since when is christmass a religions event?

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NinjaCatStudios

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There has been similar winter festivities, long before cristianity, where i live, most people celebrate Christmas, no matter what religion.
 

RagTagBand

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Christmas has religious roots though ironically very few of those roots are in Christianity. But just like Christianity took the "Meaning" of those pagan, Roman and other-winter-solstice celebrations for their own, secularism is now taking it from the Christians.

I, for one, couldn't be happier with such a transition.
 

Emperor Nat

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Vault101 said:
alright this is somthing that bugs me,

aparently...if your not christian...you dont celebrate christmas? is this an american beliife or somthing?

anyway let me exaplain

now I dont actually know if chrstmases origins were christian Im a VERY sure it actually wansnt, I know baby jesus didnt have his birthday on the 25th of decenmber..and I think christians "stole" the date to compete with another festival

but that aside....

as far as Im concerned christmas thease days generally has nothing to do with religion..no really, my family is not religous....most of Australia is not religous and we (and I imagine alot of Australia) celebrate christmas.....(aside from going to mass of coase)

you know what christmas is? its a comