked Hessian (German) mercenaries on the day after Christmas during the Battle of Trenton on December 26, 1776, Christmas being much more popular in Germany than in America at this time.

With the atheistic Cult of Reason in power during the era of Revolutionary France, Christian Christmas religious services were banned and the three kings cake was renamed the "equality cake" under anticlerical government policies.[127][128]

19th century

In the early-19th century, writers imagined Tudor Christmas as a time of heartfelt celebration. In 1843, Charles Dickens wrote the novel A Christmas Carol, which helped revive the "spirit" of Christmas and seasonal merriment.[94][95] Its instant popularity played a major role in portraying Christmas as a holiday emphasizing family, goodwill, and compassion.[57]

Dickens sought to construct Christmas as a family-centered festival of generosity, linking "worship and feasting, within a context of social reconciliation."[129] Superimposing his humanitarian vision of the holiday, in what has been termed "Carol Philosophy",[130] Dickens influenced many aspects of Christmas that are celebrated today in Western culture, such as family gatherings, seasonal food and drink, dancing, games, and a festive generosity of spirit.[131] A prominent phrase from the tale, "Merry Christmas", was popularized following the appearance of the story.[132] This coincided with the appearance of the Oxford Movement and the growth of Anglo-Catholicism, which led a revival in traditional rituals and religious observances.[133]

 
The Queen's Christmas tree at Windsor Castle, published in the Illustrated London News, 1848

The term Scrooge became a synonym for miser, with "Bah! Humbug!" dismissive of the festive spirit.[134] In 1843, the first commercial Christmas card was produced by Sir Henry Cole.[135] The revival of the Christmas Carol began with William Sandys's "Christmas Carols Ancient and Modern" (1833), with the first appearance in print of "The First Noel", "I Saw Three Ships", "Hark the Herald Angels Sing" and "God Rest Ye Merry, Gentlemen", popularized in Dickens' A Christmas Carol.

In Britain, the Christmas tree was introduced in the early 19th century by the German-born Queen Charlotte. In 1832, the future Queen Victoria wrote about her delight at having a Christmas tree, hung with lights, ornaments, and presents placed round it.[136] After her marriage to her German cousin Prince Albert, by 1841 the custom became more widespread throughout Britain.[137]

An image of the British royal family with their Christmas tree at Windsor Castle created a sensation when it was published in the Illustrated London News in 1848. A modified version of this image was published in Godey's Lady's Book, Philadelphia in 1850.[138][139] By the 1870s, putting up a Christmas tree had become common in America.[138]

In America, interest in Christmas had been revived in the 1820s by several short stories by Washington Irving which appear in his The Sketch Book of Geoffrey Crayon, Gent. and "Old Christmas". Irving's stories depicted harmonious warm-hearted English Christmas festivities he experienced while staying in Aston Hall, Birmingham, England, that had largely been abandoned,[140] and he used the tract Vindication of Christmas (1652) of Old English Christmas traditions, that he had transcribed into his journal as a format for his stories.[106]

 
A Norwegian Christmas, 1846 painting by Adolph Tidemand

In 1822, Clement Clarke Moore wrote the poem A Visit From St. Nicholas (popularly known by its first line: Twas the Night Before Christmas).[141] The poem helped popularize the tradition of exchanging gifts, and seasonal Christmas shopping began to assume economic importance.[142] This also started the cultural conflict between the holiday's spiritual significance and its associated commercialism that some see as corrupting the holiday. In her 1850 book The First Christmas in New England, Harriet Beecher Stowe includes a character who complains that the true meaning of Christmas was lost in a shopping spree.[143]

While the celebration of Christmas was not yet customary in some regions in the U.S., Henry Wadsworth Longfellow detected "a transition state about Christmas here in New England" in 1856. "The old puritan feeling prevents it from being a cheerful, hearty holiday; though every year makes it more so."[144] In Reading, Pennsylvania, a newspaper remarked in 1861, "Even our presbyterian friends who have hitherto steadfastly ignored Christmas—threw open their church doors and assembled in force to celebrate the anniversary of the Savior's birth."[144]

The First Congregational Church of Rockford, Illinois, "although of genuine Puritan stock", was 'preparing for a grand Christmas jubilee', a news correspondent reported in 1864.[144] By 1860, fourteen states including several from New England had adopted Christmas as a legal holiday.[145] In 1875, Louis Prang introduced the Christmas card to Americans. He has been called the "father of the American Christmas card".[146] On June 28, 1870, Christmas was formally declared a United States federal holiday.[147]

20th century

 
The Christmas Visit. Postcard, c.1910

During the First World War and particularly (but not exclusively)[148] in 1914, a series of informal truces took place for Christmas between opposing armies. The truces, which were organised spontaneously by fighting men, ranged from promises not to shoot shouted at a distance in order to ease the pressure of war for the day to friendly socializing, gift giving and even sport between enemies.[149] These incidents became a well known and semi-mythologised part of popular memory.[150] They have been described as a symbol of common humanity even in the darkest of situations and used to demonstrate to children the ideals of Christmas.[151]

Up to the 1950s in the UK, many Christmas customs were restricted to the upper classes and better-off families. The mass of the population had not adopted many of the Christmas rituals that later became general. The Christmas tree was rare. Christmas dinner might be beef or goose – certainly not turkey. In their stockings children might get an apple, orange, and sweets. Full celebration of a family Christmas with all the trimmings only became widespread with increased prosperity from the 1950s.[152] National papers were published on Christmas Day until 1912. Post was still delivered on Christmas Day until 1961. League football matches continued in Scotland until the 1970s while in England they ceased at the end of the 1950s.[153][154]

Under the state atheism of the Soviet Union, after its foundation in 1917, Christmas celebrations—along with other Christian holidays—were prohibited in public.[155] During the 1920s, '30s, and '40s, the League of Militant Atheists encouraged school pupils to campaign against Christmas traditions, such as the Christmas tree, as well as other Christian holidays, including Easter; the League established an antireligious holiday to be the 31st of each month as a replacement.[156] At the height of this persecution, in 1929, on Christmas Day, children in Moscow were encouraged to spit on crucifixes as a protest against the holiday.[157] Instead, the importance of the holiday and all its trappings, such as the Christmas tree and gift-giving, was transferred to the New Year.[158] It was not until the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991 that the persecution ended and Orthodox Christmas became a state holiday again for the first time in Russia after seven decades.[159]

European History Professor Joseph Perry wrote that likewise, in Nazi Germany, "because Nazi ideologues saw organized religion as an enemy of the totalitarian state, propagandists sought to deemphasize—or eliminate altogether—the Christian aspects of the holiday" and that "Propagandists tirelessly promoted numerous Nazified Christmas songs, which replaced Christian themes with the regime's racial ideologies."[160]

As Christmas celebrations began to be held around the world even outside traditional Christian cultures in the 20th century, some Muslim-majority countries subsequently banned the practice of Christmas, claiming it undermines Islam.[161]

Observance and traditions

 
Christmas at the Annunciation Church in Nazareth, 1965
 
Dark brown – countries that do not recognize Christmas on December 25 or January 7 as a public holiday.
Light brown – countries that do not recognize Christmas as a public holiday, but the holiday is given observance.
 
Many Christians attend church services to celebrate the birth of Jesus Christ.[162]

Christmas Day is celebrated as a major festival and public holiday in countries around the world, including many whose populations are mostly non-Christian. In some non-Christian areas, periods of former colonial rule introduced the celebration (e.g. Hong Kong); in others, Christian minorities or foreign cultural influences have led populations to observe the holiday. Countries such as Japan, where Christmas is popular despite there being only a small number of Christians, have adopted many of the cultural aspects of Christmas, such as gift-giving, decorations, and Christmas trees. A similar example is in Turkey, being Muslim-majority and with a small number of Christians, where Christmas trees and decorations tend to line public streets during the festival.[163]

Among countries with a strong Christian tradition, a variety of Christmas celebrations have developed that incorporate regional and local cultures.

Church attendance

Christmas Day (inclusive of its vigil, Christmas Eve), is a Festival in the Lutheran Churches, a solemnity in the Roman Catholic Church, and a Principal Feast of the Anglican Communion. Other Christian denominations do not rank their feast days but nevertheless place importance on Christmas Eve/Christmas Day, as with other Christian feasts like Easter, Ascension Day, and Pentecost.[164] As such, for Christians, attending a Christmas Eve or Christmas Day church service plays an important part in the recognition of the Christmas season. Christmas, along with Easter, is the period of highest annual church attendance. A 2010 survey by LifeWay Christian Resources found that six in ten Americans attend church services during this time.[165] In the United Kingdom, the Church of England reported an estimated attendance of 2.5 million people at Christmas services in 2015.[166]

Decorations

 
A typical Neapolitan presepe or presepio, or Nativity scene. Local crèches are renowned for their ornate decorations and symbolic figurines, often mirroring daily life.

Nativity scenes are known from 10th-century Rome. They were popularised by Saint Francis of Assisi from 1223, quickly spreading across Europe.[167] Different types of decorations developed across the Christian world, dependent on local tradition and available resources, and can vary from simple representations of the crib to far more elaborate sets – renowned manger scene traditions include the colourful Kraków szopka in Poland,[168] which imitate Kraków's historical buildings as settings, the elaborate Italian presepi (Neapolitan, Genoese and Bolognese),[169][170][171][172] or the Provençal crèches in southern France, using hand-painted terracotta figurines called santons.[173] In certain parts of the world, notably Sicily, living nativity scenes following the tradition of Saint Francis are a popular alternative to static crèches.[174][175][176] The first commercially produced decorations appeared in Germany in the 1860s, inspired by paper chains made by children.[177] In countries where a representation of the Nativity scene is very popular, people are encouraged to compete and create the most original or realistic ones. Within some families, the pieces used to make the representation are considered a valuable family heirloom.[178]

The traditional colors of Christmas decorations are red, green, and gold.[179][180] Red symbolizes the blood of Jesus, which was shed in his crucifixion; green symbolizes eternal life, and in particular the evergreen tree, which does not lose its leaves in the winter; and gold is the first color associated with Christmas, as one of the three gifts of the Magi, symbolizing royalty.[181]

 
The official White House Christmas tree for 1962, displayed in the Entrance Hall and presented by John F. Kennedy and his wife Jackie.

The Christmas tree was first used by German Lutherans in the 16th century, with records indicating that a Christmas tree was placed in the Cathedral of Strassburg in 1539, under the leadership of the Protestant Reformer, Martin Bucer.[182][183] In the United States, these "German Lutherans brought the decorated Christmas tree with them; the Moravians put lighted candles on those trees."[184][185] When decorating the Christmas tree, many individuals place a star at the top of the tree symbolizing the Star of Bethlehem, a fact recorded by The School Journal in 1897.[186][187] Professor David Albert Jones of Oxford University writes that in the 19th century, it became popular for people to also use an angel to top the Christmas tree in order to symbolize the angels mentioned in the accounts of the Nativity of Jesus.[188] Additionally, in the context of a Christian celebration of Christmas, the Christmas tree, being evergreen in colour, is symbolic of Christ, who offers eternal life; the candles or lights on the tree represent the Light of the World—Jesus—born in Bethlehem.[189][190] Christian services for family use and public worship have been published for the blessing of a Christmas tree, after it has been erected.[191][192] The Christmas tree is considered by some as Christianisation of pagan tradition and ritual surrounding the Winter Solstice, which included the use of evergreen boughs, and an adaptation of pagan tree worship;[193] according to eighth-century biographer Æddi Stephanus, Saint Boniface (634–709), who was a missionary in Germany, took an ax to an oak tree dedicated to Thor and pointed out a fir tree, which he stated was a more fitting object of reverence because it pointed to heaven and it had a triangular shape, which he said was symbolic of the Trinity.[194] The English language phrase "Christmas tree" is first recorded in 1835[195] and represents an importation from the German language.[193][196][197]

 
On Christmas, the Christ Candle in the center of the Advent wreath is traditionally lit in many church services.

Since the 16th century, the poinsettia, a native plant from Mexico, has been associated with Christmas carrying the Christian symbolism of the Star of Bethlehem; in that country it is known in Spanish as the Flower of the Holy Night.[198][199] Other popular holiday plants include holly, mistletoe, red amaryllis, and Christmas cactus.[200]

Other traditional decorations include bells, candles, candy canes, stockings, wreaths, and angels. Both the displaying of wreaths and candles in each window are a more traditional Christmas display.[201] The concentric assortment of leaves, usually from an evergreen, make up Christmas wreaths and are designed to prepare Christians for the Advent season. Candles in each window are meant to demonstrate the fact that Christians believe that Jesus Christ is the ultimate light of the world.[202]

Christmas lights and banners may be hung along streets, music played from speakers, and Christmas trees placed in prominent places.[203] It is common in many parts of the world for town squares and consumer shopping areas to sponsor and display decorations. Rolls of brightly colored paper with secular or religious Christmas motifs are manufactured for the purpose of wrapping gifts. In some countries, Christmas decorations are traditionally taken down on Twelfth Night.[204]

Nativity play

 
Children in Oklahoma reenact a Nativity play

For the Christian celebration of Christmas, the viewing of the Nativity play is one of the oldest Christmastime traditions, with the first reenactment of the Nativity of Jesus taking place in A.D. 1223.[205] In that year, Francis of Assisi assembled a Nativity scene outside of his church in Italy and children sung Christmas carols celebrating the birth of Jesus.[205] Each year, this grew larger and people travelled from afar to see Francis' depiction of the Nativity of Jesus that came to feature drama and music.[205] Nativity plays eventually spread throughout all of Europe, where they remain popular. Christmas Eve and Christmas Day church services often came to feature Nativity plays, as did schools and theatres.[205] In France, Germany, Mexico and Spain, Nativity plays are often reenacted outdoors in the streets.[205]

Music and carols

 
Christmas carolers in Jersey

The earliest extant specifically Christmas hymns appear in fourth-century Rome. Latin hymns such as "Veni redemptor gentium", written by Ambrose, Archbishop of Milan, were austere statements of the theological doctrine of the Incarnation in opposition to Arianism. "Corde natus ex Parentis" ("Of the Father's love begotten") by the Spanish poet Prudentius (d. 413) is still sung in some churches today.[206] In the 9th and 10th centuries, the Christmas "Sequence" or "Prose" was introduced in North European monasteries, developing under Bernard of Clairvaux into a sequence of rhymed stanzas. In the 12th century the Parisian monk Adam of St. Victor began to derive music from popular songs, introducing something closer to the traditional Christmas carol. Christmas carols in English appear in a 1426 work of John Awdlay who lists twenty five "caroles of Cristemas", probably sung by groups of 'wassailers', who went from house to house.[207]

 
Child singers in Bucharest, 1841

The songs now known specifically as carols were originally communal folk songs sung during celebrations such as "harvest tide" as well as Christmas. It was only later that carols began to be sung in church. Traditionally, carols have often been based on medieval chord patterns, and it is this that gives them their uniquely characteristic musical sound. Some carols like "Personent hodie", "Good King Wenceslas", and "In dulci jubilo" can be traced directly back to the Middle Ages. They are among the oldest musical compositions still regularly sung. "Adeste Fideles" (O Come all ye faithful) appears in its current form in the mid-18th century.

The singing of carols increased in popularity after the Protestant Reformation in the Lutheran areas of Europe, as the Reformer Martin Luther wrote carols and encouraged their use in worship, in addition to spearheading the practice of caroling outside the Mass.[208] The 18th-century English reformer Charles Wesley, an early Methodist divine, understood the importance of music to Christian worship. In addition to setting many psalms to melodies, he wrote texts for at least three Christmas carols. The best known was originally entitled "Hark! How All the Welkin Rings", later renamed "Hark! the Herald Angels Sing".[209]

Christmas seasonal songs of a nonreligious nature emerged in the late 18th century. The Welsh melody for "Deck the Halls" dates from 1794, with the lyrics added by Scottish musician Thomas Oliphant in 1862, and the American "Jingle Bells" was copyrighted in 1857. Other popular carols include "The First Noel", "God Rest You Merry, Gentlemen", "The Holly and the Ivy", "I Saw Three Ships", "In the Bleak Midwinter", "Joy to the World", "Once in Royal David's City" and "While Shepherds Watched Their Flocks".[210] In the 19th and 20th centuries, African American spirituals and songs about Christmas, based in their tradition of spirituals, became more widely known. An increasing number of seasonal holiday songs were commercially produced in the 20th century, including jazz and blues variations. In addition, there was a revival of interest in early music, from groups singing folk music, such as The Revels, to performers of early medieval and classical music.

One of the most ubiquitous festive songs is "We Wish You a Merry Christmas", which originates from the West Country of England in the 1930s.[211] Radio has covered Christmas music from variety shows from the 1940s and 1950s, as well as modern-day stations that exclusively play Christmas music from late November through December 25.[212] Hollywood movies have featured new Christmas music, such as "White Christmas" in Holiday Inn and Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer.[212] Traditional carols have also been included in Hollywood films, such as "Hark! the Herald Angels Sing" in It's a Wonderful Life (1946), and "Silent Night" in A Christmas Story.[212]

Traditional cuisine

 

A special Christmas family meal is traditionally an important part of the holiday's celebration, and the food that is served varies greatly from country to country. Some regions have special meals for Christmas Eve, such as Sicily, where 12 kinds of fish are served. In the United Kingdom and countries influenced by its traditions, a standard Christmas meal includes turkey, goose or other large bird, gravy, potatoes, vegetables, sometimes bread and cider. Special desserts are also prepared, such as Christmas pudding, mince pies, Christmas cake, Panettone and Yule log cake.[213][214] Traditional Christmas meal in Central Europe is fried carp or other fish.[215]

Cards

 
A 1907 Christmas card with Santa and some of his reindeer

Christmas cards are illustrated messages of greeting exchanged between friends and family members during the weeks preceding Christmas Day. The traditional greeting reads "wishing you a Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year", much like that of the first commercial Christmas card, produced by Sir Henry Cole in London in 1843.[216] The custom of sending them has become popular among a wide cross-section of people with the emergence of the modern trend towards exchanging E-cards.[217][218]

Christmas cards are purchased in considerable quantities and feature artwork, commercially designed and relevant to the season. The content of the design might relate directly to the Christmas narrative, with depictions of the Nativity of Jesus, or Christian symbols such as the Star of Bethlehem, or a white dove, which can represent both the Holy Spirit and Peace on Earth. Other Christmas cards are more secular and can depict Christmas traditions, mythical figures such as Santa Claus, objects directly associated with Christmas such as candles, holly, and baubles, or a variety of images associated with the season, such as Christmastide activities, snow scenes, and the wildlife of the northern winter.[219]

Some prefer cards with a poem, prayer, or Biblical verse; while others distance themselves from religion with an all-inclusive "Season's greetings".[220]

Commemorative stamps

A number of nations have issued commemorative stamps at Christmastide. Postal customers will often use these stamps to mail Christmas cards, and they are popular with philatelists. These stamps are regular postage stamps, unlike Christmas seals, and are valid for postage year-round. They usually go on sale sometime between early October and early December and are printed in considerable quantities.

Gift giving

 
Christmas gifts under a Christmas tree

The exchanging of gifts is one of the core aspects of the modern Christmas celebration, making it the most profitable time of year for retailers and businesses throughout the world. On Christmas, people exchange gifts based on the Christian tradition associated with Saint Nicholas,[221] and the gifts of gold, frankincense, and myrrh which were given to the baby Jesus by the Magi.[222][223] The practice of gift giving in the Roman celebration of Saturnalia may have influenced Christian customs, but on the other hand the Christian "core dogma of the Incarnation, however, solidly established the giving and receiving of gifts as the structural principle of that recurrent yet unique event", because it was the Biblical Magi, "together with all their fellow men, who received the gift of God through man's renewed participation in the divine life."[224] However, Thomas J. Talley holds that the Roman Emperor Aurelian placed the alternate festival on December 25 in order to compete with the growing rate of the Christian Church, which had already been celebrating Christmas on that date first.[59]

Gift-bearing figures

A number of figures are associated with Christmas and the seasonal giving of gifts. Among these are Father Christmas, also known as Santa Claus (derived from the Dutch for Saint Nicholas), Père Noël, and the Weihnachtsmann; Saint Nicholas or Sinterklaas; the Christkind; Kris Kringle; Joulupukki; tomte/nisse; Babbo Natale; Saint Basil; and Ded Moroz. The Scandinavian tomte (also called nisse) is sometimes depicted as a gnome instead of Santa Claus.

 
Saint Nicholas, known as Sinterklaas in the Netherlands, is considered by many to be the original Santa Claus[225]

The best known of these figures today is red-dressed Santa Claus, of diverse origins. The name Santa Claus can be traced back to the Dutch Sinterklaas, which means simply Saint Nicholas. Nicholas was a 4th-century Greek bishop of Myra, a city in the Roman province of Lycia, whose ruins are 3 kilometres (1.9 mi) from modern Demre in southwest Turkey.[226][227] Among other saintly attributes, he was noted for the care of children, generosity, and the giving of gifts. His feast day, December 6, came to be celebrated in many countries with the giving of gifts.[107]

Saint Nicholas traditionally appeared in bishop's attire, accompanied by helpers, inquiring about the behaviour of children during the past year before deciding whether they deserved a gift or not. By the 13th century, Saint Nicholas was well known in the Netherlands, and the practice of gift-giving in his name spread to other parts of central and southern Europe. At the Reformation in 16th–17th-century Europe, many Protestants changed the gift bringer to the Christ Child or Christkindl, corrupted in English to Kris Kringle, and the date of giving gifts changed from December 6 to Christmas Eve.[107]

The modern popular image of Santa Claus, however, was created in the United States, and in particular in New York. The transformation was accomplished with the aid of notable contributors including Washington Irving and the German-American cartoonist Thomas Nast (1840–1902). Following the American Revolutionary War, some of the inhabitants of New York City sought out symbols of the city's non-English past. New York had originally been established as the Dutch colonial town of New Amsterdam and the Dutch Sinterklaas tradition was reinvented as Saint Nicholas.[228]

Current tradition in several Latin American countries (such as Venezuela and Colombia) holds that while Santa makes the toys, he then gives them to the Baby Jesus, who is the one who actually delivers them to the children's homes, a reconciliation between traditional religious beliefs and the iconography of Santa Claus imported from the United States.

In South Tyrol (Italy), Austria, Czech Republic, Southern Germany, Hungary, Liechtenstein, Slovakia, and Switzerland, the Christkind (Ježíšek in Czech, Jézuska in Hungarian and Ježiško in Slovak) brings the presents. Greek children get their presents from Saint Basil on New Year's Eve, the eve of that saint's liturgical feast.[229] The German St. Nikolaus is not identical with the Weihnachtsmann (who is the German version of Santa Claus / Father Christmas). St. Nikolaus wears a bishop's dress and still brings small gifts (usually candies, nuts, and fruits) on December 6 and is accompanied by Knecht Ruprecht. Although many parents around the world routinely teach their children about Santa Claus and other gift bringers, some have come to reject this practice, considering it deceptive.[230]

Multiple gift-giver figures exist in Poland, varying between regions and individual families. St Nicholas (Święty Mikołaj) dominates Central and North-East areas, the Starman (Gwiazdor) is most common in Greater Poland, Baby Jesus (Dzieciątko) is unique to Upper Silesia, with the Little Star (Gwiazdka) and the Little Angel (Aniołek) being common in the South and the South-East. Grandfather Frost (Dziadek Mróz) is less commonly accepted in some areas of Eastern Poland.[231][232] It is worth noting that across all of Poland, St Nicholas is the gift giver on the Saint Nicholas Day on December 6.

Date according to Julian calendar

Some jurisdictions of the Eastern Orthodox Church, including those of Russia, Georgia, Ukraine, Macedonia, Montenegro, Serbia, and Jerusalem, mark feasts using the older Julian calendar. As of 2023, there is a difference of 13 days between the Julian calendar and the modern Gregorian calendar, which is used internationally for most secular purposes. As a result, December 25 on the Julian calendar currently corresponds to January 7 on the calendar used by most governments and people in everyday life. Therefore, the aforementioned Orthodox Christians mark December 25 (and thus Christmas) on the day that is internationally considered to be January 7.[233] On 18 October 2022 the Orthodox Church of Ukraine allowed its dioceses to hold Christmas services according to the Revised Julian calendar, i.e., December 25.[234]

However, following the Council of Constantinople in 1923,[235] other Orthodox Christians, such as those belonging to the jurisdictions of Constantinople, Bulgaria, Greece, Romania, Antioch, Alexandria, Albania, Cyprus, Finland, and the Orthodox Church in America, among others, began using the Revised Julian calendar, which at present corresponds exactly to the Gregorian calendar.[236] Therefore, these Orthodox Christians mark December 25 (and thus Christmas) on the same day that is internationally considered to be December 25.

A further complication is added by the fact that the Armenian Apostolic Church continues the original ancient Eastern Christian practice of celebrating the birth of Christ not as a separate holiday, but on the same day as the celebration of his baptism (Theophany), which is on January 6. This is a public holiday in Armenia, and it is held on the same day that is internationally considered to be January 6, because since 1923 the Armenian Church in Armenia has used the Gregorian calendar.[237]

However, there is also a small Armenian Patriarchate of Jerusalem, which maintains the traditional Armenian custom of celebrating the birth of Christ on the same day as Theophany (January 6), but uses the Julian calendar for the determination of that date. As a result, this church celebrates "Christmas" (more properly called Theophany) on the day that is considered January 19 on the Gregorian calendar in use by the majority of the world.[238]

In summary, there are four different dates used by different Christian groups to mark the birth of Christ, given in the table below.

Listing

Church or section Date Calendar Gregorian date Note
Armenian Patriarchate of Jerusalem January 6 Julian calendar January 19 Correspondence between Julian January 6 and Gregorian January 19 holds until 2100; in the following century the difference will be one day more.[citation needed]
Armenian Apostolic Church, Armenian Evangelical Church January 6 Gregorian calendar January 6
Eastern Orthodox Church jurisdictions, including those of Constantinople, Bulgaria, Greece, Romania, Antioch, Alexandria, Albania, Cyprus, Finland, and the Orthodox Church in America.

Also, the Ancient Church of the East, Syriac Orthodox Church and parts of the Orthodox Church of Ukraine[234]

December 25 Revised Julian calendar December 25 Revised Julian calendar was agreed at the 1923 Council of Constantinople.[235]

Although it follows the Julian calendar, the Ancient Church of the East decided on 2010 to celebrate Christmas according to the Gregorian calendar date.

Other Eastern Orthodox: Russia, Georgia, Ukraine (in part[234]), Macedonia, Belarus, Moldova, Montenegro, Serbia and Jerusalem.

Also, some Byzantine Rite Catholics and Byzantine Rite Lutherans.

December 25 Julian calendar January 7 Correspondence between Julian December 25 and Gregorian January 7 of the following year holds until 2100; from 2101 to 2199 the difference will be one day more.[citation needed]
Coptic Orthodox Church Koiak 29 or 28 (corresponding to Julian December 25) Coptic calendar January 7 After the Coptic insertion of a leap day in what for the Julian calendar is August (September in Gregorian), Christmas is celebrated on Koiak 28 in order to maintain the exact interval of nine 30-day months and 5 days of the child's gestation.[citation needed]
Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church (sole date), Eritrean Orthodox Tewahedo Church (sole date), and P'ent'ay (Ethiopian-Eritrean Evangelical) Churches (primary date) Tahsas 29 or 28 (corresponding to Julian December 25) Ethiopian calendar January 7 After the Ethiopian and Eritrean insertion of a leap day in what for the Julian calendar is August (September in Gregorian), Christmas (also called Liddet or Gena, also Ledet or Genna[239]) is celebrated on Tahsas 28 in order to maintain the exact interval of nine 30-day months and 5 days of the child's gestation.[240]

Most Protestants (P'ent'ay/Evangelicals) in the diaspora have the option of choosing the Ethiopian calendar (Tahsas 29/January 7) or the Gregorian calendar (December 25) for religious holidays, with this option being used when the corresponding eastern celebration is not a public holiday in the western world (with most diaspora Protestants celebrating both days).[citation needed]

Most Western Christian churches, most Eastern Catholic churches and civil calendars.

Also, the Assyrian Church of the East.

December 25 Gregorian calendar December 25 The Assyrian Church of the East adopted the Gregorian calendar on 1964.

Economy

 
Christmas decorations at the Galeries Lafayette department store in Paris, France. The Christmas season is the busiest trading period for retailers.
 

Christmas is typically a peak selling season for retailers in many nations around the world. Sales increase dramatically as people purchase gifts, decorations, and supplies to celebrate. In the United States, the "Christmas shopping season" starts as early as October.[241][242] In Canada, merchants begin advertising campaigns just before Halloween (October 31), and step up their marketing following Remembrance Day on November 11. In the UK and Ireland, the Christmas shopping season starts from mid-November, around the time when high street Christmas lights are turned on.[243][244] In the United States, it has been calculated that a quarter of all personal spending takes place during the Christmas/holiday shopping season.[245] Figures from the U.S. Census Bureau reveal that expenditure in department stores nationwide rose from $20.8 billion in November 2004 to $31.9 billion in December 2004, an increase of 54 percent. In other sectors, the pre-Christmas increase in spending was even greater, there being a November–December buying surge of 100 percent in bookstores and 170 percent in jewelry stores. In the same year employment in American retail stores rose from 1.6 million to 1.8 million in the two months leading up to Christmas.[246] Industries completely dependent on Christmas include Christmas cards, of which 1.9 billion are sent in the United States each year, and live Christmas Trees, of which 20.8 million were cut in the U.S. in 2002.[247] For 2019, the average US adult was projected to spend $920 on gifts alone.[248] In the UK in 2010, up to £8 billion was expected to be spent online at Christmas, approximately a quarter of total retail festive sales.[244]

 
Each year (most notably 2000) money supply in US banks is increased for Christmas shopping

In most Western nations, Christmas Day is the least active day of the year for business and commerce; almost all retail, commercial and institutional businesses are closed, and almost all industries cease activity (more than any other day of the year), whether laws require such or not. In England and Wales, the Christmas Day (Trading) Act 2004 prevents all large shops from trading on Christmas Day. Similar legislation was approved in Scotland in 2007. Film studios release many high-budget movies during the holiday season, including Christmas films, fantasy movies or high-tone dramas with high production values to hopes of maximizing the chance of nominations for the Academy Awards.[249]

One economist's analysis calculates that, despite increased overall spending, Christmas is a deadweight loss under orthodox microeconomic theory, because of the effect of gift-giving. This loss is calculated as the difference between what the gift giver spent on the item and what the gift receiver would have paid for the item. It is estimated that in 2001, Christmas resulted in a $4 billion deadweight loss in the U.S. alone.[250][251] Because of complicating factors, this analysis is sometimes used to discuss possible flaws in current microeconomic theory. Other deadweight losses include the effects of Christmas on the environment and the fact that material gifts are often perceived as white elephants, imposing cost for upkeep and storage and contributing to clutter.[252]

Controversies

 
A 1931 edition of the Soviet magazine Bezbozhnik, published by the League of Militant Atheists, depicting an Orthodox Christian priest being forbidden to take home a tree for the celebration of Christmastide, which was banned under the Marxist–Leninist doctrine of state atheism.[253]

Christmas has at times been the subject of controversy and attacks from various sources, both Christian and non-Christian. Historically, it was prohibited by Puritans during their ascendency in the Commonwealth of England (1647–1660), and in Colonial New England where the Puritans outlawed the celebration of Christmas in 1659 on the grounds that Christmas was not mentioned in Scripture and therefore violated the Reformed regulative principle of worship.[254][255] The Parliament of Scotland, which was dominated by Presbyterians, passed a series of acts outlawing the observance of Christmas between 1637 and 1690; Christmas Day did not become a public holiday in Scotland until 1871.[118][256][257] Today, some conservative Reformed denominations such as the Free Presbyterian Church of Scotland and the Reformed Presbyterian Church of North America likewise reject the celebration of Christmas based on the regulative principle and what they see as its non-Scriptural origin.[258][259] Christmas celebrations have also been prohibited by atheist states such as the Soviet Union[260] and more recently majority Muslim states such as Somalia, Tajikistan and Brunei.[261]

Some Christians and organizations such as Pat Robertson's American Center for Law and Justice cite alleged attacks on Christmas (dubbing them a "war on Christmas").[262] Such groups claim that any specific mention of the term "Christmas" or its religious aspects is being increasingly censored, avoided, or discouraged by a number of advertisers, retailers, government (prominently schools), and other public and private organizations. One controversy is the occurrence of Christmas trees being renamed Holiday trees.[263] In the U.S. there has been a tendency to replace the greeting Merry Christmas with Happy Holidays, which is considered inclusive at the time of the Jewish celebration of Hanukkah.[264] In the U.S. and Canada, where the use of the term "Holidays" is most prevalent, opponents have denounced its usage and avoidance of using the term "Christmas" as being politically correct.[265][266][267] In 1984, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in Lynch v. Donnelly that a Christmas display (which included a Nativity scene) owned and displayed by the city of Pawtucket, Rhode Island, did not violate the First Amendment.[268] American Muslim scholar Abdul Malik Mujahid has said that Muslims must treat Christmas with respect, even if they disagree with it.[269]

The government of the People's Republic of China officially espouses state atheism,[270] and has conducted antireligious campaigns to this end.[271] In December 2018, officials raided Christian churches prior to Christmastide and coerced them to close; Christmas trees and Santa Clauses were also forcibly removed.[272][273]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Several branches of Eastern Christianity that use the Julian calendar also celebrate on December 25 according to that calendar, which is now January 7 on the Gregorian calendar. Armenian Churches observed the nativity on January 6 even before the Gregorian calendar originated. Most Armenian Christians use the Gregorian calendar, still celebrating Christmas Day on January 6. Some Armenian churches use the Julian calendar, thus celebrating Christmas Day on January 19 on the Gregorian calendar, with January 18 being Christmas Eve. Some regions also celebrate primarily on December 24, rather than December 25.
  2. ^ English, Adam C. (October 14, 2016). Christmas: Theological Anticipations. Wipf and Stock Publishers. p. 70. ISBN 978-1-4982-3933-2. According to Luke 1:26, Gabriel's annunciation to Mary took place in the "sixth month" of Elizabeth's pregnancy. That is, Mary conceives sixth months after Elizabeth. Luke repeats the uniqueness of the timing in verse 26. Counting six months from September 24 we arrive at March 25, the most likely date for the annunciation and conception of Mary. Nine months hence takes us to December 25, which turns out to be a surprisingly reasonable date for the birthday [of Jesus]. Someone might object that the birth could not have occurred in midwinter because it would have been too cold for shepherds in the fields keeping watch by night (Luke 2:8). Not so. In Palestine, the months of November through February mark the rainy season, the only time of the year sheep might find fresh green grass to graze. During the other ten months of the year, animals must content themselves on dry straw. So, the suggestion that shepherds might have stayed out in the fields with their flocks in late December, at the peak of the rainy season, is not only reasonable, it is most certain. ... And so, besides considering the timing of the conception, we must take note of the earliest church records. We have evidence from the second century, less than fifty years after the close of the New Testament, that Christians were remembering and celebrating the birth of the Lord. It is not true to say that the observance of the nativity was imposed on Christians hundreds of years later by imperial decree or by a magisterial church ruling. The observance sprang up organically from the authentic devotion of ordinary believers. This in itself is important. But, besides the fact that early Christians did celebrate the incarnation of the Lord, we should make note that they did not agree upon a set date for the observance. There was no one day on which all Christians celebrated Christmas in the early church. Churches in different regions celebrated the nativity on different days. The late second-century Egyptian instructor of Christian disciples, Clement of Alexandria, reported that some believers in his area observed the twenty-fourth or twenty-fifth day of the Egyptian month of Parmuthi (the month that corresponds to the Hebrew month of Nisan—approximately May 20). The Basilidian Christians held to the eleventh or fifteen of Tubi (January 6 and 10). Clement made his own computations by counting backward from the death of Emperor Commodus, the son of Marcus Aurelius. By this method he deduced a birthdate of November 18. Other Alexandrian and Egyptian Christians adopted January 4 or 5. In so doing, they replaced the Alexandrian celebration of the birth of Aion, Time, with the birth of Christ. The regions of Nicomedia, Syria, and Caesarea celebrated Christ's birthday on Epiphany, January 6. ... According to researcher Susan Roll, the Chronograph or Philocalian Calendar is the earliest authentic document to place the birth of Jesus on December 25. ... And we should remember that although the Chronograph provides the first record of December 25, the custom of venerating the Lord's birth on that day was most likely established well before its publication. That is to say, December 25 didn't originate with the Chronograph. It must have counted as common knowledge, at least in Rome, to warrant its inclusion in the Chronograph. Soon after this time, we find other church fathers such John Chrysostom, Augustine, Jerome, and Leo confirming the twenty-fifth as the traditional date of celebration.

References

  1. ^ a b "Christmas as a Multi-Faith Festival" (PDF). BBC Learning English. December 29, 2005. (PDF) from the original on October 1, 2008. Retrieved September 30, 2008.
  2. ^ a b . Gallup, Inc. December 24, 2008. Archived from the original on November 16, 2012. Retrieved December 16, 2012.
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  4. ^ . Gallup, Inc. December 24, 2010. Archived from the original on December 7, 2012. Retrieved December 16, 2012.
  5. ^ a b Forbes, Bruce David (October 1, 2008). Christmas: A Candid History. University of California Press. p. 27. ISBN 978-0-520-25802-0. In 567 the Council of Tours proclaimed that the entire period between Christmas and Epiphany should be considered part of the celebration, creating what became known as the twelve days of Christmas, or what the English called Christmastide.
    On the last of the twelve days, called Twelfth Night, various cultures developed a wide range of additional special festivities. The variation extends even to the issue of how to count the days. If Christmas Day is the first of the twelve days, then Twelfth Night would be on January 5, the eve of Epiphany. If December 26, the day after Christmas, is the first day, then Twelfth Night falls on January 6, the evening of Epiphany itself.
    After Christmas and Epiphany were in place, on December 25 and January 6, with the twelve days of Christmas in between, Christians slowly adopted a period called Advent, as a time of spiritual preparation leading up to Christmas.
  6. ^ Canadian Heritage – Public holidays November 24, 2009, at the Wayback MachineGovernment of Canada. Retrieved November 27, 2009.
  7. ^ 2009 Federal Holidays January 16, 2013, at the Wayback MachineU.S. Office of Personnel Management. Retrieved November 27, 2009.
  8. ^ Bank holidays and British Summer time May 15, 2011, at the Wayback MachineHM Government. Retrieved November 27, 2009.
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  11. ^ Crump, William D. (September 15, 2001). The Christmas Encyclopedia (3 ed.). McFarland. p. 39. ISBN 978-0-7864-6827-0. Christians believe that a number of passages in the Bible are prophecies about future events in the life of the promised Messiah or Jesus Christ. Most, but not all, of those prophecies are found in the Old Testament ... Born in Bethlehem (Micah 5:2): "But thou, Bethlehem Ephratah, though thou be little among the thousands of Juda, yet out of thee shall he come forth unto me that is to be ruler in Israel; whose goings forth have been from of old, from everlasting."
  12. ^ Tucker, Ruth A. (2011). Parade of Faith: A Biographical History of the Christian Church. Zondervan. p. 23. ISBN 978-0-310-20638-5. According to gospel accounts, Jesus was born during the reign of Herod the Great, thus sometime before 4 BCE. The birth narrative in Luke's gospel is one of the most familiar passages in the Bible. Leaving their hometown of Nazareth, Mary and Joseph travel to Bethlehem to pay taxes. Arriving late, they find no vacancy at the inn. They are, however, offered a stable, most likely a second room attached to a family dwelling where animals were sheltered—a room that would offer some privacy from the main family room for cooking, eating, and sleeping. This "city of David" is the little town of Bethlehem of Christmas-carol fame, a starlit silhouette indelibly etched on Christmas cards. No sooner was the baby born than angels announced the news to shepherds who spread the word.
  13. ^ Corinna Laughlin, Michael R. Prendergast, Robert C. Rabe, Corinna Laughlin, Jill Maria Murdy, Therese Brown, Mary Patricia Storms, Ann E. Degenhard, Jill Maria Murdy, Ann E. Degenhard, Therese Brown, Robert C. Rabe, Mary Patricia Storms, Michael R. Prendergast, Sourcebook for Sundays, Seasons, and Weekdays 2011: The Almanac for Pastoral Liturgy April 7, 2015, at the Wayback Machine, LiturgyTrainingPublications, 2010, p. 29.
  14. ^ "The Chronography of 354 AD. Part 12: Commemorations of the Martyrs" November 22, 2011, at the Wayback Machine, The Tertullian Project. 2006. Retrieved November 24, 2011.
  15. ^ Roll, Susan K. (1995). Toward the Origins of Christmas. Peeters Publishers. p. 133. ISBN 978-90-390-0531-6.
  16. ^ a b c Hale Bradt (2004). (PDF). p. 69. Archived from the original (PDF) on September 20, 2018..
    Roll, p. 87
    These two references say that March 25 was the equinox, and Roll refers to a work called De Solstitiis et Aequinoctiis February 5, 2022, at the Wayback Machine which gives December 25 as the solstice. However, at the time of Julius Caesar the winter solstice was actually on the 23rd or 24th.
  17. ^ a b Melton, J. Gordon (2011). Religious Celebrations: An Encyclopedia of Holidays, Festivals, Solemn Observances, and Spiritual Commemorations [2 volumes]: An Encyclopedia of Holidays, Festivals, Solemn Observances, and Spiritual Commemorations. ABC-CLIO. p. 39. ISBN 978-1-59884-206-7. The March 25 date, which tied together the beginning of Mary's pregnancy and the incarnation of God in Jesus as occurring nine months before Christmas (December 25), supplied the rationale for setting the beginning of the ecclesiastical and legal year. ... Both the Anglicans and the Lutherans have continued to observe the March 25 date for celebrating the Annunciation.
  18. ^ The Liturgical Year. Thomas Nelson. November 3, 2009. ISBN 978-1-4185-8073-5. Retrieved April 2, 2009. Christmas is not really about the celebration of a birth date at all. It is about the celebration of a birth. The fact of the date and the fact of the birth are two different things. The calendrical verification of the feast itself is not really that important ... What is important to the understanding of a life-changing moment is that it happened, not necessarily where or when it happened. The message is clear: Christmas is not about marking the actual birth date of Jesus. It is about the Incarnation of the One who became like us in all things but sin (Hebrews 4:15) and who humbled Himself "to the point of death-even death on a cross" (Phil. 2:8). Christmas is a pinnacle feast, yes, but it is not the beginning of the liturgical year. It is a memorial, a remembrance, of the birth of Jesus, not really a celebration of the day itself. We remember that because the Jesus of history was born, the Resurrection of the Christ of faith could happen.
  19. ^ . CRI / Voice, Institute. Archived from the original on April 7, 2009. Retrieved April 2, 2009. The origins of the celebrations of Christmas and Epiphany, as well as the dates on which they are observed, are rooted deeply in the history of the early church. There has been much scholarly debate concerning the exact time of the year when Jesus was born, and even in what year he was born. Actually, we do not know either. The best estimate is that Jesus was probably born in the springtime, somewhere between the years of 6 and 4 BC, as December is in the middle of the cold rainy season in Bethlehem, when the sheep are kept inside and not on pasture as told in the Bible. The lack of a consistent system of timekeeping in the first century, mistakes in later calendars and calculations, and lack of historical details to cross-reference events have led to this imprecision in fixing Jesus' birth. This suggests that the Christmas celebration is not an observance of a historical date, but a commemoration of the event in terms of worship.
  20. ^ The School Journal, Volume 49. Harvard University. 1894. Retrieved April 2, 2009. Throughout the Christian world the 25th of December is celebrated as the birthday of Jesus Christ. There was a time when the churches were not united regarding the date of the joyous event. Many Christians kept their Christmas in April, others in May, and still others at the close of September, till finally December 25 was agreed upon as the most appropriate date. The choice of that day was, of course, wholly arbitrary, for neither the exact date not the period of the year at which the birth of Christ occurred is known. For purposes of commemoration, however, it is unimportant whether the celebration shall fall or not at the precise anniversary of the joyous event.
  21. ^ West's Federal Supplement. West Publishing Company. 1990. While the Washington and King birthdays are exclusively secular holidays, Christmas has both secular and religious aspects.
  22. ^ a b Huckabee, Tyler (December 9, 2021). "No, Christmas Trees Don't Have 'Pagan' Roots". Relevant Magazine. Retrieved December 9, 2022.
  23. ^ "Poll: In a changing nation, Santa endures". Associated Press. December 22, 2006. from the original on December 26, 2018. Retrieved December 24, 2018.
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  42. ^ The manuscript reads, VIII kal. Ian. natus Christus in Betleem Iudeae. ("The Chronography of 354 AD. Part 12: Commemorations of the Martyrs November 22, 2011, at the Wayback Machine," The Tertullian Project. 2006.)
  43. ^ "Depositio Martyrum". December 25, 2021, at the Wayback Machine New Catholic Encyclopedia. The last name in the Martyrum is Pope Sylvester I (d. 335); the inclusion of Pope Mark (d. 336) and Julius I (d. 352) is clearly a later addition.
  44. ^ Wainwright, Geoffrey; Westerfield Tucker, Karen Beth, eds. (2005). The Oxford History of Christian Worship. Oxford University Press. p. 65. ISBN 978-0-19-513886-3. Retrieved February 3, 2012.
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  48. ^ "Christmas and its cycle". New Catholic Encyclopedia. Vol. 3 (2nd ed.). Catholic University of America Press. 2002. pp. 550–557.
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  50. ^ a b Malachi 4:2.
  51. ^ Hynes, Mary Ellen (1993). Companion to the Calendar. Liturgy Training Publications. p. 8. ISBN 9781568540115. In the year 567 the church council of Tours called the 13 days between December 25 and January 6 a festival season.
  52. ^ Hill, Christopher (2003). Holidays and Holy Nights: Celebrating Twelve Seasonal Festivals of the Christian Year. Quest Books. p. 91. ISBN 9780835608107. This arrangement became an administrative problem for the Roman Empire as it tried to coordinate the solar Julian calendar with the lunar calendars of its provinces in the east. While the Romans could roughly match the months in the two systems, the four cardinal points of the solar year—the two equinoxes and solstices—still fell on different dates. By the time of the first century, the calendar date of the winter solstice in Egypt and Palestine was eleven to twelve days later than the date in Rome. As a result the Incarnation came to be celebrated on different days in different parts of the Empire. The Western Church, in its desire to be universal, eventually took them both—one became Christmas, one Epiphany—with a resulting twelve days in between. Over time this hiatus became invested with specific Christian meaning. The Church gradually filled these days with saints, some connected to the birth narratives in Gospels (Holy Innocents' Day, December 28, in honor of the infants slaughtered by Herod; St. John the Evangelist, "the Beloved," December 27; St. Stephen, the first Christian martyr, December 26; the Holy Family, December 31; the Virgin Mary, January 1). In 567, the Council of Tours declared the twelve days between Christmas and Epiphany to become one unified festal cycle.
  53. ^ Federer, William J. (January 6, 2014). "On the 12th Day of Christmas". American Minute. Retrieved December 25, 2014. In 567 AD, the Council of Tours ended a dispute. Western Europe celebrated Christmas, December 25, as the holiest day of the season... but Eastern Europe celebrated Epiphany, January 6, recalling the Wise Men's visit and Jesus' baptism. It could not be decided which day was holier, so the Council made all 12 days from December 25 to January 6 "holy days" or "holidays," These became known as "The Twelve Days of Christmas."
  54. ^ Kirk Cameron, William Federer (November 6, 2014). . Trinity Broadcasting Network. Event occurs at 01:15:14. Archived from the original on December 25, 2014. Retrieved December 25, 2014. Western Europe celebrated Christmas December 25 as the holiest day. Eastern Europe celebrated January 6 the Epiphany, the visit of the Wise Men, as the holiest day... and so they had this council and they decided to make all twelve days from December 25 to January 6 the Twelve Days of Christmas.
  55. ^ a b c d e Durston, Chris (December 1985). . History Today. Vol. 35, no. 12. pp. 7–14. Archived from the original on March 10, 2007.
  56. ^ a b c "When Christmas carols were banned". BBC. Retrieved March 11, 2022.
  57. ^ a b c Rowell, Geoffrey (December 1993). "Dickens and the Construction of Christmas". History Today. 43 (12). from the original on December 29, 2016. Retrieved December 28, 2016. There is no doubt that A Christmas Carol is first and foremost a story concerned with the Christian gospel of liberation by the grace of God, and with incarnational religion which refuses to drive a wedge between the world of spirit and the world of matter. Both the Christmas dinners and the Christmas dinner-carriers are blessed; the cornucopia of Christmas food and feasting reflects both the goodness of creation and the joy of heaven. It is a significant sign of a shift in theological emphasis in the nineteenth century from a stress on the Atonement to a stress on the Incarnation, a stress which found outward and visible form in the sacramentalism of the Oxford Movement, the development of richer and more symbolic forms of worship, the building of neo-Gothic churches, and the revival and increasing centrality of the keeping of Christmas itself as a Christian festival. ... In the course of the century, under the influence of the Oxford Movement's concern for the better observance of Christian festivals, Christmas became more and more prominent. By the later part of the century cathedrals provided special services and musical events, and might have revived ancient special charities for the poor – though we must not forget the problems for large: parish-church cathedrals like Manchester, which on one Christmas Day had no less than eighty couples coming to be married (the signing of the registers lasted until four in the afternoon). The popularity of Dickens' A Christmas Carol played a significant part in the changing consciousness of Christmas and the way in which it was celebrated. The popularity of his public readings of the story is an indication of how much it resonated with the contemporary mood, and contributed to the increasing place of the Christmas celebration in both secular and religious ways that was firmly established by the end of the nineteenth century.
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  64. ^ English, Adam C. (October 14, 2016). Christmas: Theological Anticipations. Wipf and Stock Publishers. p. 70. ISBN 978-1-4982-3933-2. According to Luke 1:26, Gabriel's annunciation to Mary took place in the "sixth month" of Elizabeth's pregnancy. That is, Mary conceives sixth months after Elizabeth. Luke repeats the uniqueness of the timing in verse 26. Counting six months from September 24 we arrive at March 25, the most likely date for the annunciation and conception of Mary. Nine months hence takes us to December 25, which turns out to be a surprisingly reasonable date for the birthday [of Jesus].
  65. ^ a b Bonneau, Normand (1998). The Sunday Lectionary: Ritual Word, Paschal Shape. Liturgical Press. p. 114. ISBN 978-0-8146-2457-9. The Roman Church celebrates the annunciation of March 25 (the Roman calendar equivalent to the Jewish fourteenth Nisan); hence Jesus' birthday occurred nine months later on December 25. This computation matches well with other indications in Luke's gospel. Christians conjectured that the priest Zechariah was serving in the temple on the Day of Atonement, roughly at the autumnal equinox, when the angel announced to him the miraculous conception of John the Baptist. At her annunciation, Mary received news that Elizabeth was in her sixth month. Sixth months after the autumnal equinox means that Mary conceived Jesus at the vernal equinox (March 25). If John the Baptist was conceived at the autumnal equinox, he was born at the summer solstice nine months later. Thus even to this day the liturgical calendar commemorates John's birth on June 24. Finally, John 3:30, where John the Baptist says of Jesus: "He must increase, but I must decrease," corroborates this tallying of dates. For indeed, after the birth of Jesus at the winter solstice the days increase, while after the birth of John at the summer solstice the days decrease.
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  88. ^ "Although this view is still very common, it has been seriously challenged" – Church of England Liturgical Commission, The Promise of His Glory: Services and Prayers for the Season from All Saints to Candlemas (Church House Publishing 1991 ISBN 978-0-7151-3738-3) quoted in "The Date of Christmas and Epiphany" April 6, 2015, at the Wayback Machine.
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  128. ^ Mason, Julia (December 21, 2015). . HistoryBuff. Archived from the original on November 1, 2016. Retrieved November 18, 2016. How did people celebrate the Christmas during the French Revolution? In white-knuckled terror behind closed doors. Anti-clericalism reached its apex on 10 November 1793, when a Fête de la Raison was held in honor of the Cult of Reason. Churches across France were renamed "Temples of Reason" and the Notre Dame was "de-baptized" for the occasion. The Commune spared no expense: "The first festival of reason, which took place in Notre Dame, featured a fabricated mountain, with a temple of philosophy at its summit and a script borrowed from an opera libretto. At the sound of Marie-Joseph Chénier's Hymne à la Liberté, two rows of young women, dressed in white, descended the mountain, crossing each other before the 'altar of reason' before ascending once more to greet the goddess of Liberty." As you can probably gather from the above description, 1793 was not a great time to celebrate Christmas in the capital.
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  155. ^ Connelly, Mark (2000). Christmas at the Movies: Images of Christmas in American, British and European Cinema. I.B.Tauris. p. 186. ISBN 978-1-86064-397-2. A chapter on representations of Christmas in Soviet cinema could, in fact be the shortest in this collection: suffice it to say that there were, at least officially, no Christmas celebrations in the atheist socialist state after its foundation in 1917.
  156. ^ Ramet, Sabrina Petra (November 10, 2005). Religious Policy in the Soviet Union. Cambridge University Press. p. 138. ISBN 978-0-521-02230-9. The League sallied forth to save the day from this putative religious revival. Antireligioznik obliged with so many articles that it devoted an entire section of its annual index for 1928 to anti-religious training in the schools. More such material followed in 1929, and a flood of it the next year. It recommended what Lenin and others earlier had explicitly condemned—carnivals, farces, and games to intimidate and purge the youth of religious belief. It suggested that pupils campaign against customs associated with Christmas (including Christmas trees) and Easter. Some schools, the League approvingly reported, staged an anti-religious day on the 31st of each month. Not teachers but the League's local set the programme for this special occasion.
  157. ^ Zugger, Christopher Lawrence (2001). Catholics of the Soviet Empire from Lenin Through Stalin. Syracuse University Press. p. 210. ISBN 978-0-8156-0679-6. As observed by Nicholas Brianchaninov, writing in 1929–1930, after the NEP and just as the worst of collectivization was beginning, the Soviets deemed it necessary to drive into the heads of the people the axiom that religion was the synthesis of everything most harmful to humanity. It must be presented as the enemy of man and society, of life and learning, of progress. ... In caricatures, articles, Bezbozhnik, Antireligioznik, League of Militant Atheists propaganda and films. School courses [were give] on conducting the struggle against religion (how to profane a church, break windows, objects of piety). The young, always eager to be with the latest trend, often responded to such propaganda. In Moscow in 1929 children were brought to spit on the crucifixes at Christmas. Priests in Tiraspol diocese were sometimes betrayed by their own young parishioners, leading to their imprisonment and even death, and tearing their families apart.
  158. ^ Tamkin, Emily (December 30, 2016). "How Soviets Came to Celebrate New Year's Like Christmas (and Why Russians Still Do)". Foreign Policy. Foreign Policy. Retrieved January 6, 2022.
  159. ^ Goldberg, Carey (January 7, 1991). "A Russian Christmas—Better Late Than Never: Soviet Union: Orthodox Church celebration is the first under Communists. But, as with most of Yeltsin's pronouncements, the holiday stirs a controversy". Los Angeles Times. from the original on December 22, 2015. Retrieved November 22, 2014. For the first time in more than seven decades, Christmas—celebrated today by Russian Orthodox Christians—is a full state holiday across Russia's vast and snowy expanse. As part of Russian Federation President Boris N. Yeltsin's ambitious plan to revive the traditions of Old Russia, the republic's legislature declared last month that Christmas, long ignored under atheist Communist ideology, should be written back into the public calendar. "The Bolsheviks replaced crosses with hammers and sickles," said Vyacheslav S. Polosin, head of the Russian legislature's committee on religion. "Now they are being changed back."
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  162. ^ Jespersen, Knud J. V. (June 21, 2011). A History of Denmark. Macmillan International Higher Education. p. 91. ISBN 978-0-230-34417-4. It is quite normal to go to church on Christmas Eve, and many people like to celebrate a christening or wedding in church. The Church is especially important at the end of a life; by far the majority of funerals are still conducted in a church by a minister.
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  182. ^ Senn, Frank C. (2012). Introduction to Christian Liturgy. Fortress Press. p. 118. ISBN 978-1-4514-2433-1. The Christmas tree as we know it seemed to emerge in Lutheran lands in Germany in the sixteenth century. Although no specific city or town has been identified as the first to have a Christmas tree, records for the Cathedral of Strassburg indicate that a Christmas tree was set up in that church in 1539 during Martin Bucer's superintendency.
  183. ^ "The Christmas Tree". Lutheran Spokesman. 29–32. 1936. The Christmas tree became a widespread custom among German Lutherans by the eighteenth century.
  184. ^ Kelly, Joseph F. (2010). The Feast of Christmas. Liturgical Press. p. 94. ISBN 978-0-8146-3932-0. German Lutherans brought the decorated Christmas tree with them; the Moravians put lighted candles on those trees.
  185. ^ Blainey, Geoffrey (October 24, 2013). A Short History of Christianity. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. p. 418. ISBN 978-1-4422-2590-9. Many Lutherans continued to set up a small fir tree as their Christmas tree, and it must have been a seasonal sight in Bach's Leipzig at a time when it was virtually unknown in England, and little known in those farmlands of North America where Lutheran immigrants congregated.
  186. ^ Mandryk, DeeAnn (October 25, 2005). Canadian Christmas Traditions. James Lorimer & Company. p. 67. ISBN 978-1-55439-098-4. The eight-pointed star became a popular manufactured Christmas ornament around the 1840s and many people place a star on the top of their Christmas tree to represent the Star of Bethlehem.
  187. ^ Wells, Dorothy (1897). "Christmas in Other Lands". The School Journal. 55: 697–8. Christmas is the occasional of family reunions. Grandmother always has the place of honor. As the time approaches for enjoying the tree, she gathers her grandchildren about her, to tell them the story of the Christ child, with the meaning of the Christ child, with the meaning of the Christmas tree; how the evergreen is meant to represent the life everlasting, the candle lights to recall the light of the world, and the star at the top of the tree is to remind them of the star of Bethlehem.
  188. ^ Jones, David Albert (October 27, 2011). Angels. Oxford University Press. p. 24. ISBN 978-0-19-161491-0. The same ambiguity is seen in that most familiar of angels, the angel on top of the Christmas tree. This decoration, popularized in the nineteenth century, recalls the place of the angels in the Christmas story (Luke 2.9–18).
  189. ^ Becker, Udo (January 1, 2000). The Continuum Encyclopedia of Symbols. A & C Black. p. 60. ISBN 978-0-8264-1221-8. In Christianity, the Christmas tree is a symbol of Christ as the true tree of life; the candles symbolize the "light of the world" that was born in Bethlehem; the apples often used as decorations set up a symbolic relation to the paradisal apple of knowledge and thus to the original sin that Christ took away so that the return to Eden-symbolized by the Christmas tree-is again possible for humanity.
  190. ^ Crump, William D. (2006). The Christmas Encyclopedia. McFarland & Company. p. 67. ISBN 978-0-7864-2293-7. the evergreen tree (itself symbolic of eternal life through Christ)
  191. ^ Socias, James (June 24, 2020). Handbook of Prayers. Midwest Theological Forum. ISBN 978-1-936045-54-9.
  192. ^ Kitch, Anne E. (2004). The Anglican Family Prayer Book. Morehouse Publishing. p. 125.
  193. ^ a b van Renterghem, Tony. When Santa was a shaman. St. Paul: Llewellyn Publications, 1995. ISBN 1-56718-765-X.
  194. ^ Fritz Allhoff, Scott C. Lowe (2010). Christmas. John Wiley & Sons. His biographer, Eddius Stephanus, relates that while Boniface was serving as a missionary near Geismar, Germany, he had enough of the locals' reverence for the old gods. Taking an axe to an oak tree dedicated to Norse god Thor, Boniface chopped the tree down and dared Thor to zap him for it. When nothing happened, Boniface pointed out a young fir tree amid the roots of the oak and explained how this tree was a more fitting object of reverence as it pointed towards the Christian heaven and its triangular shape was reminiscent of the Christian trinity.
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  198. ^ Hewitson, Carolyn (2013). Festivals. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-135-05706-0. It is said to resemble the star of Bethlehem. The Mexicans call it the flower of the Holy Night, but usually it is called poinsettia after the man who introduced it to America, Dr Joel Poinsett.
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  206. ^ Miles, Clement, Christmas customs and traditions, Courier Dover Publications, 1976, ISBN 0-486-23354-5, p. 32.
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  208. ^ Clancy, Ronald M. (2008). Sacred Christmas Music: The Stories Behind the Most Beloved Songs of Devotion. Sterling Publishing Company. p. 40. ISBN 978-1-4027-5811-9. Luther sought reforms in music, as he sought change in theology, ethics, ritual, and art. He loved polyphony and wanted music that moved people by fusing faith and song. He encouraged a greater participation by the congregation in singing, and he simplified the music from choir plainsong to easy harmony … Luther published hundreds of hymn texts to be sung to popular melodies and simple chants. In the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, the Reformation extended the range of religious choral music beyond the liturgy, and the informal group singing of songs was highly encouraged, leading to a greater familiarity with Christmas hymns.
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  211. ^ Byrne, Eugene (December 24, 2019). "Arguably most famous Christmas song was written by a Bristolian". BristolLive. Retrieved November 6, 2020.
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  221. ^ Collins, Ace (April 20, 2010). Stories Behind the Great Traditions of Christmas. Zondervan. p. 17. ISBN 978-0-310-87388-4. Retrieved April 10, 2012. The legend of St. Nicholas, who became the bishop of Myra in the beginning of the fourth century, is the next link in the Christmas-gift chain. Legend has it that during his life the priest rode across Asia Minor bestowing gifts upon poor children.
  222. ^ Trexler, Richard (May 23, 1997). The Journey of the Magi: Meanings in History of a Christian Story. Princeton University Press. p. 17. ISBN 978-0-691-01126-4. from the original on December 31, 2015. Retrieved April 10, 2012. This exchange network of ceremonial welcome was mirrored in a second reciprocity allowing early Christians to imagine their own magi: the phenomenon of giving gifts.
  223. ^ Collins, Ace (April 20, 2010). Stories Behind the Great Traditions of Christmas. Zondervan. p. 17. ISBN 978-0-310-87388-4. Retrieved April 10, 2012. Most people today trace the practice of giving gifts on Christmas Day to the three gifts that the Magi gave to Jesus.
  224. ^ Berking, Helmuth (March 30, 1999). Sociology of Giving. SAGE Publications. p. 14. ISBN 978-0-85702-613-2. For the Enlightenment educationalist, gift-giving turned out to be a relic of a pagan custom, namely, the Roman Saturnalia. After the introduction of the Julian calendar in Rome, the 25th of December became the day of Sol invictus when people greeted the winter solstice. It was the day of the Sun's rebirth, and it was the day of the Christmas festivities – although it was only in the year 336 AD that it appears to have become established as the day of Jesus's birth (see Pannenberg 1989: 57). The Eastern Church adopted this date even later, towards the end of the 4th century, having previously regarded the 6th of January as the day of gift-giving, as it still is in the Italian community of Befana. The winter solstice was a time of festivity in every traditional culture, and the Christian Christmas probably took its place within this mythical context of the solar cult. Its core dogma of the Incarnation, however, solidly established the giving and receiving of gifts as the structural principle of that recurrent yet unique event. 'Children were given presents as the Jesus child received gifts from the magi or kings who came from afar to adore him. But in reality it was they, together with all their fellow men, who received the gift of God through man's renewed participation in the divine life' (ibid.: 61).
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Further reading

  • Bowler, Gerry, The World Encyclopedia of Christmas (October 2004: McClelland & Stewart). ISBN 978-0-7710-1535-9
  • Bowler, Gerry, Santa Claus: A Biography (November 2007: McClelland & Stewart). ISBN 978-0-7710-1668-4
  • Comfort, David, Just Say Noel: A History of Christmas from the Nativity to the Nineties (November 1995: Fireside). ISBN 978-0-684-80057-8
  • Count, Earl W., 4000 Years of Christmas: A Gift from the Ages (November 1997: Ulysses Press). ISBN 978-1-56975-087-2
  • Federer, William J., There Really Is a Santa Claus: The History of St. Nicholas & Christmas Holiday Traditions December 25, 2022, at the Wayback Machine (December 2002: Amerisearch). ISBN 978-0-9653557-4-2
  • Kelly, Joseph F., The Origins of Christmas December 25, 2022, at the Wayback Machine (August 2004: Liturgical Press). ISBN 978-0-8146-2984-0
  • Miles, Clement A., Christmas Customs and Traditions December 25, 2022, at the Wayback Machine (1976: Dover Publications). ISBN 978-0-486-23354-3
  • Nissenbaum, Stephen, The Battle for Christmas (1996; New York: Vintage Books, 1997). ISBN 0-679-74038-4
  • Restad, Penne L. (1995). Christmas in America: A History. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-509300-1.
  • Rosenthal, Jim, St. Nicholas: A Closer Look at Christmas (July 2006: Nelson Reference). ISBN 1-4185-0407-6
  • Sammons, Peter (May 2006). The Birth of Christ. Glory to Glory Publications (UK). ISBN 978-0-9551790-1-3.
  • "Christmas" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 6 (11th ed.). 1911. pp. 293–294.
  • Martindale, Cyril (1908). "Christmas" . In Herbermann, Charles (ed.). Catholic Encyclopedia. Vol. 3. New York: Robert Appleton Company.

External links

  • Christmas: Its Origin and Associations, by William Francis Dawson, 1902, from Project Gutenberg

christmas, redirects, here, other, uses, disambiguation, disambiguation, annual, festival, commemorating, birth, jesus, christ, observed, primarily, december, religious, cultural, celebration, among, billions, people, around, world, feast, central, christian, . Christmas Day redirects here For other uses see Christmas disambiguation and Christmas Day disambiguation Christmas is an annual festival commemorating the birth of Jesus Christ observed primarily on December 25 a as a religious and cultural celebration among billions of people around the world 2 3 4 A feast central to the Christian liturgical year it is preceded by the season of Advent or the Nativity Fast and initiates the season of Christmastide which historically in the West lasts twelve days and culminates on Twelfth Night 5 Christmas Day is a public holiday in many countries 6 7 8 is celebrated religiously by a majority of Christians 9 as well as culturally by many non Christians 1 10 and forms an integral part of the holiday season organized around it ChristmasNativity scene depicted using Christmas lightsAlso calledNoel Nativity Koleda XmasObserved byChristians many non Christians 1 2 TypeChristian cultural InternationalSignificanceCommemoration of the nativity of JesusCelebrationsGift giving family and other social gatherings symbolic decoration feasting etc ObservancesChurch servicesDateDecember 25 Western Christianity and part of the Eastern churches January 6 Armenian Apostolic Church and the Armenian Evangelical Church January 7 O S Dec 25 Most Oriental Orthodox and part of the Eastern Orthodox churches January 19 O S Jan 6 Armenian Patriarchate of Jerusalem FrequencyAnnualRelated toChristmastide Christmas Eve Advent Annunciation Epiphany Baptism of the Lord Nativity Fast Nativity of Christ Old Christmas Yule St Stephen s Day Boxing DayThe traditional Christmas narrative recounted in the New Testament known as the Nativity of Jesus says that Jesus was born in Bethlehem in accordance with messianic prophecies 11 When Joseph and Mary arrived in the city the inn had no room and so they were offered a stable where the Christ Child was soon born with angels proclaiming this news to shepherds who then spread the word 12 There are different hypotheses regarding the date of Jesus birth and in the early fourth century the church fixed the date as December 25 b 13 14 15 This corresponds to the traditional date of the winter solstice on the Roman calendar 16 It is exactly nine months after Annunciation on March 25 also the date of the spring equinox 17 Most Christians celebrate on December 25 in the Gregorian calendar which has been adopted almost universally in the civil calendars used in countries throughout the world However part of the Eastern Christian Churches celebrate Christmas on December 25 of the older Julian calendar which currently corresponds to January 7 in the Gregorian calendar For Christians believing that God came into the world in the form of man to atone for the sins of humanity rather than knowing Jesus exact birth date is considered to be the primary purpose in celebrating Christmas 18 19 20 The celebratory customs associated in various countries with Christmas have a mix of pre Christian Christian and secular themes and origins 21 22 Popular modern customs of the holiday include gift giving completing an Advent calendar or Advent wreath Christmas music and caroling viewing a Nativity play an exchange of Christmas cards church services a special meal and the display of various Christmas decorations including Christmas trees Christmas lights nativity scenes garlands wreaths mistletoe and holly In addition several closely related and often interchangeable figures known as Santa Claus Father Christmas Saint Nicholas and Christkind are associated with bringing gifts to children during the Christmas season and have their own body of traditions and lore 23 Because gift giving and many other aspects of the Christmas festival involve heightened economic activity the holiday has become a significant event and a key sales period for retailers and businesses Over the past few centuries Christmas has had a steadily growing economic effect in many regions of the world Contents 1 Etymology 1 1 Other names 2 Nativity 3 History 3 1 Calculation hypothesis 3 2 Solstice date hypothesis 3 3 History of religions hypothesis 3 4 Relation to concurrent celebrations 3 5 Post classical history 3 6 Modern history 3 6 1 17th and 18th centuries 3 6 2 19th century 3 6 3 20th century 4 Observance and traditions 4 1 Church attendance 4 2 Decorations 4 3 Nativity play 4 4 Music and carols 4 5 Traditional cuisine 4 6 Cards 4 7 Commemorative stamps 4 8 Gift giving 4 8 1 Gift bearing figures 4 9 Date according to Julian calendar 4 9 1 Listing 5 Economy 6 Controversies 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 10 Further reading 11 External linksEtymologyThe English word Christmas is a shortened form of Christ s Mass The word is recorded as Cristesmaesse in 1038 and Cristes messe in 1131 24 Crist genitive Cristes is from Greek Khristos Xristos a translation of Hebrew Masiaḥ מ ש יח Messiah meaning anointed 25 26 and maesse is from Latin missa the celebration of the Eucharist 27 The form Christenmas was also used during some periods but is now considered archaic and dialectal 28 The term derives from Middle English Cristenmasse meaning Christian mass 29 Xmas is an abbreviation of Christmas found particularly in print based on the initial letter chi X in Greek Khristos Xristos Christ although some style guides discourage its use 30 This abbreviation has precedent in Middle English Xr es masse where Xr is an abbreviation for Xristos 29 Other names In addition to Christmas the holiday has had various other English names throughout its history The Anglo Saxons referred to the feast as midwinter 31 32 or more rarely as Natiuited from Latin nativitas below 31 33 Nativity meaning birth is from Latin nativitas 34 In Old English Geola Yule referred to the period corresponding to December and January which was eventually equated with Christian Christmas 35 Noel also Nowel or Nowell as in The First Nowell entered English in the late 14th century and is from the Old French noel or nael itself ultimately from the Latin natalis dies meaning birth day 36 Koleda is the traditional Slavic name for Christmas and the period from Christmas to Epiphany or more generally to Slavic Christmas related rituals some dating to pre Christian times 37 It is actually used in Bulgarian NativityMain article Nativity of Jesus The gospels of Luke and Matthew describe Jesus as being born in Bethlehem to the Virgin Mary In the gospel of Luke Joseph and Mary traveled from Nazareth to Bethlehem for the census and Jesus was born there and placed in a manger 38 Angels proclaimed him a savior for all people and shepherds came to adore him The gospel of Matthew adds that the magi followed a star to Bethlehem to bring gifts to Jesus born the king of the Jews King Herod ordered the massacre of all the boys less than two years old in Bethlehem but the family fled to Egypt and later returned to Nazareth 39 HistorySee also Date of birth of Jesus Eastern Orthodox icon of the birth of Christ by Saint Andrei Rublev 15th century Nativity of Christ medieval illustration from the Hortus deliciarum of Herrad of Landsberg 12th century Adoration of the Shepherds 1622 by Gerard van Honthorst depicts the nativity of Jesus The nativity sequences included in the Gospels of Matthew and Luke prompted early Christian writers to suggest various dates for the anniversary 40 At the time of the 2nd century the earliest church records indicate that Christians were remembering and celebrating the birth of the Lord an observance that sprang up organically from the authentic devotion of ordinary believers 41 Though Christmas did not appear on the lists of festivals given by the early Christian writers Irenaeus and Tertullian 24 the Chronograph of 354 records that a Christmas celebration took place in Rome eight days before the calends of January 42 This section was written in AD 336 during the brief pontificate of Pope Mark 43 In the East the birth of Jesus was celebrated in connection with the Epiphany on January 6 44 45 This holiday was not primarily about the nativity but rather the baptism of Jesus 46 Christmas was promoted in the East as part of the revival of Orthodox Christianity that followed the death of the pro Arian Emperor Valens at the Battle of Adrianople in 378 The feast was introduced in Constantinople in 379 in Antioch by John Chrysostom towards the end of the fourth century 45 probably in 388 and in Alexandria in the following century 47 The first recorded Christmas celebration was in Rome on December 25 AD 336 48 In the 3rd century the date of the nativity was the subject of great interest Around AD 200 Clement of Alexandria wrote There are those who have determined not only the year of our Lord s birth but also the day and they say that it took place in the 28th year of Augustus and in the 25th day of the Egyptian month Pachon May 20 Further others say that He was born on the 24th or 25th of Pharmuthi April 20 or 21 49 Various factors contributed to the selection of December 25 as a date of celebration it was nine months after the date linked to the conception of Jesus March 25 which also marked the vernal equinox celebrated as the Feast of the Annunciation and it was the date of the winter solstice on the Roman calendar 17 Adam C English Professor of Religion at Campbell University writes 41 First we should examine the biblical evidence regarding the timing of the conception The angel Gabriel appeared to Zechariah husband of Elizabeth and father of John the Baptizer on the day he was chosen by lot to enter the sanctuary of the Lord and offer incense Luke 1 9 Zechariah belonged to the tribe of Levi the one tribe especially selected by the Lord to serve as priests Not restricted to any one tribal territory the Levite priests dispersed throughout the land of Israel Nevertheless many chose to live near Jerusalem in order to fulfill duties in the Temple just like Zechariah who resided at nearby Ein Karem Lots were cast regularly to decide any number of priestly duties preparing the altar making the sacrifice cleaning the ashes burning the morning or evening incense Yet given the drama of the event it would seem that he entered the Temple sanctuary on the highest and holiest day of the year the Day of Atonement Yom Kippur There beside the altar of the Lord a radiant angel gave news of the child to be born to Elizabeth The date reckoned for this occurrence is September 24 based on computations from the Jewish calendar in accordance with Leviticus 23 regarding the Day of Atonement According to Luke 1 26 Gabriel s annunciation to Mary took place in the sixth month of Elizabeth s pregnancy That is Mary conceives six months after Elizabeth Luke repeats the uniqueness of the timing in verse 36 Counting six months from September 24 we arrive at March 25 the most likely date for the annunciation and conception of Mary Nine months hence takes us to December 25 which turns out to be a surprisingly reasonable date for the birthday In Palestine the months of November mark the rainy season the only time of the year sheep might find fresh green grass to graze During the other ten months of the year animals must content themselves on dry straw So the suggestion that shepherds might have stayed out in the fields with their flocks in late December at the peak of the rainy season is not only reasonable it is most certain 41 The early Church Fathers John Chrysostom Augustine of Hippo and Jerome attested to 25 December as the date of Christmas 41 The primitive Church connected Jesus to the Sun through the use of such phrases as Sun of righteousness 40 50 The early Christian writer Lactantius wrote the east is attached to God because he is the source of light and the illuminator of the world and he makes us rise toward eternal life It is for this reason that the early Christians established the direction of prayer as being eastward towards the rising sun 41 In the Roman Empire in which many Christians resided the winter solstice was marked on December 25 16 In 567 the Council of Tours put in place the season of Christmastide proclaiming the twelve days from Christmas to Epiphany as a sacred and festive season and established the duty of Advent fasting in preparation for the feast 5 51 This was done in order to solve the administrative problem for the Roman Empire as it tried to coordinate the solar Julian calendar with the lunar calendars of its provinces in the east 52 53 54 Christmas played a role in the Arian controversy of the fourth century After this controversy ran its course the prominence of the holiday declined for a few centuries The feast regained prominence after 800 when Charlemagne was crowned emperor on Christmas Day In Puritan England Christmas was banned with Puritans considering it a Catholic invention and also associating the day with drunkenness and other misbehaviour 55 It was restored as a legal holiday in England in 1660 when Puritan legislation was declared null and void but it remained disreputable in the minds of some 56 In the early 19th century Christmas festivities and services became widespread with the rise of the Oxford Movement in the Church of England that emphasized the centrality of Christmas in Christianity and charity to the poor 57 along with Washington Irving Charles Dickens and other authors emphasizing family children kind heartedness gift giving and Santa Claus for Irving 57 or Father Christmas for Dickens 58 Various theories have been offered with respect to the establishment of the dates on which the Christian Churches came to celebrate Christmas 41 59 Calculation hypothesis Further information Chronology of Jesus Mosaic in Mausoleum M in the pre fourth century necropolis under St Peter s Basilica in Rome interpreted by some as Jesus represented as Christus Sol Christ the Sun 60 The calculation hypothesis suggests that an earlier holiday the Annunciation which celebrated the conception of Jesus held on March 25 became associated with the Incarnation 61 Christmas was then calculated as nine months later The calculation hypothesis was proposed by French writer Louis Duchesne in 1889 62 63 The Bible in Luke 1 26 records the annunciation to Mary to be at the time when Elizabeth mother of John the Baptist was in her sixth month of pregnancy cf Nativity of Saint John the Baptist 64 65 Thus the ecclesiastical holiday to commemorate the Annunciation of the Lord was created in the seventh century and was assigned to be celebrated on March 25 this date is nine months before Christmas in addition to being the traditional date of the equinox 65 It is unrelated to the Quartodeciman which had been forgotten by this time 66 Early Christians celebrated the life of Jesus on a date considered equivalent to 14 Nisan Passover on the local calendar Because Passover was held on the 14th of the month this feast is referred to as the Quartodeciman All the major events of Christ s life especially the passion were celebrated on this date In his letter to the Corinthians Paul mentions Passover presumably celebrated according to the local calendar in Corinth 67 Tertullian d 220 who lived in Latin speaking North Africa gives the date of passion celebration as March 25 68 The date of the passion was moved to Good Friday in 165 According to the calculation hypothesis the celebration of the Quartodeciman continued in some areas and the feast became associated with Incarnation 69 The calculation hypothesis is considered academically to be a thoroughly viable hypothesis though not certain 70 It was a traditional Jewish belief that great men were born and died on the same day so lived a whole number of years without fractions Jesus was therefore considered to have been conceived on March 25 as he died on March 25 which was calculated to have coincided with 14 Nisan 71 A passage in Commentary on the Prophet Daniel 204 by Hippolytus of Rome identifies December 25 as the date of the nativity This passage is generally considered a late interpolation But the manuscript includes another passage one that is more likely to be authentic that gives the passion as March 25 72 In 221 Sextus Julius Africanus c 160 c 240 gave March 25 as the day of creation and of the conception of Jesus in his universal history This conclusion was based on solar symbolism with March 25 the date of the equinox As this implies a birth in December it is sometimes claimed to be the earliest identification of December 25 as the nativity However Africanus was not such an influential writer that it is likely he determined the date of Christmas 73 The treatise De solstitia et aequinoctia conceptionis et nativitatis Domini nostri Iesu Christi et Iohannis Baptistae pseudepigraphically attributed to John Chrysostom and dating to the early fourth century 74 75 also argued that Jesus was conceived and crucified on the same day of the year and calculated this as March 25 76 77 This anonymous tract also states But Our Lord too is born in the month of December the eight before the calends of January 25 December But they call it the Birthday of the Unconquered Who indeed is so unconquered as Our Lord Or if they say that it is the birthday of the Sun He is the Sun of Justice 24 Solstice date hypothesis December 25 was considered the date of the winter solstice in the Roman calendar 16 78 though actually it occurred on the 23rd or 24th at that time 79 A late fourth century sermon by Saint Augustine explains why this was a fitting day to celebrate Christ s nativity Hence it is that He was born on the day which is the shortest in our earthly reckoning and from which subsequent days begin to increase in length He therefore who bent low and lifted us up chose the shortest day yet the one whence light begins to increase 80 Linking Jesus to the Sun was supported by various Biblical passages Jesus was considered to be the Sun of righteousness prophesied by Malachi Unto you shall the sun of righteousness arise and healing is in his wings 50 Such solar symbolism could support more than one date of birth An anonymous work known as De Pascha Computus 243 linked the idea that creation began at the spring equinox on March 25 with the conception or birth the word nascor can mean either of Jesus on March 28 the day of the creation of the sun in the Genesis account One translation reads O the splendid and divine providence of the Lord that on that day the very day on which the sun was made March 28 a Wednesday Christ should be born 24 81 In the 17th century Isaac Newton who coincidentally was born on December 25 argued that the date of Christmas may have been selected to correspond with the solstice 82 Conversely according to Steven Hijmans of the University of Alberta It is cosmic symbolism which inspired the Church leadership in Rome to elect the southern solstice December 25 as the birthday of Christ and the northern solstice as that of John the Baptist supplemented by the equinoxes as their respective dates of conception 83 History of religions hypothesis See also Saturnalia The rival History of Religions hypothesis suggests that the Church selected December 25 date to appropriate festivities held by the Romans in honor of the Sun god Sol Invictus 61 This cult was established by Aurelian in 274 An explicit expression of this theory appears in an annotation of uncertain date added to a manuscript of a work by 12th century Syrian bishop Jacob Bar Salibi The scribe who added it wrote It was a custom of the Pagans to celebrate on the same 25 December the birthday of the Sun at which they kindled lights in token of festivity In these solemnities and revelries the Christians also took part Accordingly when the doctors of the Church perceived that the Christians had a leaning to this festival they took counsel and resolved that the true Nativity should be solemnised on that day 84 In 1743 German Protestant Paul Ernst Jablonski argued Christmas was placed on December 25 to correspond with the Roman solar holiday Dies Natalis Solis Invicti and was therefore a paganization that debased the true church 85 However it has been also argued that on the contrary the Emperor Aurelian who in 274 instituted the holiday of the Dies Natalis Solis Invicti did so partly as an attempt to give a pagan significance to a date already important for Christians in Rome 86 Hermann Usener 87 and others 24 proposed that the Christians chose this day because it was the Roman feast celebrating the birthday of Sol Invictus Modern scholar S E Hijmans however states that While they were aware that pagans called this day the birthday of Sol Invictus this did not concern them and it did not play any role in their choice of date for Christmas 83 Moreover Thomas J Talley holds that the Roman Emperor Aurelian placed a festival of Sol Invictus on December 25 in order to compete with the growing rate of the Christian Church which had already been celebrating Christmas on that date first 59 In the judgement of the Church of England Liturgical Commission the History of Religions hypothesis has been challenged 88 by a view based on an old tradition according to which the date of Christmas was fixed at nine months after March 25 the date of the vernal equinox on which the Annunciation was celebrated 76 Adam C English Professor of Religion at Campbell University writes 41 We have evidence from the second century less than fifty years after the close of the New Testament that Christians were remembering and celebrating the birth of the Lord It is not true to say that the observance of the nativity was imposed on Christians hundreds of years later by imperial decree or by a magisterial church ruling The observance sprang up organically from the authentic devotion of ordinary believers 41 With regard to a December religious feast of the deified Sun Sol as distinct from a solstice feast of the birth or rebirth of the astronomical sun Hijmans has commented that while the winter solstice on or around December 25 was well established in the Roman imperial calendar there is no evidence that a religious celebration of Sol on that day antedated the celebration of Christmas 89 Thomas Talley has shown that although the Emperor Aurelian s dedication of a temple to the sun god in the Campus Martius C E 274 probably took place on the Birthday of the Invincible Sun on December 25 the cult of the sun in pagan Rome ironically did not celebrate the winter solstice nor any of the other quarter tense days as one might expect 90 The Oxford Companion to Christian Thought remarks on the uncertainty about the order of precedence between the religious celebrations of the Birthday of the Unconquered Sun and of the birthday of Jesus stating that the hypothesis that December 25 was chosen for celebrating the birth of Jesus on the basis of the belief that his conception occurred on March 25 potentially establishes 25 December as a Christian festival before Aurelian s decree which when promulgated might have provided for the Christian feast both opportunity and challenge 91 Relation to concurrent celebrations Many popular customs associated with Christmas developed independently of the commemoration of Jesus birth with some claiming that certain elements are Christianized and have origins in pre Christian festivals that were celebrated by pagan populations who were later converted to Christianity other scholars reject these claims and affirm that Christmas customs largely developed in a Christian context 92 22 The prevailing atmosphere of Christmas has also continually evolved since the holiday s inception ranging from a sometimes raucous drunken carnival like state in the Middle Ages 93 to a tamer family oriented and children centered theme introduced in a 19th century transformation 94 95 The celebration of Christmas was banned on more than one occasion within certain groups such as the Puritans and Jehovah s Witnesses who do not celebrate birthdays in general due to concerns that it was too unbiblical 96 55 97 Prior to and through the early Christian centuries winter festivals were the most popular of the year in many European pagan cultures Reasons included the fact that less agricultural work needed to be done during the winter as well as an expectation of better weather as spring approached 98 Celtic winter herbs such as mistletoe and ivy and the custom of kissing under a mistletoe are common in modern Christmas celebrations in the English speaking countries 99 The pre Christian Germanic peoples including the Anglo Saxons and the Norse celebrated a winter festival called Yule held in the late December to early January period yielding modern English yule today used as a synonym for Christmas 100 In Germanic language speaking areas numerous elements of modern Christmas folk custom and iconography may have originated from Yule including the Yule log Yule boar and the Yule goat 101 100 Often leading a ghostly procession through the sky the Wild Hunt the long bearded god Odin is referred to as the Yule one and Yule father in Old Norse texts while other gods are referred to as Yule beings 102 On the other hand as there are no reliable existing references to a Christmas log prior to the 16th century the burning of the Christmas block may have been an early modern invention by Christians unrelated to the pagan practice 103 In eastern Europe also pre Christian traditions were incorporated into Christmas celebrations there an example being the Koleda 104 which shares parallels with the Christmas carol Post classical history The Nativity from a 14th century Missal a liturgical book containing texts and music necessary for the celebration of Mass throughout the year In the Early Middle Ages Christmas Day was overshadowed by Epiphany which in western Christianity focused on the visit of the magi But the medieval calendar was dominated by Christmas related holidays The forty days before Christmas became the forty days of St Martin which began on November 11 the feast of St Martin of Tours now known as Advent 93 In Italy former Saturnalian traditions were attached to Advent 93 Around the 12th century these traditions transferred again to the Twelve Days of Christmas December 25 January 5 a time that appears in the liturgical calendars as Christmastide or Twelve Holy Days 93 The prominence of Christmas Day increased gradually after Charlemagne was crowned Emperor on Christmas Day in 800 King Edmund the Martyr was anointed on Christmas in 855 and King William I of England was crowned on Christmas Day 1066 The coronation of Charlemagne on Christmas of 800 helped promote the popularity of the holiday By the High Middle Ages the holiday had become so prominent that chroniclers routinely noted where various magnates celebrated Christmas King Richard II of England hosted a Christmas feast in 1377 at which 28 oxen and 300 sheep were eaten 93 The Yule boar was a common feature of medieval Christmas feasts Caroling also became popular and was originally performed by a group of dancers who sang The group was composed of a lead singer and a ring of dancers that provided the chorus Various writers of the time condemned caroling as lewd indicating that the unruly traditions of Saturnalia and Yule may have continued in this form 93 Misrule drunkenness promiscuity gambling was also an important aspect of the festival In England gifts were exchanged on New Year s Day and there was special Christmas ale 93 Christmas during the Middle Ages was a public festival that incorporated ivy holly and other evergreens 105 Christmas gift giving during the Middle Ages was usually between people with legal relationships such as tenant and landlord 105 The annual indulgence in eating dancing singing sporting and card playing escalated in England and by the 17th century the Christmas season featured lavish dinners elaborate masques and pageants In 1607 King James I insisted that a play be acted on Christmas night and that the court indulge in games 106 It was during the Reformation in 16th 17th century Europe that many Protestants changed the gift bringer to the Christ Child or Christkindl and the date of giving gifts changed from December 6 to Christmas Eve 107 Modern history 17th and 18th centuries Following the Protestant Reformation many of the new denominations including the Anglican Church and Lutheran Church continued to celebrate Christmas 108 In 1629 the Anglican poet John Milton penned On the Morning of Christ s Nativity a poem that has since been read by many during Christmastide 109 110 Donald Heinz a professor at California State University states that Martin Luther inaugurated a period in which Germany would produce a unique culture of Christmas much copied in North America 111 Among the congregations of the Dutch Reformed Church Christmas was celebrated as one of the principal evangelical feasts 112 However in 17th century England some groups such as the Puritans strongly condemned the celebration of Christmas considering it a Catholic invention and the trappings of popery or the rags of the Beast 55 In contrast the established Anglican Church pressed for a more elaborate observance of feasts penitential seasons and saints days The calendar reform became a major point of tension between the Anglican party and the Puritan party 113 The Catholic Church also responded promoting the festival in a more religiously oriented form King Charles I of England directed his noblemen and gentry to return to their landed estates in midwinter to keep up their old style Christmas generosity 106 Following the Parliamentarian victory over Charles I during the English Civil War England s Puritan rulers banned Christmas in 1647 55 114 Protests followed as pro Christmas rioting broke out in several cities and for weeks Canterbury was controlled by the rioters who decorated doorways with holly and shouted royalist slogans 55 The book The Vindication of Christmas London 1652 argued against the Puritans and makes note of Old English Christmas traditions dinner roast apples on the fire card playing dances with plow boys and maidservants old Father Christmas and carol singing 115 During the ban semi clandestine religious services marking Christ s birth continued to be held and people sang carols in secret 56 The Examination and Tryal of Old Father Christmas 1686 published after Christmas was reinstated as a holy day in England The Restoration of King Charles II in 1660 ended the ban and Christmas was again freely celebrated in England 56 Many Calvinist clergymen disapproved of Christmas celebration As such in Scotland the Presbyterian Church of Scotland discouraged the observance of Christmas and though James VI commanded its celebration in 1618 attendance at church was scant 116 The Parliament of Scotland officially abolished the observance of Christmas in 1640 claiming that the church had been purged of all superstitious observation of days 117 Whereas in England Wales and Ireland Christmas Day is a common law holiday having been a customary holiday since time immemorial it was not until 1871 that it was designated a bank holiday in Scotland 118 Following the Restoration of Charles II Poor Robin s Almanack contained the lines Now thanks to God for Charles return Whose absence made old Christmas mourn For then we scarcely did it know Whether it Christmas were or no 119 The diary of James Woodforde from the latter half of the 18th century details the observance of Christmas and celebrations associated with the season over a number of years 120 As in England Puritans in Colonial America staunchly opposed the observation of Christmas 97 The Pilgrims of New England pointedly spent their first December 25 in the New World working normally 97 Puritans such as Cotton Mather condemned Christmas both because scripture did not mention its observance and because Christmas celebrations of the day often involved boisterous behavior 121 122 Many non Puritans in New England deplored the loss of the holidays enjoyed by the laboring classes in England 123 Christmas observance was outlawed in Boston in 1659 97 The ban on Christmas observance was revoked in 1681 by English governor Edmund Andros but it was not until the mid 19th century that celebrating Christmas became fashionable in the Boston region 124 At the same time Christian residents of Virginia and New York observed the holiday freely Pennsylvania Dutch settlers predominantly Moravian settlers of Bethlehem Nazareth and Lititz in Pennsylvania and the Wachovia settlements in North Carolina were enthusiastic celebrators of Christmas The Moravians in Bethlehem had the first Christmas trees in America as well as the first Nativity Scenes 125 Christmas fell out of favor in the United States after the American Revolution when it was considered an English custom 126 George Washington attacked Hessian German mercenaries on the day after Christmas during the Battle of Trenton on December 26 1776 Christmas being much more popular in Germany than in America at this time With the atheistic Cult of Reason in power during the era of Revolutionary France Christian Christmas religious services were banned and the three kings cake was renamed the equality cake under anticlerical government policies 127 128 19th century Ebenezer Scrooge and the Ghost of Christmas Present From Charles Dickens A Christmas Carol 1843 In the early 19th century writers imagined Tudor Christmas as a time of heartfelt celebration In 1843 Charles Dickens wrote the novel A Christmas Carol which helped revive the spirit of Christmas and seasonal merriment 94 95 Its instant popularity played a major role in portraying Christmas as a holiday emphasizing family goodwill and compassion 57 Dickens sought to construct Christmas as a family centered festival of generosity linking worship and feasting within a context of social reconciliation 129 Superimposing his humanitarian vision of the holiday in what has been termed Carol Philosophy 130 Dickens influenced many aspects of Christmas that are celebrated today in Western culture such as family gatherings seasonal food and drink dancing games and a festive generosity of spirit 131 A prominent phrase from the tale Merry Christmas was popularized following the appearance of the story 132 This coincided with the appearance of the Oxford Movement and the growth of Anglo Catholicism which led a revival in traditional rituals and religious observances 133 The Queen s Christmas tree at Windsor Castle published in the Illustrated London News 1848 The term Scrooge became a synonym for miser with Bah Humbug dismissive of the festive spirit 134 In 1843 the first commercial Christmas card was produced by Sir Henry Cole 135 The revival of the Christmas Carol began with William Sandys s Christmas Carols Ancient and Modern 1833 with the first appearance in print of The First Noel I Saw Three Ships Hark the Herald Angels Sing and God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen popularized in Dickens A Christmas Carol In Britain the Christmas tree was introduced in the early 19th century by the German born Queen Charlotte In 1832 the future Queen Victoria wrote about her delight at having a Christmas tree hung with lights ornaments and presents placed round it 136 After her marriage to her German cousin Prince Albert by 1841 the custom became more widespread throughout Britain 137 An image of the British royal family with their Christmas tree at Windsor Castle created a sensation when it was published in the Illustrated London News in 1848 A modified version of this image was published in Godey s Lady s Book Philadelphia in 1850 138 139 By the 1870s putting up a Christmas tree had become common in America 138 In America interest in Christmas had been revived in the 1820s by several short stories by Washington Irving which appear in his The Sketch Book of Geoffrey Crayon Gent and Old Christmas Irving s stories depicted harmonious warm hearted English Christmas festivities he experienced while staying in Aston Hall Birmingham England that had largely been abandoned 140 and he used the tract Vindication of Christmas 1652 of Old English Christmas traditions that he had transcribed into his journal as a format for his stories 106 A Norwegian Christmas 1846 painting by Adolph Tidemand In 1822 Clement Clarke Moore wrote the poem A Visit From St Nicholas popularly known by its first line Twas the Night Before Christmas 141 The poem helped popularize the tradition of exchanging gifts and seasonal Christmas shopping began to assume economic importance 142 This also started the cultural conflict between the holiday s spiritual significance and its associated commercialism that some see as corrupting the holiday In her 1850 book The First Christmas in New England Harriet Beecher Stowe includes a character who complains that the true meaning of Christmas was lost in a shopping spree 143 While the celebration of Christmas was not yet customary in some regions in the U S Henry Wadsworth Longfellow detected a transition state about Christmas here in New England in 1856 The old puritan feeling prevents it from being a cheerful hearty holiday though every year makes it more so 144 In Reading Pennsylvania a newspaper remarked in 1861 Even our presbyterian friends who have hitherto steadfastly ignored Christmas threw open their church doors and assembled in force to celebrate the anniversary of the Savior s birth 144 The First Congregational Church of Rockford Illinois although of genuine Puritan stock was preparing for a grand Christmas jubilee a news correspondent reported in 1864 144 By 1860 fourteen states including several from New England had adopted Christmas as a legal holiday 145 In 1875 Louis Prang introduced the Christmas card to Americans He has been called the father of the American Christmas card 146 On June 28 1870 Christmas was formally declared a United States federal holiday 147 20th century The Christmas Visit Postcard c 1910 During the First World War and particularly but not exclusively 148 in 1914 a series of informal truces took place for Christmas between opposing armies The truces which were organised spontaneously by fighting men ranged from promises not to shoot shouted at a distance in order to ease the pressure of war for the day to friendly socializing gift giving and even sport between enemies 149 These incidents became a well known and semi mythologised part of popular memory 150 They have been described as a symbol of common humanity even in the darkest of situations and used to demonstrate to children the ideals of Christmas 151 Up to the 1950s in the UK many Christmas customs were restricted to the upper classes and better off families The mass of the population had not adopted many of the Christmas rituals that later became general The Christmas tree was rare Christmas dinner might be beef or goose certainly not turkey In their stockings children might get an apple orange and sweets Full celebration of a family Christmas with all the trimmings only became widespread with increased prosperity from the 1950s 152 National papers were published on Christmas Day until 1912 Post was still delivered on Christmas Day until 1961 League football matches continued in Scotland until the 1970s while in England they ceased at the end of the 1950s 153 154 Under the state atheism of the Soviet Union after its foundation in 1917 Christmas celebrations along with other Christian holidays were prohibited in public 155 During the 1920s 30s and 40s the League of Militant Atheists encouraged school pupils to campaign against Christmas traditions such as the Christmas tree as well as other Christian holidays including Easter the League established an antireligious holiday to be the 31st of each month as a replacement 156 At the height of this persecution in 1929 on Christmas Day children in Moscow were encouraged to spit on crucifixes as a protest against the holiday 157 Instead the importance of the holiday and all its trappings such as the Christmas tree and gift giving was transferred to the New Year 158 It was not until the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991 that the persecution ended and Orthodox Christmas became a state holiday again for the first time in Russia after seven decades 159 European History Professor Joseph Perry wrote that likewise in Nazi Germany because Nazi ideologues saw organized religion as an enemy of the totalitarian state propagandists sought to deemphasize or eliminate altogether the Christian aspects of the holiday and that Propagandists tirelessly promoted numerous Nazified Christmas songs which replaced Christian themes with the regime s racial ideologies 160 As Christmas celebrations began to be held around the world even outside traditional Christian cultures in the 20th century some Muslim majority countries subsequently banned the practice of Christmas claiming it undermines Islam 161 Observance and traditionsFurther information Christmas traditions and Observance of Christmas by country Christmas at the Annunciation Church in Nazareth 1965 Dark brown countries that do not recognize Christmas on December 25 or January 7 as a public holiday Light brown countries that do not recognize Christmas as a public holiday but the holiday is given observance Many Christians attend church services to celebrate the birth of Jesus Christ 162 Christmas Day is celebrated as a major festival and public holiday in countries around the world including many whose populations are mostly non Christian In some non Christian areas periods of former colonial rule introduced the celebration e g Hong Kong in others Christian minorities or foreign cultural influences have led populations to observe the holiday Countries such as Japan where Christmas is popular despite there being only a small number of Christians have adopted many of the cultural aspects of Christmas such as gift giving decorations and Christmas trees A similar example is in Turkey being Muslim majority and with a small number of Christians where Christmas trees and decorations tend to line public streets during the festival 163 Among countries with a strong Christian tradition a variety of Christmas celebrations have developed that incorporate regional and local cultures Church attendance Christmas Day inclusive of its vigil Christmas Eve is a Festival in the Lutheran Churches a solemnity in the Roman Catholic Church and a Principal Feast of the Anglican Communion Other Christian denominations do not rank their feast days but nevertheless place importance on Christmas Eve Christmas Day as with other Christian feasts like Easter Ascension Day and Pentecost 164 As such for Christians attending a Christmas Eve or Christmas Day church service plays an important part in the recognition of the Christmas season Christmas along with Easter is the period of highest annual church attendance A 2010 survey by LifeWay Christian Resources found that six in ten Americans attend church services during this time 165 In the United Kingdom the Church of England reported an estimated attendance of 2 5 million people at Christmas services in 2015 166 Decorations Main article Christmas decoration Further information Hanging of the greens A typical Neapolitan presepe or presepio or Nativity scene Local creches are renowned for their ornate decorations and symbolic figurines often mirroring daily life Nativity scenes are known from 10th century Rome They were popularised by Saint Francis of Assisi from 1223 quickly spreading across Europe 167 Different types of decorations developed across the Christian world dependent on local tradition and available resources and can vary from simple representations of the crib to far more elaborate sets renowned manger scene traditions include the colourful Krakow szopka in Poland 168 which imitate Krakow s historical buildings as settings the elaborate Italian presepi Neapolitan Genoese and Bolognese 169 170 171 172 or the Provencal creches in southern France using hand painted terracotta figurines called santons 173 In certain parts of the world notably Sicily living nativity scenes following the tradition of Saint Francis are a popular alternative to static creches 174 175 176 The first commercially produced decorations appeared in Germany in the 1860s inspired by paper chains made by children 177 In countries where a representation of the Nativity scene is very popular people are encouraged to compete and create the most original or realistic ones Within some families the pieces used to make the representation are considered a valuable family heirloom 178 The traditional colors of Christmas decorations are red green and gold 179 180 Red symbolizes the blood of Jesus which was shed in his crucifixion green symbolizes eternal life and in particular the evergreen tree which does not lose its leaves in the winter and gold is the first color associated with Christmas as one of the three gifts of the Magi symbolizing royalty 181 The official White House Christmas tree for 1962 displayed in the Entrance Hall and presented by John F Kennedy and his wife Jackie The Christmas tree was first used by German Lutherans in the 16th century with records indicating that a Christmas tree was placed in the Cathedral of Strassburg in 1539 under the leadership of the Protestant Reformer Martin Bucer 182 183 In the United States these German Lutherans brought the decorated Christmas tree with them the Moravians put lighted candles on those trees 184 185 When decorating the Christmas tree many individuals place a star at the top of the tree symbolizing the Star of Bethlehem a fact recorded by The School Journal in 1897 186 187 Professor David Albert Jones of Oxford University writes that in the 19th century it became popular for people to also use an angel to top the Christmas tree in order to symbolize the angels mentioned in the accounts of the Nativity of Jesus 188 Additionally in the context of a Christian celebration of Christmas the Christmas tree being evergreen in colour is symbolic of Christ who offers eternal life the candles or lights on the tree represent the Light of the World Jesus born in Bethlehem 189 190 Christian services for family use and public worship have been published for the blessing of a Christmas tree after it has been erected 191 192 The Christmas tree is considered by some as Christianisation of pagan tradition and ritual surrounding the Winter Solstice which included the use of evergreen boughs and an adaptation of pagan tree worship 193 according to eighth century biographer AEddi Stephanus Saint Boniface 634 709 who was a missionary in Germany took an ax to an oak tree dedicated to Thor and pointed out a fir tree which he stated was a more fitting object of reverence because it pointed to heaven and it had a triangular shape which he said was symbolic of the Trinity 194 The English language phrase Christmas tree is first recorded in 1835 195 and represents an importation from the German language 193 196 197 On Christmas the Christ Candle in the center of the Advent wreath is traditionally lit in many church services Since the 16th century the poinsettia a native plant from Mexico has been associated with Christmas carrying the Christian symbolism of the Star of Bethlehem in that country it is known in Spanish as the Flower of the Holy Night 198 199 Other popular holiday plants include holly mistletoe red amaryllis and Christmas cactus 200 Other traditional decorations include bells candles candy canes stockings wreaths and angels Both the displaying of wreaths and candles in each window are a more traditional Christmas display 201 The concentric assortment of leaves usually from an evergreen make up Christmas wreaths and are designed to prepare Christians for the Advent season Candles in each window are meant to demonstrate the fact that Christians believe that Jesus Christ is the ultimate light of the world 202 Christmas lights and banners may be hung along streets music played from speakers and Christmas trees placed in prominent places 203 It is common in many parts of the world for town squares and consumer shopping areas to sponsor and display decorations Rolls of brightly colored paper with secular or religious Christmas motifs are manufactured for the purpose of wrapping gifts In some countries Christmas decorations are traditionally taken down on Twelfth Night 204 Nativity play Main article Nativity play Children in Oklahoma reenact a Nativity play For the Christian celebration of Christmas the viewing of the Nativity play is one of the oldest Christmastime traditions with the first reenactment of the Nativity of Jesus taking place in A D 1223 205 In that year Francis of Assisi assembled a Nativity scene outside of his church in Italy and children sung Christmas carols celebrating the birth of Jesus 205 Each year this grew larger and people travelled from afar to see Francis depiction of the Nativity of Jesus that came to feature drama and music 205 Nativity plays eventually spread throughout all of Europe where they remain popular Christmas Eve and Christmas Day church services often came to feature Nativity plays as did schools and theatres 205 In France Germany Mexico and Spain Nativity plays are often reenacted outdoors in the streets 205 Music and carols Main article Christmas music Christmas carolers in Jersey The earliest extant specifically Christmas hymns appear in fourth century Rome Latin hymns such as Veni redemptor gentium written by Ambrose Archbishop of Milan were austere statements of the theological doctrine of the Incarnation in opposition to Arianism Corde natus ex Parentis Of the Father s love begotten by the Spanish poet Prudentius d 413 is still sung in some churches today 206 In the 9th and 10th centuries the Christmas Sequence or Prose was introduced in North European monasteries developing under Bernard of Clairvaux into a sequence of rhymed stanzas In the 12th century the Parisian monk Adam of St Victor began to derive music from popular songs introducing something closer to the traditional Christmas carol Christmas carols in English appear in a 1426 work of John Awdlay who lists twenty five caroles of Cristemas probably sung by groups of wassailers who went from house to house 207 Child singers in Bucharest 1841 The songs now known specifically as carols were originally communal folk songs sung during celebrations such as harvest tide as well as Christmas It was only later that carols began to be sung in church Traditionally carols have often been based on medieval chord patterns and it is this that gives them their uniquely characteristic musical sound Some carols like Personent hodie Good King Wenceslas and In dulci jubilo can be traced directly back to the Middle Ages They are among the oldest musical compositions still regularly sung Adeste Fideles O Come all ye faithful appears in its current form in the mid 18th century The singing of carols increased in popularity after the Protestant Reformation in the Lutheran areas of Europe as the Reformer Martin Luther wrote carols and encouraged their use in worship in addition to spearheading the practice of caroling outside the Mass 208 The 18th century English reformer Charles Wesley an early Methodist divine understood the importance of music to Christian worship In addition to setting many psalms to melodies he wrote texts for at least three Christmas carols The best known was originally entitled Hark How All the Welkin Rings later renamed Hark the Herald Angels Sing 209 Hark The Herald Angels Sing source source Performed by the U S Army Band Chorus Problems playing this file See media help Christmas seasonal songs of a nonreligious nature emerged in the late 18th century The Welsh melody for Deck the Halls dates from 1794 with the lyrics added by Scottish musician Thomas Oliphant in 1862 and the American Jingle Bells was copyrighted in 1857 Other popular carols include The First Noel God Rest You Merry Gentlemen The Holly and the Ivy I Saw Three Ships In the Bleak Midwinter Joy to the World Once in Royal David s City and While Shepherds Watched Their Flocks 210 In the 19th and 20th centuries African American spirituals and songs about Christmas based in their tradition of spirituals became more widely known An increasing number of seasonal holiday songs were commercially produced in the 20th century including jazz and blues variations In addition there was a revival of interest in early music from groups singing folk music such as The Revels to performers of early medieval and classical music One of the most ubiquitous festive songs is We Wish You a Merry Christmas which originates from the West Country of England in the 1930s 211 Radio has covered Christmas music from variety shows from the 1940s and 1950s as well as modern day stations that exclusively play Christmas music from late November through December 25 212 Hollywood movies have featured new Christmas music such as White Christmas in Holiday Inn and Rudolph the Red Nosed Reindeer 212 Traditional carols have also been included in Hollywood films such as Hark the Herald Angels Sing in It s a Wonderful Life 1946 and Silent Night in A Christmas Story 212 Traditional cuisine Christmas dinner setting A special Christmas family meal is traditionally an important part of the holiday s celebration and the food that is served varies greatly from country to country Some regions have special meals for Christmas Eve such as Sicily where 12 kinds of fish are served In the United Kingdom and countries influenced by its traditions a standard Christmas meal includes turkey goose or other large bird gravy potatoes vegetables sometimes bread and cider Special desserts are also prepared such as Christmas pudding mince pies Christmas cake Panettone and Yule log cake 213 214 Traditional Christmas meal in Central Europe is fried carp or other fish 215 Cards Main article Christmas card A 1907 Christmas card with Santa and some of his reindeer Christmas cards are illustrated messages of greeting exchanged between friends and family members during the weeks preceding Christmas Day The traditional greeting reads wishing you a Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year much like that of the first commercial Christmas card produced by Sir Henry Cole in London in 1843 216 The custom of sending them has become popular among a wide cross section of people with the emergence of the modern trend towards exchanging E cards 217 218 Christmas cards are purchased in considerable quantities and feature artwork commercially designed and relevant to the season The content of the design might relate directly to the Christmas narrative with depictions of the Nativity of Jesus or Christian symbols such as the Star of Bethlehem or a white dove which can represent both the Holy Spirit and Peace on Earth Other Christmas cards are more secular and can depict Christmas traditions mythical figures such as Santa Claus objects directly associated with Christmas such as candles holly and baubles or a variety of images associated with the season such as Christmastide activities snow scenes and the wildlife of the northern winter 219 Some prefer cards with a poem prayer or Biblical verse while others distance themselves from religion with an all inclusive Season s greetings 220 Commemorative stamps Main article Christmas stamp A number of nations have issued commemorative stamps at Christmastide Postal customers will often use these stamps to mail Christmas cards and they are popular with philatelists These stamps are regular postage stamps unlike Christmas seals and are valid for postage year round They usually go on sale sometime between early October and early December and are printed in considerable quantities Gift giving Main article Christmas gift Christmas gifts under a Christmas tree The exchanging of gifts is one of the core aspects of the modern Christmas celebration making it the most profitable time of year for retailers and businesses throughout the world On Christmas people exchange gifts based on the Christian tradition associated with Saint Nicholas 221 and the gifts of gold frankincense and myrrh which were given to the baby Jesus by the Magi 222 223 The practice of gift giving in the Roman celebration of Saturnalia may have influenced Christian customs but on the other hand the Christian core dogma of the Incarnation however solidly established the giving and receiving of gifts as the structural principle of that recurrent yet unique event because it was the Biblical Magi together with all their fellow men who received the gift of God through man s renewed participation in the divine life 224 However Thomas J Talley holds that the Roman Emperor Aurelian placed the alternate festival on December 25 in order to compete with the growing rate of the Christian Church which had already been celebrating Christmas on that date first 59 Gift bearing figures Main article List of Christmas and winter gift bringers by country A number of figures are associated with Christmas and the seasonal giving of gifts Among these are Father Christmas also known as Santa Claus derived from the Dutch for Saint Nicholas Pere Noel and the Weihnachtsmann Saint Nicholas or Sinterklaas the Christkind Kris Kringle Joulupukki tomte nisse Babbo Natale Saint Basil and Ded Moroz The Scandinavian tomte also called nisse is sometimes depicted as a gnome instead of Santa Claus Saint Nicholas known as Sinterklaas in the Netherlands is considered by many to be the original Santa Claus 225 The best known of these figures today is red dressed Santa Claus of diverse origins The name Santa Claus can be traced back to the Dutch Sinterklaas which means simply Saint Nicholas Nicholas was a 4th century Greek bishop of Myra a city in the Roman province of Lycia whose ruins are 3 kilometres 1 9 mi from modern Demre in southwest Turkey 226 227 Among other saintly attributes he was noted for the care of children generosity and the giving of gifts His feast day December 6 came to be celebrated in many countries with the giving of gifts 107 Saint Nicholas traditionally appeared in bishop s attire accompanied by helpers inquiring about the behaviour of children during the past year before deciding whether they deserved a gift or not By the 13th century Saint Nicholas was well known in the Netherlands and the practice of gift giving in his name spread to other parts of central and southern Europe At the Reformation in 16th 17th century Europe many Protestants changed the gift bringer to the Christ Child or Christkindl corrupted in English to Kris Kringle and the date of giving gifts changed from December 6 to Christmas Eve 107 The modern popular image of Santa Claus however was created in the United States and in particular in New York The transformation was accomplished with the aid of notable contributors including Washington Irving and the German American cartoonist Thomas Nast 1840 1902 Following the American Revolutionary War some of the inhabitants of New York City sought out symbols of the city s non English past New York had originally been established as the Dutch colonial town of New Amsterdam and the Dutch Sinterklaas tradition was reinvented as Saint Nicholas 228 Current tradition in several Latin American countries such as Venezuela and Colombia holds that while Santa makes the toys he then gives them to the Baby Jesus who is the one who actually delivers them to the children s homes a reconciliation between traditional religious beliefs and the iconography of Santa Claus imported from the United States In South Tyrol Italy Austria Czech Republic Southern Germany Hungary Liechtenstein Slovakia and Switzerland the Christkind Jezisek in Czech Jezuska in Hungarian and Jezisko in Slovak brings the presents Greek children get their presents from Saint Basil on New Year s Eve the eve of that saint s liturgical feast 229 The German St Nikolaus is not identical with the Weihnachtsmann who is the German version of Santa Claus Father Christmas St Nikolaus wears a bishop s dress and still brings small gifts usually candies nuts and fruits on December 6 and is accompanied by Knecht Ruprecht Although many parents around the world routinely teach their children about Santa Claus and other gift bringers some have come to reject this practice considering it deceptive 230 Multiple gift giver figures exist in Poland varying between regions and individual families St Nicholas Swiety Mikolaj dominates Central and North East areas the Starman Gwiazdor is most common in Greater Poland Baby Jesus Dzieciatko is unique to Upper Silesia with the Little Star Gwiazdka and the Little Angel Aniolek being common in the South and the South East Grandfather Frost Dziadek Mroz is less commonly accepted in some areas of Eastern Poland 231 232 It is worth noting that across all of Poland St Nicholas is the gift giver on the Saint Nicholas Day on December 6 Date according to Julian calendar Some jurisdictions of the Eastern Orthodox Church including those of Russia Georgia Ukraine Macedonia Montenegro Serbia and Jerusalem mark feasts using the older Julian calendar As of 2023 there is a difference of 13 days between the Julian calendar and the modern Gregorian calendar which is used internationally for most secular purposes As a result December 25 on the Julian calendar currently corresponds to January 7 on the calendar used by most governments and people in everyday life Therefore the aforementioned Orthodox Christians mark December 25 and thus Christmas on the day that is internationally considered to be January 7 233 On 18 October 2022 the Orthodox Church of Ukraine allowed its dioceses to hold Christmas services according to the Revised Julian calendar i e December 25 234 However following the Council of Constantinople in 1923 235 other Orthodox Christians such as those belonging to the jurisdictions of Constantinople Bulgaria Greece Romania Antioch Alexandria Albania Cyprus Finland and the Orthodox Church in America among others began using the Revised Julian calendar which at present corresponds exactly to the Gregorian calendar 236 Therefore these Orthodox Christians mark December 25 and thus Christmas on the same day that is internationally considered to be December 25 A further complication is added by the fact that the Armenian Apostolic Church continues the original ancient Eastern Christian practice of celebrating the birth of Christ not as a separate holiday but on the same day as the celebration of his baptism Theophany which is on January 6 This is a public holiday in Armenia and it is held on the same day that is internationally considered to be January 6 because since 1923 the Armenian Church in Armenia has used the Gregorian calendar 237 However there is also a small Armenian Patriarchate of Jerusalem which maintains the traditional Armenian custom of celebrating the birth of Christ on the same day as Theophany January 6 but uses the Julian calendar for the determination of that date As a result this church celebrates Christmas more properly called Theophany on the day that is considered January 19 on the Gregorian calendar in use by the majority of the world 238 In summary there are four different dates used by different Christian groups to mark the birth of Christ given in the table below Listing Church or section Date Calendar Gregorian date NoteArmenian Patriarchate of Jerusalem January 6 Julian calendar January 19 Correspondence between Julian January 6 and Gregorian January 19 holds until 2100 in the following century the difference will be one day more citation needed Armenian Apostolic Church Armenian Evangelical Church January 6 Gregorian calendar January 6Eastern Orthodox Church jurisdictions including those of Constantinople Bulgaria Greece Romania Antioch Alexandria Albania Cyprus Finland and the Orthodox Church in America Also the Ancient Church of the East Syriac Orthodox Church and parts of the Orthodox Church of Ukraine 234 December 25 Revised Julian calendar December 25 Revised Julian calendar was agreed at the 1923 Council of Constantinople 235 Although it follows the Julian calendar the Ancient Church of the East decided on 2010 to celebrate Christmas according to the Gregorian calendar date Other Eastern Orthodox Russia Georgia Ukraine in part 234 Macedonia Belarus Moldova Montenegro Serbia and Jerusalem Also some Byzantine Rite Catholics and Byzantine Rite Lutherans December 25 Julian calendar January 7 Correspondence between Julian December 25 and Gregorian January 7 of the following year holds until 2100 from 2101 to 2199 the difference will be one day more citation needed Coptic Orthodox Church Koiak 29 or 28 corresponding to Julian December 25 Coptic calendar January 7 After the Coptic insertion of a leap day in what for the Julian calendar is August September in Gregorian Christmas is celebrated on Koiak 28 in order to maintain the exact interval of nine 30 day months and 5 days of the child s gestation citation needed Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church sole date Eritrean Orthodox Tewahedo Church sole date and P ent ay Ethiopian Eritrean Evangelical Churches primary date Tahsas 29 or 28 corresponding to Julian December 25 Ethiopian calendar January 7 After the Ethiopian and Eritrean insertion of a leap day in what for the Julian calendar is August September in Gregorian Christmas also called Liddet or Gena also Ledet or Genna 239 is celebrated on Tahsas 28 in order to maintain the exact interval of nine 30 day months and 5 days of the child s gestation 240 Most Protestants P ent ay Evangelicals in the diaspora have the option of choosing the Ethiopian calendar Tahsas 29 January 7 or the Gregorian calendar December 25 for religious holidays with this option being used when the corresponding eastern celebration is not a public holiday in the western world with most diaspora Protestants celebrating both days citation needed Most Western Christian churches most Eastern Catholic churches and civil calendars Also the Assyrian Church of the East December 25 Gregorian calendar December 25 The Assyrian Church of the East adopted the Gregorian calendar on 1964 EconomyMain article Economics of Christmas Christmas decorations at the Galeries Lafayette department store in Paris France The Christmas season is the busiest trading period for retailers Christmas market in Jena Germany Christmas is typically a peak selling season for retailers in many nations around the world Sales increase dramatically as people purchase gifts decorations and supplies to celebrate In the United States the Christmas shopping season starts as early as October 241 242 In Canada merchants begin advertising campaigns just before Halloween October 31 and step up their marketing following Remembrance Day on November 11 In the UK and Ireland the Christmas shopping season starts from mid November around the time when high street Christmas lights are turned on 243 244 In the United States it has been calculated that a quarter of all personal spending takes place during the Christmas holiday shopping season 245 Figures from the U S Census Bureau reveal that expenditure in department stores nationwide rose from 20 8 billion in November 2004 to 31 9 billion in December 2004 an increase of 54 percent In other sectors the pre Christmas increase in spending was even greater there being a November December buying surge of 100 percent in bookstores and 170 percent in jewelry stores In the same year employment in American retail stores rose from 1 6 million to 1 8 million in the two months leading up to Christmas 246 Industries completely dependent on Christmas include Christmas cards of which 1 9 billion are sent in the United States each year and live Christmas Trees of which 20 8 million were cut in the U S in 2002 247 For 2019 the average US adult was projected to spend 920 on gifts alone 248 In the UK in 2010 up to 8 billion was expected to be spent online at Christmas approximately a quarter of total retail festive sales 244 Each year most notably 2000 money supply in US banks is increased for Christmas shopping In most Western nations Christmas Day is the least active day of the year for business and commerce almost all retail commercial and institutional businesses are closed and almost all industries cease activity more than any other day of the year whether laws require such or not In England and Wales the Christmas Day Trading Act 2004 prevents all large shops from trading on Christmas Day Similar legislation was approved in Scotland in 2007 Film studios release many high budget movies during the holiday season including Christmas films fantasy movies or high tone dramas with high production values to hopes of maximizing the chance of nominations for the Academy Awards 249 One economist s analysis calculates that despite increased overall spending Christmas is a deadweight loss under orthodox microeconomic theory because of the effect of gift giving This loss is calculated as the difference between what the gift giver spent on the item and what the gift receiver would have paid for the item It is estimated that in 2001 Christmas resulted in a 4 billion deadweight loss in the U S alone 250 251 Because of complicating factors this analysis is sometimes used to discuss possible flaws in current microeconomic theory Other deadweight losses include the effects of Christmas on the environment and the fact that material gifts are often perceived as white elephants imposing cost for upkeep and storage and contributing to clutter 252 ControversiesMain article Christmas controversies Further information Persecution of Christians in the Soviet Union Kirchenkampf and Antireligious campaigns in China A 1931 edition of the Soviet magazine Bezbozhnik published by the League of Militant Atheists depicting an Orthodox Christian priest being forbidden to take home a tree for the celebration of Christmastide which was banned under the Marxist Leninist doctrine of state atheism 253 Christmas has at times been the subject of controversy and attacks from various sources both Christian and non Christian Historically it was prohibited by Puritans during their ascendency in the Commonwealth of England 1647 1660 and in Colonial New England where the Puritans outlawed the celebration of Christmas in 1659 on the grounds that Christmas was not mentioned in Scripture and therefore violated the Reformed regulative principle of worship 254 255 The Parliament of Scotland which was dominated by Presbyterians passed a series of acts outlawing the observance of Christmas between 1637 and 1690 Christmas Day did not become a public holiday in Scotland until 1871 118 256 257 Today some conservative Reformed denominations such as the Free Presbyterian Church of Scotland and the Reformed Presbyterian Church of North America likewise reject the celebration of Christmas based on the regulative principle and what they see as its non Scriptural origin 258 259 Christmas celebrations have also been prohibited by atheist states such as the Soviet Union 260 and more recently majority Muslim states such as Somalia Tajikistan and Brunei 261 Some Christians and organizations such as Pat Robertson s American Center for Law and Justice cite alleged attacks on Christmas dubbing them a war on Christmas 262 Such groups claim that any specific mention of the term Christmas or its religious aspects is being increasingly censored avoided or discouraged by a number of advertisers retailers government prominently schools and other public and private organizations One controversy is the occurrence of Christmas trees being renamed Holiday trees 263 In the U S there has been a tendency to replace the greeting Merry Christmas with Happy Holidays which is considered inclusive at the time of the Jewish celebration of Hanukkah 264 In the U S and Canada where the use of the term Holidays is most prevalent opponents have denounced its usage and avoidance of using the term Christmas as being politically correct 265 266 267 In 1984 the U S Supreme Court ruled in Lynch v Donnelly that a Christmas display which included a Nativity scene owned and displayed by the city of Pawtucket Rhode Island did not violate the First Amendment 268 American Muslim scholar Abdul Malik Mujahid has said that Muslims must treat Christmas with respect even if they disagree with it 269 The government of the People s Republic of China officially espouses state atheism 270 and has conducted antireligious campaigns to this end 271 In December 2018 officials raided Christian churches prior to Christmastide and coerced them to close Christmas trees and Santa Clauses were also forcibly removed 272 273 See also Christianity portal Holidays portalChristmas in July Second Christmas celebration Christmas Peace Finnish tradition Christmas Sunday Sunday after Christmas List of Christmas films List of Christmas novels Little Christmas Alternative title for 6 January Nochebuena Mawlid Birthday of Muhammad Twin Holy Birthdays Bahaʼi religious observance Yalda Night Persian festival Christmas by medium Christmas represented in different mediaNotes Several branches of Eastern Christianity that use the Julian calendar also celebrate on December 25 according to that calendar which is now January 7 on the Gregorian calendar Armenian Churches observed the nativity on January 6 even before the Gregorian calendar originated Most Armenian Christians use the Gregorian calendar still celebrating Christmas Day on January 6 Some Armenian churches use the Julian calendar thus celebrating Christmas Day on January 19 on the Gregorian calendar with January 18 being Christmas Eve Some regions also celebrate primarily on December 24 rather than December 25 English Adam C October 14 2016 Christmas Theological Anticipations Wipf and Stock Publishers p 70 ISBN 978 1 4982 3933 2 According to Luke 1 26 Gabriel s annunciation to Mary took place in the sixth month of Elizabeth s pregnancy That is Mary conceives sixth months after Elizabeth Luke repeats the uniqueness of the timing in verse 26 Counting six months from September 24 we arrive at March 25 the most likely date for the annunciation and conception of Mary Nine months hence takes us to December 25 which turns out to be a surprisingly reasonable date for the birthday of Jesus Someone might object that the birth could not have occurred in midwinter because it would have been too cold for shepherds in the fields keeping watch by night Luke 2 8 Not so In Palestine the months of November through February mark the rainy season the only time of the year sheep might find fresh green grass to graze During the other ten months of the year animals must content themselves on dry straw So the suggestion that shepherds might have stayed out in the fields with their flocks in late December at the peak of the rainy season is not only reasonable it is most certain And so besides considering the timing of the conception we must take note of the earliest church records We have evidence from the second century less than fifty years after the close of the New Testament that Christians were remembering and celebrating the birth of the Lord It is not true to say that the observance of the nativity was imposed on Christians hundreds of years later by imperial decree or by a magisterial church ruling The observance sprang up organically from the authentic devotion of ordinary believers This in itself is important But besides the fact that early Christians did celebrate the incarnation of the Lord we should make note that they did not agree upon a set date for the observance There was no one day on which all Christians celebrated Christmas in the early church Churches in different regions celebrated the nativity on different days The late second century Egyptian instructor of Christian disciples Clement of Alexandria reported that some believers in his area observed the twenty fourth or twenty fifth day of the Egyptian month of Parmuthi the month that corresponds to the Hebrew month of Nisan approximately May 20 The Basilidian Christians held to the eleventh or fifteen of Tubi January 6 and 10 Clement made his own computations by counting backward from the death of Emperor Commodus the son of Marcus Aurelius By this method he deduced a birthdate of November 18 Other Alexandrian and Egyptian Christians adopted January 4 or 5 In so doing they replaced the Alexandrian celebration of the birth of Aion Time with the birth of Christ The regions of Nicomedia Syria and Caesarea celebrated Christ s birthday on Epiphany January 6 According to researcher Susan Roll the Chronograph or Philocalian Calendar is the earliest authentic document to place the birth of Jesus on December 25 And we should remember that although the Chronograph provides the first record of December 25 the custom of venerating the Lord s birth on that day was most likely established well before its publication That is to say December 25 didn t originate with the Chronograph It must have counted as common knowledge at least in Rome to warrant its inclusion in the Chronograph Soon after this time we find other church fathers such John Chrysostom Augustine Jerome and Leo confirming the twenty fifth as the traditional date of celebration References a b Christmas as a Multi Faith Festival PDF BBC Learning English December 29 2005 Archived PDF from the original on October 1 2008 Retrieved September 30 2008 a b In the U S Christmas Not Just for Christians Gallup Inc December 24 2008 Archived from the original on November 16 2012 Retrieved December 16 2012 The Global Religious Landscape Christians Pew Research Center December 18 2012 Archived from the original on March 10 2015 Retrieved May 23 2014 Christmas Strongly Religious For Half in U S Who Celebrate It Gallup Inc December 24 2010 Archived from the original on December 7 2012 Retrieved December 16 2012 a b Forbes Bruce David October 1 2008 Christmas A Candid History University of California Press p 27 ISBN 978 0 520 25802 0 In 567 the Council of Tours proclaimed that the entire period between Christmas and Epiphany should be considered part of the celebration creating what became known as the twelve days of Christmas or what the English called Christmastide On the last of the twelve days called Twelfth Night various cultures developed a wide range of additional special festivities The variation extends even to the issue of how to count the days If Christmas Day is the first of the twelve days then Twelfth Night would be on January 5 the eve of Epiphany If December 26 the day after Christmas is the first day then Twelfth Night falls on January 6 the evening of Epiphany itself After Christmas and Epiphany were in place on December 25 and January 6 with the twelve days of Christmas in between Christians slowly adopted a period called Advent as a time of spiritual preparation leading up to Christmas Canadian Heritage Public holidaysArchived November 24 2009 at the Wayback Machine Government of Canada Retrieved November 27 2009 2009 Federal Holidays Archived January 16 2013 at the Wayback Machine U S Office of Personnel Management Retrieved November 27 2009 Bank holidays and British Summer time Archived May 15 2011 at the Wayback Machine HM Government Retrieved November 27 2009 Ehorn Lee Ellen Hewlett Shirely J Hewlett Dale M September 1 1995 December Holiday Customs Lorenz Educational Press p 1 ISBN 978 1 4291 0896 6 Nick Hytrek Non Christians focus on secular side of Christmas Archived November 14 2009 at the Wayback Machine Sioux City Journal November 10 2009 Retrieved November 18 2009 Crump William D September 15 2001 The Christmas Encyclopedia 3 ed McFarland p 39 ISBN 978 0 7864 6827 0 Christians believe that a number of passages in the Bible are prophecies about future events in the life of the promised Messiah or Jesus Christ Most but not all of those prophecies are found in the Old Testament Born in Bethlehem Micah 5 2 But thou Bethlehem Ephratah though thou be little among the thousands of Juda yet out of thee shall he come forth unto me that is to be ruler in Israel whose goings forth have been from of old from everlasting Tucker Ruth A 2011 Parade of Faith A Biographical History of the Christian Church Zondervan p 23 ISBN 978 0 310 20638 5 According to gospel accounts Jesus was born during the reign of Herod the Great thus sometime before 4 BCE The birth narrative in Luke s gospel is one of the most familiar passages in the Bible Leaving their hometown of Nazareth Mary and Joseph travel to Bethlehem to pay taxes Arriving late they find no vacancy at the inn They are however offered a stable most likely a second room attached to a family dwelling where animals were sheltered a room that would offer some privacy from the main family room for cooking eating and sleeping This city of David is the little town of Bethlehem of Christmas carol fame a starlit silhouette indelibly etched on Christmas cards No sooner was the baby born than angels announced the news to shepherds who spread the word Corinna Laughlin Michael R Prendergast Robert C Rabe Corinna Laughlin Jill Maria Murdy Therese Brown Mary Patricia Storms Ann E Degenhard Jill Maria Murdy Ann E Degenhard Therese Brown Robert C Rabe Mary Patricia Storms Michael R Prendergast Sourcebook for Sundays Seasons and Weekdays 2011 The Almanac for Pastoral Liturgy Archived April 7 2015 at the Wayback Machine LiturgyTrainingPublications 2010 p 29 The Chronography of 354 AD Part 12 Commemorations of the Martyrs Archived November 22 2011 at the Wayback Machine The Tertullian Project 2006 Retrieved November 24 2011 Roll Susan K 1995 Toward the Origins of Christmas Peeters Publishers p 133 ISBN 978 90 390 0531 6 a b c Hale Bradt 2004 Astronomy Methods PDF p 69 Archived from the original PDF on September 20 2018 Roll p 87These two references say that March 25 was the equinox and Roll refers to a work called De Solstitiis et Aequinoctiis Archived February 5 2022 at the Wayback Machine which gives December 25 as the solstice However at the time of Julius Caesar the winter solstice was actually on the 23rd or 24th a b Melton J Gordon 2011 Religious Celebrations An Encyclopedia of Holidays Festivals Solemn Observances and Spiritual Commemorations 2 volumes An Encyclopedia of Holidays Festivals Solemn Observances and Spiritual Commemorations ABC CLIO p 39 ISBN 978 1 59884 206 7 The March 25 date which tied together the beginning of Mary s pregnancy and the incarnation of God in Jesus as occurring nine months before Christmas December 25 supplied the rationale for setting the beginning of the ecclesiastical and legal year Both the Anglicans and the Lutherans have continued to observe the March 25 date for celebrating the Annunciation The Liturgical Year Thomas Nelson November 3 2009 ISBN 978 1 4185 8073 5 Retrieved April 2 2009 Christmas is not really about the celebration of a birth date at all It is about the celebration of a birth The fact of the date and the fact of the birth are two different things The calendrical verification of the feast itself is not really that important What is important to the understanding of a life changing moment is that it happened not necessarily where or when it happened The message is clear Christmas is not about marking the actual birth date of Jesus It is about the Incarnation of the One who became like us in all things but sin Hebrews 4 15 and who humbled Himself to the point of death even death on a cross Phil 2 8 Christmas is a pinnacle feast yes but it is not the beginning of the liturgical year It is a memorial a remembrance of the birth of Jesus not really a celebration of the day itself We remember that because the Jesus of history was born the Resurrection of the Christ of faith could happen The Christmas Season CRI Voice Institute Archived from the original on April 7 2009 Retrieved April 2 2009 The origins of the celebrations of Christmas and Epiphany as well as the dates on which they are observed are rooted deeply in the history of the early church There has been much scholarly debate concerning the exact time of the year when Jesus was born and even in what year he was born Actually we do not know either The best estimate is that Jesus was probably born in the springtime somewhere between the years of 6 and 4 BC as December is in the middle of the cold rainy season in Bethlehem when the sheep are kept inside and not on pasture as told in the Bible The lack of a consistent system of timekeeping in the first century mistakes in later calendars and calculations and lack of historical details to cross reference events have led to this imprecision in fixing Jesus birth This suggests that the Christmas celebration is not an observance of a historical date but a commemoration of the event in terms of worship The School Journal Volume 49 Harvard University 1894 Retrieved April 2 2009 Throughout the Christian world the 25th of December is celebrated as the birthday of Jesus Christ There was a time when the churches were not united regarding the date of the joyous event Many Christians kept their Christmas in April others in May and still others at the close of September till finally December 25 was agreed upon as the most appropriate date The choice of that day was of course wholly arbitrary for neither the exact date not the period of the year at which the birth of Christ occurred is known For purposes of commemoration however it is unimportant whether the celebration shall fall or not at the precise anniversary of the joyous event West s Federal Supplement West Publishing Company 1990 While the Washington and King birthdays are exclusively secular holidays Christmas has both secular and religious aspects a b Huckabee Tyler December 9 2021 No Christmas Trees Don t Have Pagan Roots Relevant Magazine Retrieved December 9 2022 Poll In a changing nation Santa endures Associated Press December 22 2006 Archived from the original on December 26 2018 Retrieved December 24 2018 a b c d e Martindale Cyril Charles 1908 Christmas The Catholic Encyclopedia Vol 3 New York Robert Appleton Company Schoenborn Christoph 1994 God s human face the Christ icon p 154 ISBN 978 0 89870 514 0 Galey John 1986 Sinai and the Monastery of St Catherine p 92 ISBN 978 977 424 118 5 Christmas Origin Definition Traditions History amp Facts Britannica www britannica com Retrieved December 22 2021 Christenmas n Oxford English Dictionary Retrieved December 12 a b Christmas in the Middle English Dictionary Archived January 5 2012 at the Wayback Machine Griffiths Emma December 22 2004 Why get cross about Xmas BBC News Archived from the original on November 11 2011 Retrieved December 12 2011 a b Hutton Ronald 2001 The Stations of the Sun A History of the Ritual Year in Britain Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 285448 3 Midwinter in Bosworth amp Toller Archived January 13 2012 at the Wayback Machine Serjeantson Mary Sidney 1968 A History of Foreign Words in English Online Etymology Dictionary Archived from the original on January 13 2012 Retrieved December 13 2011 Yule Archived January 13 2012 at the Wayback Machine Online Etymology Dictionary Retrieved December 12 Online Etymology Dictionary Noel Archived January 13 2012 at the Wayback Machine accessed January 3 2022 Tolkovyj slovar Dalya onlajn slovardalja net Retrieved December 25 2022 Biblical literature Archived April 26 2015 at the Wayback Machine Encyclopaedia Britannica 2011 Web January 22 2011 Guzik David December 8 2015 Matthew Chapter 2 Enduring Word Retrieved December 25 2020 a b Hijmans S E Sol The Sun in the Art and Religions of Rome 2009 p 584 a b c d e f g h English Adam C October 14 2016 Christmas Theological Anticipations Wipf and Stock Publishers pp 70 71 ISBN 978 1 4982 3933 2 The manuscript reads VIII kal Ian natus Christus in Betleem Iudeae The Chronography of 354 AD Part 12 Commemorations of the Martyrs Archived November 22 2011 at the Wayback Machine The Tertullian Project 2006 Depositio Martyrum Archived December 25 2021 at the Wayback Machine New Catholic Encyclopedia The last name in the Martyrum is Pope Sylvester I d 335 the inclusion of Pope Mark d 336 and Julius I d 352 is clearly a later addition Wainwright Geoffrey Westerfield Tucker Karen Beth eds 2005 The Oxford History of Christian Worship Oxford University Press p 65 ISBN 978 0 19 513886 3 Retrieved February 3 2012 a b Roy Christian 2005 Traditional Festivals A Multicultural Encyclopedia Santa Barbara California ABC CLIO p 146 ISBN 978 1 57607 089 5 Archived from the original on January 11 2014 Retrieved February 3 2012 Pokhilko Hieromonk Nicholas History of Epiphany Archived from the original on September 23 2016 Retrieved December 27 2017 Hastings James Selbie John A eds 2003 Encyclopedia of Religion and Ethics Vol 6 Kessinger Publishing Company pp 603 604 ISBN 978 0 7661 3676 2 Archived from the original on November 22 2018 Retrieved February 3 2012 Christmas and its cycle New Catholic Encyclopedia Vol 3 2nd ed Catholic University of America Press 2002 pp 550 557 McGowan Andrew How December 25 Became Christmas Archived December 14 2012 at the Wayback Machine Bible History Daily February 12 2016 a b Malachi 4 2 Hynes Mary Ellen 1993 Companion to the Calendar Liturgy Training Publications p 8 ISBN 9781568540115 In the year 567 the church council of Tours called the 13 days between December 25 and January 6 a festival season Hill Christopher 2003 Holidays and Holy Nights Celebrating Twelve Seasonal Festivals of the Christian Year Quest Books p 91 ISBN 9780835608107 This arrangement became an administrative problem for the Roman Empire as it tried to coordinate the solar Julian calendar with the lunar calendars of its provinces in the east While the Romans could roughly match the months in the two systems the four cardinal points of the solar year the two equinoxes and solstices still fell on different dates By the time of the first century the calendar date of the winter solstice in Egypt and Palestine was eleven to twelve days later than the date in Rome As a result the Incarnation came to be celebrated on different days in different parts of the Empire The Western Church in its desire to be universal eventually took them both one became Christmas one Epiphany with a resulting twelve days in between Over time this hiatus became invested with specific Christian meaning The Church gradually filled these days with saints some connected to the birth narratives in Gospels Holy Innocents Day December 28 in honor of the infants slaughtered by Herod St John the Evangelist the Beloved December 27 St Stephen the first Christian martyr December 26 the Holy Family December 31 the Virgin Mary January 1 In 567 the Council of Tours declared the twelve days between Christmas and Epiphany to become one unified festal cycle Federer William J January 6 2014 On the 12th Day of Christmas American Minute Retrieved December 25 2014 In 567 AD the Council of Tours ended a dispute Western Europe celebrated Christmas December 25 as the holiest day of the season but Eastern Europe celebrated Epiphany January 6 recalling the Wise Men s visit and Jesus baptism It could not be decided which day was holier so the Council made all 12 days from December 25 to January 6 holy days or holidays These became known as The Twelve Days of Christmas Kirk Cameron William Federer November 6 2014 Praise the Lord Trinity Broadcasting Network Event occurs at 01 15 14 Archived from the original on December 25 2014 Retrieved December 25 2014 Western Europe celebrated Christmas December 25 as the holiest day Eastern Europe celebrated January 6 the Epiphany the visit of the Wise Men as the holiest day and so they had this council and they decided to make all twelve days from December 25 to January 6 the Twelve Days of Christmas a b c d e Durston Chris December 1985 Lords of Misrule The Puritan War on Christmas 1642 60 History Today Vol 35 no 12 pp 7 14 Archived from the original on March 10 2007 a b c When Christmas carols were banned BBC Retrieved March 11 2022 a b c Rowell Geoffrey December 1993 Dickens and the Construction of Christmas History Today 43 12 Archived from the original on December 29 2016 Retrieved December 28 2016 There is no doubt that A Christmas Carol is first and foremost a story concerned with the Christian gospel of liberation by the grace of God and with incarnational religion which refuses to drive a wedge between the world of spirit and the world of matter Both the Christmas dinners and the Christmas dinner carriers are blessed the cornucopia of Christmas food and feasting reflects both the goodness of creation and the joy of heaven It is a significant sign of a shift in theological emphasis in the nineteenth century from a stress on the Atonement to a stress on the Incarnation a stress which found outward and visible form in the sacramentalism of the Oxford Movement the development of richer and more symbolic forms of worship the building of neo Gothic churches and the revival and increasing centrality of the keeping of Christmas itself as a Christian festival In the course of the century under the influence of the Oxford Movement s concern for the better observance of Christian festivals Christmas became more and more prominent By the later part of the century cathedrals provided special services and musical events and might have revived ancient special charities for the poor though we must not forget the problems for large parish church cathedrals like Manchester which on one Christmas Day had no less than eighty couples coming to be married the signing of the registers lasted until four in the afternoon The popularity of Dickens A Christmas Carol played a significant part in the changing consciousness of Christmas and the way in which it was celebrated The popularity of his public readings of the story is an indication of how much it resonated with the contemporary mood and contributed to the increasing place of the Christmas celebration in both secular and religious ways that was firmly established by the end of the nineteenth century Ledger Sally Furneaux Holly eds 2011 Charles Dickens in Context Cambridge University Press p 178 ISBN 978 0 19 513886 3 Retrieved December 25 2020 a b c Talley Thomas J 1991 The Origins of the Liturgical Year Liturgical Press pp 88 91 ISBN 978 0 8146 6075 1 Retrieved December 27 2016 Kelly Joseph F The Origins of Christmas Liturgical Press 2004 pp 67 69 a b Bradshaw Paul F Christmas Archived January 9 2017 at the Wayback Machine The New SCM Dictionary of Liturgy of Worship Hymns Ancient and Modern Ltd 2002 Roll pp 88 90 Duchesne Louis Les Origines du Culte Chretien Paris 1902 262 ff Andrew McGowan How December 25 Became Christmas Bible Review amp Bible History Daily Biblical Archaeology Society Archived from the original on December 14 2012 Retrieved February 24 2011 English Adam C October 14 2016 Christmas Theological Anticipations Wipf and Stock Publishers p 70 ISBN 978 1 4982 3933 2 According to Luke 1 26 Gabriel s annunciation to Mary took place in the sixth month of Elizabeth s pregnancy That is Mary conceives sixth months after Elizabeth Luke repeats the uniqueness of the timing in verse 26 Counting six months from September 24 we arrive at March 25 the most likely date for the annunciation and conception of Mary Nine months hence takes us to December 25 which turns out to be a surprisingly reasonable date for the birthday of Jesus a b Bonneau Normand 1998 The Sunday Lectionary Ritual Word Paschal Shape Liturgical Press p 114 ISBN 978 0 8146 2457 9 The Roman Church celebrates the annunciation of March 25 the Roman calendar equivalent to the Jewish fourteenth Nisan hence Jesus birthday occurred nine months later on December 25 This computation matches well with other indications in Luke s gospel Christians conjectured that the priest Zechariah was serving in the temple on the Day of Atonement roughly at the autumnal equinox when the angel announced to him the miraculous conception of John the Baptist At her annunciation Mary received news that Elizabeth was in her sixth month Sixth months after the autumnal equinox means that Mary conceived Jesus at the vernal equinox March 25 If John the Baptist was conceived at the autumnal equinox he was born at the summer solstice nine months later Thus even to this day the liturgical calendar commemorates John s birth on June 24 Finally John 3 30 where John the Baptist says of Jesus He must increase but I must decrease corroborates this tallying of dates For indeed after the birth of Jesus at the winter solstice the days increase while after the birth of John at the summer solstice the days decrease Annunciation New Catholic Encyclopedia 2nd edition 2003 Catholic University of America Press 1 Corinthians 5 7 8 Our paschal lamb Christ has been sacrificed Therefore let us celebrate the festival Tally pp 2 4 Roll p 87 Christology The Arian controversy Britannica www britannica com Retrieved December 23 2021 Roll 1995 p 88 Collinge William J 2012 Historical Dictionary of Catholicism ISBN 978 0 8108 5755 1 Archived from the original on December 31 2015 Retrieved December 23 2014 Hippolytus and December 25th as the date of Jesus birth Archived September 13 2018 at the Wayback Machine Roll 1995 p 87 Kelly Joseph F 2004 The Origins of Christmas Liturgical Press p 60 ISBN 978 0 8146 2984 0 Online here 1 Archived February 19 2017 at the Wayback Machine Pearse Roger December 26 2019 Some notes on De solstitiis et aequinoctis CPL 2277 Roger Pearse Retrieved April 9 2021 Roll Susan K 1995 Towards the Origin of Christmas Kok Pharos Publishing p 97 cf note 173 ISBN 978 90 390 0531 6 Archived from the original on April 9 2021 Retrieved April 9 2021 a b Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church Oxford University Press 2005 ISBN 978 0 19 280290 3 article Christmas Senn Frank C 2012 Introduction to Christian Liturgy ISBN 978 1 4514 2433 1 Archived from the original on December 31 2015 Retrieved December 23 2014 Bruma Seasonal Festivals of the Greeks and RomansPliny the Elder Natural History 18 59 Archived June 16 2022 at the Wayback Machine paragraph 220 in Latin Archived May 4 2022 at the Wayback Machine In a space of four yeaers the solstice occurs latest in the Julian Calendar in the year before a leap year In 2019 it occurred on the 22nd in the Gregorian Calendar or December 9 in the Julian at 4 19 AM according to Earth s Seasons Equinoxes Solstices Perihelion and Aphelion Archived October 13 2007 at the Wayback Machine The number of days betwwen successive winter solstices varied from 365 242883 to 365 242740 between the year 1 BC and AD 2000 according to Meeus J Savoie D 1992 The history of the tropical year Journal of the British Astronomical Association 102 1 40 42 Bibcode 1992JBAA 102 40M Therefore the average value over the last 2000 years has been 365 24281 days 0 00719 days less than an average Julian year This means the solstice was 2000 0 00719 14 38 days later that is on December 23 in the middle of the day A hundred years earlier it would have been on the 24th Augustine Sermon 192 Archived November 25 2016 at the Wayback Machine Roll Susan K 1995 Towards the Origin of Christmas Kok Pharos Publishing p 82 cf note 115 ISBN 978 90 390 0531 6 Archived from the original on December 31 2015 Retrieved December 25 2013 Newton Isaac Observations on the Prophecies of Daniel and the Apocalypse of St John Archived September 18 2012 at the Wayback Machine 1733 Ch XI A sun connection is possible because Christians considered Jesus to be the Sun of righteousness prophesied in Malachi 4 2 But for you who fear my name the sun of righteousness shall rise with healing in its wings You shall go out leaping like calves from the stall a b Hijmans S E Sol the sun in the art and religions of Rome 2009 p 595 ISBN 978 90 367 3931 3 Archived May 10 2013 at the Wayback Machine cited in Christianity and Paganism in the Fourth to Eighth Centuries Ramsay MacMullen Yale 1997 p 155 Christmas Archived August 31 2009 at the Wayback Machine Encarta 2009 10 31 Roll Susan K 1995 Toward the Origins of Christmas Peeters Publishers p 130 ISBN 978 90 390 0531 6 Archived from the original on November 2 2015 Retrieved June 20 2015 Tighe William J 2003 Calculating Christmas Touchstone 16 10 Archived from the original on December 11 2008 Retrieved November 17 2008 Hermann Usener Das Weihnachtsfest In Religionsgeschichtliche Untersuchungen part 1 Second edition Verlag von Max Cohen amp Sohn Bonn 1911 Note that the first edition 1889 doesn t have the discussion of Natalis Solis Invicti also Sol Invictus 1905 Although this view is still very common it has been seriously challenged Church of England Liturgical Commission The Promise of His Glory Services and Prayers for the Season from All Saints to Candlemas Church House Publishing 1991 ISBN 978 0 7151 3738 3 quoted in The Date of Christmas and Epiphany Archived April 6 2015 at the Wayback Machine Hijmans S E 2009 The Sun in the Art and Religions of Rome p 588 ISBN 978 90 367 3931 3 Archived from the original on May 10 2013 Michael Alan Anderson Symbols of Saints Theology ritual and kinship in music for John the Baptist and St Anne 1175 1563 The University of Chicago UMI ProQuest Dissertations Publishing Ann Arbor 2008 pp 42 46 ISBN 978 0 549 56551 2 Tucker Karen B Westerfield 2000 Christmas In Hastings Adrian Mason Alistair Pyper Hugh eds The Oxford Companion to Christian Thought Oxford University Press p 114 ISBN 978 0 19 860024 4 McGrath Alister E January 27 2015 Christianity An Introduction John Wiley amp Sons p 239 ISBN 978 1 118 46565 3 a b c d e f g Murray Alexander Medieval Christmas Archived December 13 2011 at the Wayback Machine History Today December 1986 36 12 pp 31 39 a b Standiford Les 2008 The Man Who Invented Christmas How Charles Dickens s A Christmas Carol Rescued His Career and Revived Our Holiday Spirits Crown ISBN 978 0 307 40578 4 a b Minzesheimer Bob December 22 2008 Dickens classic Christmas Carol still sings to us USA Today Archived from the original on November 6 2009 Retrieved April 30 2010 Neal Daniel 1822 The History of the Puritans William Baynes and Son p 193 They disapproved of the observation of sundry of the church festivals or holidays as having no foundation in Scripture or primitive antiquity a b c d Barnett James Harwood 1984 The American Christmas A Study in National Culture Ayer Publishing p 3 ISBN 978 0 405 07671 8 Christmas An Ancient Holiday Archived May 9 2007 at the Wayback Machine The History Channel 2007 NEWS SA December 24 2022 Christmas Day 2022 Facts Story amp Quotes About Merry Christmas SA News Channel Retrieved December 26 2022 a b Simek 2007 379 Coffman Elesha Why December 25 Archived September 19 2008 at the Wayback Machine Christian History amp Biography Christianity Today 2000 Simek 2010 180 379 380 Weiser Franz Xaver 1958 Handbook of Christian Feasts and Customs Harcourt Koliada Encyclopediaofukraine com Retrieved November 19 2012 a b McGreevy Patrick Place in the American Christmas JSTOR Archived December 15 2018 at the Wayback Machine Geographical Review Vol 80 No 1 January 1990 pp 32 42 Retrieved September 10 2007 a b c Restad Penne L 1995 Christmas in America a History Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 510980 1 a b c Forbes Bruce David Christmas a candid history University of California Press 2007 ISBN 0 520 25104 0 pp 68 79 Lowe Scott C January 11 2011 Christmas John Wiley amp Sons p 226 ISBN 978 1 4443 4145 4 Shawcross John T January 1 1993 John Milton University Press of Kentucky p 249 ISBN 978 0 8131 7014 5 Milton was raised an Anglican trained to become an Anglican minister and remained an Anglican through the signing of the subscription books of Cambridge University in both 1629 and 1632 which demanded an allegiance to the state church and its Thirty nine Articles Browne Sammy R April 29 2012 A Brief Anthology of English Literature Volume 1 p 412 ISBN 978 1 105 70569 4 His father had wanted him to practice law but Milton considered writing poetry his life s work At 21 years old he wrote a poem On the morning of Christ s Nativity a work that is still widely read during Christmas Heinz Donald 2010 Christmas Festival of Incarnation Fortress Press p 94 ISBN 978 1 4514 0695 5 Old Hughes Oliphant 2002 Worship Reformed According to Scripture Westminster John Knox Press p 29 ISBN 978 0 664 22579 7 Within a few years the Reformed church calendar was fairly well established The heart of it was the weekly observance of the resurrection on the Lord s Day Instead of liturgical seasons being observed the five evangelical feast days were observed Christmas Good Friday Easter Ascension and Pentecost They were chosen because they were understood to mark the essential stages in the history of salvation Old Hughes Oliphant 2002 Worship Reformed According to Scripture Westminster John Knox Press p 29 ISBN 978 0 664 22579 7 Carl Philipp Emanuel Nothaft October 2011 From Sukkot to Saturnalia The Attack on Christmas in Sixteenth Century Chronological Scholarship Journal of the History of Ideas 72 4 504 505 JSTOR 41337151 However when Thomas Mocket rector of Gilston in Hertfordshire decried such vices in a pamphlet to justify the parliamentary ban of Christmas effective since June 1647 Sandys William 1852 Christmastide its history festivities and carols London John Russell Smith pp 119 120 Chambers Robert 1885 Domestic Annals of Scotland p 211 Act dischairging the Yule vacance The Records of the Parliaments of Scotland to 1707 in Middle Scots St Andrews University of St Andrews and National Archives of Scotland Archived from the original on May 19 2012 Retrieved February 29 2012 a b Anon May 22 2007 Bank Holiday Fact File PDF TUC press release TUC Archived from the original PDF on June 3 2013 Retrieved January 12 2010 Miall Anthony amp Peter 1978 The Victorian Christmas Book Dent p 7 ISBN 978 0 460 12039 5 Woodforde James 1978 The Diary of a Country Parson 1758 1802 Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 281241 4 Mather Cotton December 25 1712 Grace defended A censure on the ungodliness by which the glorious grace of God is too commonly abused A sermon preached on the twenty fifth day of December 1712 Containing some seasonable admonitions of piety And concluded with a brief dissertation on that case whether the penitent thief on the cross be an example of one repenting at the last hour and on such a repentance received unto mercy Speech Boston Massachusetts B Green for Samuel Gerrish Retrieved August 12 2022 Stephen W Nissenbaum Christmas in Early New England 1620 1820 Puritanism Popular Culture and the Printed Word Proceedings of the American Antiquarian Society 106 1 79 January 1 1996 Innes Stephen 1995 Creating the Commonwealth The Economic Culture of Puritan New England W W Norton amp Company p 145 ISBN 978 0 393 03584 1 Marling Karal Ann 2000 Merry Christmas Celebrating America s Greatest Holiday Harvard University Press p 44 ISBN 978 0 674 00318 7 Smith Thomas Nancy 2007 Moravian Christmas in the South p 20 ISBN 978 0 8078 3181 6 Andrews Peter 1975 Christmas in Colonial and Early America United States World Book Encyclopedia Inc ISBN 978 0 7166 2001 3 Christmas in France World Book Encyclopedia 1996 p 35 ISBN 978 0 7166 0876 9 Carols were altered by substituting names of prominent political leaders for royal characters in the lyrics such as the Three Kings Church bells were melted down for their bronze to increase the national treasury and religious services were banned on Christmas Day The cake of kings too came under attack as a symbol of royalty It survived however for a while with a new name the cake of equality Mason Julia December 21 2015 Why Was Christmas Renamed Dog Day During the French Revolution HistoryBuff Archived from the original on November 1 2016 Retrieved November 18 2016 How did people celebrate the Christmas during the French Revolution In white knuckled terror behind closed doors Anti clericalism reached its apex on 10 November 1793 when a Fete de la Raison was held in honor of the Cult of Reason Churches across France were renamed Temples of Reason and the Notre Dame was de baptized for the occasion The Commune spared no expense The first festival of reason which took place in Notre Dame featured a fabricated mountain with a temple of philosophy at its summit and a script borrowed from an opera libretto At the sound of Marie Joseph Chenier s Hymne a la Liberte two rows of young women dressed in white descended the mountain crossing each other before the altar of reason before ascending once more to greet the goddess of Liberty As you can probably gather from the above description 1793 was not a great time to celebrate Christmas in the capital Hutton Ronald February 15 2001 The Stations of the Sun A History of the Ritual Year in Britain Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 157842 7 Forbes Bruce David October 1 2008 Christmas A Candid History University of California Press p 62 ISBN 978 0 520 25802 0 What Dickens did advocate in his story was the spirit of Christmas Sociologist James Barnett has described it as Dickens s Carol Philosophy which combined religious and secular attitudes toward to celebration into a humanitarian pattern It excoriated individual selfishness and extolled the virtues of brotherhood kindness and generosity at Christmas Dickens preached that at Christmas men should forget self and think of others especially the poor and the unfortunate The message was one that both religious and secular people could endorse Kelly Richard Michael ed 2003 A Christmas Carol Broadview Press pp 9 12 ISBN 978 1 55111 476 7 Cochrane Robertson Wordplay origins meanings and usage of the English language University of Toronto Press 1996 p 126 ISBN 0 8020 7752 8 Hutton Ronald The Stations of the Sun The Ritual Year in England 1996 Oxford Oxford University Press p 113 ISBN 0 19 285448 8 Joe L Wheeler Christmas in My Heart Volume 10 p 97 Review and Herald Pub Assoc 2001 ISBN 0 8280 1622 4 Earnshaw Iris November 2003 The History of Christmas Cards Inverloch Historical Society Inc Archived from the original on May 26 2016 Retrieved July 25 2008 The Girlhood of Queen Victoria a selection from Her Majesty s diaries p 61 Longmans Green amp Co 1912 University of Wisconsin Lejeune Marie Claire Compendium of symbolic and ritual plants in Europe p 550 University of Michigan ISBN 90 77135 04 9 a b Shoemaker Alfred Lewis 1959 Christmas in Pennsylvania a folk cultural study Edition 40 pp 52 53 Stackpole Books 1999 ISBN 0 8117 0328 2 Godey s Lady s Book 1850 Godey s copied it exactly except he removed the Queen s tiara and Prince Albert s moustache to remake the engraving into an American scene Kelly Richard Michael ed 2003 A Christmas Carol p 20 Broadview Literary Texts New York Broadview Press ISBN 1 55111 476 3 Moore s poem transferred the genuine old Dutch traditions celebrated at New Year in New York including the exchange of gifts family feasting and tales of sinterklass a derivation in Dutch from Saint Nicholas from whence comes the modern Santa Claus to Christmas The history of Christmas Christmas history in America Archived April 19 2018 at the Wayback Machine 2006 Americans Celebrate Christmas in Diverse Ways Archived December 10 2006 at the Wayback Machine Usinfo state gov November 26 2006 First Presbyterian Church of Watertown Oh and one more thing December 11 2005 Archived February 25 2007 at the Wayback Machine a b c Restad Penne L 1995 Christmas in America a History Oxford Oxford University Press p 96 ISBN 0 19 510980 5 Christian church of God history of Christmas Christianchurchofgod com Archived from the original on December 19 2010 Retrieved February 24 2011 Meggs Philip B A History of Graphic Design 1998 John Wiley amp Sons Inc p 148 ISBN 0 471 29198 6 Jacob R Straus November 16 2012 Federal Holidays Evolution and Current Practices PDF Congressional Research Service Archived PDF from the original on January 3 2014 Retrieved January 2 2014 Crossland David December 22 2021 Truces weren t just for 1914 Christmas The Times ISSN 0140 0460 Retrieved December 24 2021 Baxter Keven December 24 2021 Peace for a day How soccer brought a brief truce to World War I on Christmas Day 1914 Los Angeles Times Archived from the original on December 24 2021 Retrieved December 24 2021 The Real Story of the Christmas Truce Imperial War Museums Retrieved December 24 2021 Christmas Truce 1914 BBC School Radio Retrieved December 24 2021 Weightman Gavin Humphries Steve 1987 Christmas Past London Sidgwick and Jackson p 31 ISBN 978 0 283 99531 6 Harding Patrick 2003 The Xmas Files Facts Behind the Myths and Magic of Christmas London Metro Publishing When was the last time football matches in Britain were played on Christmas Day The Guardian Archived from the original on October 6 2014 Retrieved October 23 2014 Connelly Mark 2000 Christmas at the Movies Images of Christmas in American British and European Cinema I B Tauris p 186 ISBN 978 1 86064 397 2 A chapter on representations of Christmas in Soviet cinema could in fact be the shortest in this collection suffice it to say that there were at least officially no Christmas celebrations in the atheist socialist state after its foundation in 1917 Ramet Sabrina Petra November 10 2005 Religious Policy in the Soviet Union Cambridge University Press p 138 ISBN 978 0 521 02230 9 The League sallied forth to save the day from this putative religious revival Antireligioznik obliged with so many articles that it devoted an entire section of its annual index for 1928 to anti religious training in the schools More such material followed in 1929 and a flood of it the next year It recommended what Lenin and others earlier had explicitly condemned carnivals farces and games to intimidate and purge the youth of religious belief It suggested that pupils campaign against customs associated with Christmas including Christmas trees and Easter Some schools the League approvingly reported staged an anti religious day on the 31st of each month Not teachers but the League s local set the programme for this special occasion Zugger Christopher Lawrence 2001 Catholics of the Soviet Empire from Lenin Through Stalin Syracuse University Press p 210 ISBN 978 0 8156 0679 6 As observed by Nicholas Brianchaninov writing in 1929 1930 after the NEP and just as the worst of collectivization was beginning the Soviets deemed it necessary to drive into the heads of the people the axiom that religion was the synthesis of everything most harmful to humanity It must be presented as the enemy of man and society of life and learning of progress In caricatures articles Bezbozhnik Antireligioznik League of Militant Atheists propaganda and films School courses were give on conducting the struggle against religion how to profane a church break windows objects of piety The young always eager to be with the latest trend often responded to such propaganda In Moscow in 1929 children were brought to spit on the crucifixes at Christmas Priests in Tiraspol diocese were sometimes betrayed by their own young parishioners leading to their imprisonment and even death and tearing their families apart Tamkin Emily December 30 2016 How Soviets Came to Celebrate New Year s Like Christmas and Why Russians Still Do Foreign Policy Foreign Policy Retrieved January 6 2022 Goldberg Carey January 7 1991 A Russian Christmas Better Late Than Never Soviet Union Orthodox Church celebration is the first under Communists But as with most of Yeltsin s pronouncements the holiday stirs a controversy Los Angeles Times Archived from the original on December 22 2015 Retrieved November 22 2014 For the first time in more than seven decades Christmas celebrated today by Russian Orthodox Christians is a full state holiday across Russia s vast and snowy expanse As part of Russian Federation President Boris N Yeltsin s ambitious plan to revive the traditions of Old Russia the republic s legislature declared last month that Christmas long ignored under atheist Communist ideology should be written back into the public calendar The Bolsheviks replaced crosses with hammers and sickles said Vyacheslav S Polosin head of the Russian legislature s committee on religion Now they are being changed back Perry Joseph December 24 2015 How the Nazis co opted Christmas A history of propaganda The Washington Post Archived from the original on January 6 2016 Retrieved March 11 2016 Somalia joins Brunei by banning Christmas celebrations to protect Islam The Daily Telegraph December 24 2015 Archived from the original on May 29 2018 Retrieved April 4 2018 Jespersen Knud J V June 21 2011 A History of Denmark Macmillan International Higher Education p 91 ISBN 978 0 230 34417 4 It is quite normal to go to church on Christmas Eve and many people like to celebrate a christening or wedding in church The Church is especially important at the end of a life by far the majority of funerals are still conducted in a church by a minister Alkan Sena December 19 2015 The history behind Christmas and Turkey Daily Sabah Retrieved November 30 2022 2018 Worship and Music Planning Calendar The United Methodist Church 2018 Retrieved December 9 2018 Stetzer Ed December 14 2015 What Is Church Attendance Like During Christmastime New Data From LifeWay Research Christianity Today Archived from the original on January 29 2018 Retrieved December 9 2018 Bingham John October 27 2016 British families only attend church at Christmas new figures suggest The Daily Telegraph Archived from the original on December 27 2017 Retrieved December 24 2017 Collins Ace Stories Behind the Great Traditions of Christmas Zondervan 2003 ISBN 0 310 24880 9 p 47 Internet Archive Susan Topp Weber Nativities of the World Gibbs Smith 2013 Alla scoperta dei cinque presepi piu belli di Bologna Nuok Nuok it January 24 2013 Archived from the original on December 27 2013 Retrieved December 25 2013 Presepi in Liguria provincia di Genova Tigullio sito di Paolino Digilander libero it Archived from the original on December 27 2013 Retrieved December 25 2013 Holidays at the Museums Carnegie Museum of Natural History Carnegiemnh org November 26 2013 Archived from the original on December 27 2013 Retrieved December 25 2013 Bershad David Carolina Mangone The Christian Travelers Guide to Italy Archived December 25 2022 at the Wayback Machine Zondervan 2001 The Provencal Nativity Scene Simplytreasures com Archived from the original on September 14 2012 Retrieved December 25 2013 Seaburg Carl Celebrating Christmas An Anthology Archived December 25 2022 at the Wayback Machine iUniverse 2003 Bowler Gerry The World Encyclopedia of Christmas Archived December 25 2022 at the Wayback Machine Random House LLC 2012 Carol King December 24 2012 A Christmas Living Nativity Scene in Sicily Italy Magazine Archived from the original on December 26 2013 Retrieved December 25 2013 Collins p 83 These Strange German Ways Edelweiss Publishing Company 1989 p 122 Nowak Claire December 23 2019 The Real Reason Why Christmas Colors Are Green and Red Reader s Digest Retrieved December 18 2020 Norris Rebecca October 29 2019 Here s the History Behind Why Red and Green Are the Traditional Christmas Colors Country Living Retrieved December 18 2020 Collins Ace April 1 2010 Stories Behind the Great Traditions of Christmas Zondervan ISBN 978 0 310 87388 4 Retrieved December 2 2010 Senn Frank C 2012 Introduction to Christian Liturgy Fortress Press p 118 ISBN 978 1 4514 2433 1 The Christmas tree as we know it seemed to emerge in Lutheran lands in Germany in the sixteenth century Although no specific city or town has been identified as the first to have a Christmas tree records for the Cathedral of Strassburg indicate that a Christmas tree was set up in that church in 1539 during Martin Bucer s superintendency The Christmas Tree Lutheran Spokesman 29 32 1936 The Christmas tree became a widespread custom among German Lutherans by the eighteenth century Kelly Joseph F 2010 The Feast of Christmas Liturgical Press p 94 ISBN 978 0 8146 3932 0 German Lutherans brought the decorated Christmas tree with them the Moravians put lighted candles on those trees Blainey Geoffrey October 24 2013 A Short History of Christianity Rowman amp Littlefield Publishers p 418 ISBN 978 1 4422 2590 9 Many Lutherans continued to set up a small fir tree as their Christmas tree and it must have been a seasonal sight in Bach s Leipzig at a time when it was virtually unknown in England and little known in those farmlands of North America where Lutheran immigrants congregated Mandryk DeeAnn October 25 2005 Canadian Christmas Traditions James Lorimer amp Company p 67 ISBN 978 1 55439 098 4 The eight pointed star became a popular manufactured Christmas ornament around the 1840s and many people place a star on the top of their Christmas tree to represent the Star of Bethlehem Wells Dorothy 1897 Christmas in Other Lands The School Journal 55 697 8 Christmas is the occasional of family reunions Grandmother always has the place of honor As the time approaches for enjoying the tree she gathers her grandchildren about her to tell them the story of the Christ child with the meaning of the Christ child with the meaning of the Christmas tree how the evergreen is meant to represent the life everlasting the candle lights to recall the light of the world and the star at the top of the tree is to remind them of the star of Bethlehem Jones David Albert October 27 2011 Angels Oxford University Press p 24 ISBN 978 0 19 161491 0 The same ambiguity is seen in that most familiar of angels the angel on top of the Christmas tree This decoration popularized in the nineteenth century recalls the place of the angels in the Christmas story Luke 2 9 18 Becker Udo January 1 2000 The Continuum Encyclopedia of Symbols A amp C Black p 60 ISBN 978 0 8264 1221 8 In Christianity the Christmas tree is a symbol of Christ as the true tree of life the candles symbolize the light of the world that was born in Bethlehem the apples often used as decorations set up a symbolic relation to the paradisal apple of knowledge and thus to the original sin that Christ took away so that the return to Eden symbolized by the Christmas tree is again possible for humanity Crump William D 2006 The Christmas Encyclopedia McFarland amp Company p 67 ISBN 978 0 7864 2293 7 the evergreen tree itself symbolic of eternal life through Christ Socias James June 24 2020 Handbook of Prayers Midwest Theological Forum ISBN 978 1 936045 54 9 Kitch Anne E 2004 The Anglican Family Prayer Book Morehouse Publishing p 125 a b van Renterghem Tony When Santa was a shaman St Paul Llewellyn Publications 1995 ISBN 1 56718 765 X Fritz Allhoff Scott C Lowe 2010 Christmas John Wiley amp Sons His biographer Eddius Stephanus relates that while Boniface was serving as a missionary near Geismar Germany he had enough of the locals reverence for the old gods Taking an axe to an oak tree dedicated to Norse god Thor Boniface chopped the tree down and dared Thor to zap him for it When nothing happened Boniface pointed out a young fir tree amid the roots of the oak and explained how this tree was a more fitting object of reverence as it pointed towards the Christian heaven and its triangular shape was reminiscent of the Christian trinity Harper Douglas Christ Archived May 9 2006 at the Wayback Machine Online Etymology Dictionary 2001 The Chronological History of the Christmas Tree The Christmas Archives Archived from the original on December 21 2007 Retrieved December 18 2007 Christmas Tradition The Christmas Tree Custom Fashion Era Archived from the original on December 18 2007 Retrieved December 18 2007 Hewitson Carolyn 2013 Festivals Routledge ISBN 978 1 135 05706 0 It is said to resemble the star of Bethlehem The Mexicans call it the flower of the Holy Night but usually it is called poinsettia after the man who introduced it to America Dr Joel Poinsett The Legends and Traditions of Holiday Plants www ipm iastate edu Archived from the original on January 22 2016 Retrieved February 17 2016 StackPath www gardeningknowhow com Retrieved December 23 2020 Germany s Advent wreath tradition and how to make one of your own Stripes Europe November 21 2019 Retrieved December 23 2020 Liturgical Year Symbolic Lights and Fires of Christmas Activity Catholic Culture Archived from the original on January 13 2012 Retrieved December 10 2011 Murray Brian Christmas lights and community building in America History Matters Spring 2006 Archived June 29 2010 at the Wayback Machine Epiphany Should Christmas decorations come down on 6 January BBC News January 6 2017 Retrieved December 23 2020 a b c d e Collins Ace 2010 Stories Behind the Great Traditions of Christmas Zondervan pp 139 141 ISBN 978 0 310 87388 4 Miles Clement Christmas customs and traditions Courier Dover Publications 1976 ISBN 0 486 23354 5 p 32 Miles Clement Christmas customs and traditions Courier Dover Publications 1976 pp 47 48 Clancy Ronald M 2008 Sacred Christmas Music The Stories Behind the Most Beloved Songs of Devotion Sterling Publishing Company p 40 ISBN 978 1 4027 5811 9 Luther sought reforms in music as he sought change in theology ethics ritual and art He loved polyphony and wanted music that moved people by fusing faith and song He encouraged a greater participation by the congregation in singing and he simplified the music from choir plainsong to easy harmony Luther published hundreds of hymn texts to be sung to popular melodies and simple chants In the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries the Reformation extended the range of religious choral music beyond the liturgy and the informal group singing of songs was highly encouraged leading to a greater familiarity with Christmas hymns Dudley Smith Timothy 1987 A Flame of Love London Triangle SPCK ISBN 978 0 281 04300 2 Thomas John Talhaiarn Thomas Oliphant 1862 Welsh melodies with Welsh and English poetry London Addison Hollier and Lucas p 139 OCLC 63015609 Byrne Eugene December 24 2019 Arguably most famous Christmas song was written by a Bristolian BristolLive Retrieved November 6 2020 a b c Smolko Joanna February 4 2012 Christmas music Grove Music Online Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 gmo 9781561592630 article A2227990 Broomfield Andrea 2007 Food and Cooking in Victorian England A History Archived October 25 2022 at the Wayback Machine Greenwood Publishing Group 2007 pp 149 150 Muir Frank 1977 Christmas customs amp traditions Taplinger Pub Co 1977 p 58 Carp for Christmas the odd Central European tradition explained Kafkadesk December 9 2018 Christmas card sold for record price Archived February 5 2006 at the Wayback Machine BBC News Retrieved October 28 2011 Schaverien Anna June 19 2021 E Cards Are Back Thanks to the Pandemic The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on December 28 2021 Retrieved November 13 2021 It s time to mail your holiday cards if you can find any NBC News Retrieved November 13 2021 History of Christmas Part 2 The Note Pad Stationery amp Party Etiquette Blog by American Stationery November 28 2012 Retrieved December 22 2021 Pruitt Sarah The War of Words behind Happy Holidays HISTORY Retrieved December 24 2020 Collins Ace April 20 2010 Stories Behind the Great Traditions of Christmas Zondervan p 17 ISBN 978 0 310 87388 4 Retrieved April 10 2012 The legend of St Nicholas who became the bishop of Myra in the beginning of the fourth century is the next link in the Christmas gift chain Legend has it that during his life the priest rode across Asia Minor bestowing gifts upon poor children Trexler Richard May 23 1997 The Journey of the Magi Meanings in History of a Christian Story Princeton University Press p 17 ISBN 978 0 691 01126 4 Archived from the original on December 31 2015 Retrieved April 10 2012 This exchange network of ceremonial welcome was mirrored in a second reciprocity allowing early Christians to imagine their own magi the phenomenon of giving gifts Collins Ace April 20 2010 Stories Behind the Great Traditions of Christmas Zondervan p 17 ISBN 978 0 310 87388 4 Retrieved April 10 2012 Most people today trace the practice of giving gifts on Christmas Day to the three gifts that the Magi gave to Jesus Berking Helmuth March 30 1999 Sociology of Giving SAGE Publications p 14 ISBN 978 0 85702 613 2 For the Enlightenment educationalist gift giving turned out to be a relic of a pagan custom namely the Roman Saturnalia After the introduction of the Julian calendar in Rome the 25th of December became the day of Sol invictus when people greeted the winter solstice It was the day of the Sun s rebirth and it was the day of the Christmas festivities although it was only in the year 336 AD that it appears to have become established as the day of Jesus s birth see Pannenberg 1989 57 The Eastern Church adopted this date even later towards the end of the 4th century having previously regarded the 6th of January as the day of gift giving as it still is in the Italian community of Befana The winter solstice was a time of festivity in every traditional culture and the Christian Christmas probably took its place within this mythical context of the solar cult Its core dogma of the Incarnation however solidly established the giving and receiving of gifts as the structural principle of that recurrent yet unique event Children were given presents as the Jesus child received gifts from the magi or kings who came from afar to adore him But in reality it was they together with all their fellow men who received the gift of God through man s renewed participation in the divine life ibid 61 Seward Pat Lal Sunandini Arora 2006 Netherlands Marshall Cavendish p 116 ISBN 978 0 7614 2052 1 Until quite recently the celebrations focused solely on Saint Nicholas or Sinterklaas SIN ter klahs as the Dutch call him Interestingly the American Santa Claus was born out of the Dutch Sinterklaas Domenico Roy Palmer 2002 The regions of Italy a reference guide to history and culture Greenwood Publishing Group p 21 ISBN 978 0 313 30733 1 Saint Nicholas Bishop of Myra replaced Sabino as the patron saint of the city A Greek from what is now Turkey he lived in the early fourth century Collins Ace 2009 Stories Behind Men of Faith Zondervan p 121 ISBN 978 0 310 56456 0 Retrieved June 20 2015 Nicholas was born in the Greek city of Patara around 270 AD The son of a businessman named Theophanes and his wife Nonna the child s earliest years were spent in Myra As a port on the Mediterranean Sea in the middle of the sea lanes that linked Egypt Greece and Rome Myra was a destination for traders fishermen and merchant sailors Spawned by the spirit of both the city s Greek heritage and the ruling Roman government cultural endeavors such as art drama and music were mainstays of everyday life Jona Lendering November 20 2008 Saint Nicholas Sinterklaas Santa Claus Livius org Archived from the original on May 13 2011 Retrieved February 24 2011 St Basil 330 379 Skiathosbooks com Archived from the original on January 12 2012 Retrieved February 3 2012 Matera Mariane Santa The First Great Lie Archived September 14 2007 at the Wayback Machine Citybeat Issue 304 Kto przynosi Wam prezenty Sw Mikolaj Gwiazdor Aniolek Dzieciatko czy moze Dziadek Mroz Bezprawnik in Polish December 22 2016 Archived from the original on December 24 2017 Retrieved December 24 2017 Nie tylko Mikolaj czyli kto wedlug tradycji rozdaje prezenty w roznych regionach Polski gazeta pl in Polish Archived from the original on December 24 2017 Retrieved December 24 2017 Ramzy John The Glorious Feast of Nativity 7 January 29 Kiahk 25 December Coptic Orthodox Church Network Archived from the original on December 28 2010 Retrieved January 17 2011 a b c It won t be like before Christmas in Ukraine transformed by war The Guardian December 25 2022 Retrieved January 5 2023 OCU allowed Christmas services on December 25 Ukrainian Pravda in Ukrainian Retrieved October 18 2022 a b Blakemore Erin December 26 2019 Why some people celebrate Christmas in January www nationalgeographic com National Geographic Partners LLC Retrieved July 26 2022 Christmas in Bethlehem www sacred destinations com Archived from the original on June 16 2010 Retrieved June 12 2010 Why Do Armenians Celebrate Christmas on January 6th armenianchurch org Retrieved August 13 2022 Christmas is here yet again Jerusalem Post Retrieved August 13 2022 lt The Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church Faith and Order Religious Holidays and Calendar Archived October 29 2021 at the Wayback Machine gt Siegbert Uhlig Encyclopaedia Aethiopica He N p 538 Varga Melody Black Friday About Retail Industry Archived May 17 2008 at the Wayback Machine Definition Christmas Creep What is Christmas Creep Womeninbusiness about com November 2 2010 Archived from the original on December 27 2010 Retrieved February 24 2011 South Molton and Brook Street Christmas Lights Archived November 19 2010 at the Wayback Machine November 16 2010 View London co uk a b Kollewe Julia November 29 2010 West End spree worth 250m marks start of Christmas shopping season Archived December 21 2016 at the Wayback Machine The Guardian Gwen Outen December 3 2004 ECONOMICS REPORT Holiday Shopping Season in the U S Voice of America Archived from the original on March 3 2009 US Census Bureau Facts The Holiday Season December 19 2005 accessed November 30 2009 Archived copy at the Library of Congress May 7 2010 US Census 2005 Haury Amanda C November 8 2019 Average Cost of an American Christmas Investopedia Dotdash Retrieved December 17 2019 Zauzmer Ben January 31 2020 Oscar Seasons The Intersection of Data and the Academy Awards Harvard Data Science Review 2 1 doi 10 1162 99608f92 6230ce9f S2CID 213681214 Retrieved November 15 2021 The Deadweight Loss of Christmas American Economic Review December 1993 83 5 Is Santa a deadweight loss Archived December 21 2005 at the Wayback Machine The Economist December 20 2001 Reuters Christmas is Damaging the Environment Report Says Archived March 12 2007 at the Wayback Machine December 16 2005 Harper Timothy 1999 Moscow Madness Crime Corruption and One Man s Pursuit of Profit in the New Russia McGraw Hill p 72 ISBN 978 0 07 026700 8 Marta Patino The Puritan Ban on Christmas Timetravel britain com Archived from the original on March 1 2011 Retrieved February 24 2011 Christmas in the Colonies Archived December 25 2011 at the Wayback Machine Time Retrieved December 25 2011 Daniels Bruce Colin 1995 Puritans at Play Leisure and Recreation in Colonial New England Macmillan p 89 ISBN 978 0 312 16124 8 Roark James Johnson Michael Cohen Patricia Stage Sarah Lawson Alan Hartmann Susan 2011 Understanding the American Promise A History Volume I To 1877 Bedford St Martin s p 91 Puritans mandated other purifications of what they considered corrupt English practices They refused to celebrate Christmas or Easter because the Bible did not mention either one The Regulative Principle of Worship Free Presbyterian Church of Scotland Retrieved April 12 2022 Those who adhere to the Regulative Principle by singing exclusively the psalms refusing to use musical instruments and rejecting Christmas Easter and the rest are often accused of causing disunity among the people of God The truth is the opposite The right way to move towards more unity is to move to exclusively Scriptural worship Each departure from the worship instituted in Scripture creates a new division among the people of God Returning to Scripture alone to guide worship is the only remedy Minutes of Session of 1905 Reformed Presbyterian Church of North America 1905 p 130 WHEREAS There is a growing tendency in Protestant Churches and to some extent in our own to observe days and ceremonies as Christmas and Easter that are without divine authority we urge our people to abstain from all such customs as are popish in their origin and injurious as lending sacredness to rites that come from paganism that ministers keep before the minds of the people that only institutions that are Scriptural and of Divine appointment should be used in the worship of God Goldberg Carey January 7 1991 A Russian Christmas Better Late Than Never Soviet Union Orthodox Church Celebration Is the First Under Communists But as with Most of Yeltsin s Pronouncements the Holiday Stirs a Controversy Los Angeles Times Archived from the original on December 22 2015 Retrieved August 11 2016 Woolf Nicky December 24 2015 Christmas celebrations banned in Somalia Tajikistan and Brunei The Guardian Archived from the original on August 26 2016 Retrieved August 10 2016 ACLJ Christmas laws Aclj org Archived from the original on December 25 2013 Retrieved December 25 2013 Christmas controversy article Muslim Canadian Congress dead link Feder Don In the culture Christmas morphs into holiday Archived April 12 2010 at the Wayback Machine Jewish World Review December 13 2000 The Brits Have It Right Forget Happy Holidays Just Wish People Merry Christmas The Guardian London August 11 2016 Archived from the original on December 21 2016 Retrieved December 11 2016 Jankowski Paul August 11 2016 Is Saying Merry Christmas Politically Correct Who Cares Forbes Archived from the original on August 7 2017 Retrieved August 22 2017 If We Can t Say Merry Christmas in Canada Multiculturalism Failed HuffPost August 11 2016 Archived from the original on September 29 2016 Retrieved August 11 2016 Lynch vs Donnelly Belcherfoundation org 1984 Archived from the original on February 16 2006 Retrieved April 12 2006 Mujahid Abdul Malik Treating Christmas with respect Archived April 5 2017 at the Wayback Machine Sound Vision Dillon Michael 2001 Religious Minorities and China Minority Rights Group International Buang Sa eda Chew Phyllis Ghim Lian May 9 2014 Muslim Education in the 21st Century Asian Perspectives Routledge p 75 ISBN 978 1 317 81500 6 Subsequently a new China was found on the basis of Communist ideology i e atheism Within the framework of this ideology religion was treated as a contorted world view and people believed that religion would necessarily disappear at the end along with the development of human society A series of anti religious campaigns was implemented by the Chinese Communist Party from the early 1950s to the late 1970s As a result in nearly 30 years between the beginning of the 1950s and the end of the 1970s mosques as well as churches and Chinese temples were shut down and Imams involved in forced re education Alarm over China s Church crackdown BBC December 18 2018 Archived from the original on January 5 2019 Retrieved January 11 2019 Among those arrested are a prominent pastor and his wife of the Early Rain Covenant Church in Sichuan Both have been charged with state subversion And on Saturday morning dozens of police raided a children s Bible class at Rongguili Church in Guangzhou One Christian in Chengdu told the BBC I m lucky they haven t found me yet China is officially atheist though says it allows religious freedom Santa Claus won t be coming to this town as Chinese officials ban Christmas South China Morning Post December 18 2018 Archived from the original on January 12 2019 Retrieved January 11 2019 Christmas is not a recognised holiday in mainland China where the ruling party is officially atheist and for many years authorities have taken a tough stance on anyone who celebrates it in public The statement by Langfang officials said that anyone caught selling Christmas trees wreaths stockings or Santa Claus figures in the city would be punished While the ban on the sale of Christmas goods might appear to be directed at retailers it also comes amid a crackdown on Christians practising their religion across the country On Saturday morning more than 60 police officers and officials stormed a children s Bible class in Guangzhou capital of southern China s Guangdong province The incident came after authorities shut down the 1 500 member Zion Church in Beijing in September and Chengdu s 500 member Early Rain Covenant Church last week In the case of the latter about 100 worshippers were snatched from their homes or from the streets in coordinated raids Further readingBowler Gerry The World Encyclopedia of Christmas October 2004 McClelland amp Stewart ISBN 978 0 7710 1535 9 Bowler Gerry Santa Claus A Biography November 2007 McClelland amp Stewart ISBN 978 0 7710 1668 4 Comfort David Just Say Noel A History of Christmas from the Nativity to the Nineties November 1995 Fireside ISBN 978 0 684 80057 8 Count Earl W 4000 Years of Christmas A Gift from the Ages November 1997 Ulysses Press ISBN 978 1 56975 087 2 Federer William J There Really Is a Santa Claus The History of St Nicholas amp Christmas Holiday Traditions Archived December 25 2022 at the Wayback Machine December 2002 Amerisearch ISBN 978 0 9653557 4 2 Kelly Joseph F The Origins of Christmas Archived December 25 2022 at the Wayback Machine August 2004 Liturgical Press ISBN 978 0 8146 2984 0 Miles Clement A Christmas Customs and Traditions Archived December 25 2022 at the Wayback Machine 1976 Dover Publications ISBN 978 0 486 23354 3 Nissenbaum Stephen The Battle for Christmas 1996 New York Vintage Books 1997 ISBN 0 679 74038 4 Restad Penne L 1995 Christmas in America A History New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 509300 1 Rosenthal Jim St Nicholas A Closer Look at Christmas July 2006 Nelson Reference ISBN 1 4185 0407 6 Sammons Peter May 2006 The Birth of Christ Glory to Glory Publications UK ISBN 978 0 9551790 1 3 Christmas Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 6 11th ed 1911 pp 293 294 Martindale Cyril 1908 Christmas In Herbermann Charles ed Catholic Encyclopedia Vol 3 New York Robert Appleton Company External linksChristmas at Wikipedia s sister projects Definitions from Wiktionary Media from Commons News from Wikinews Quotations from Wikiquote Texts from Wikisource Textbooks from Wikibooks Data from Wikidata Christmas Its Origin and Associations by William Francis Dawson 1902 from Project Gutenberg Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Christmas amp oldid 1132060019, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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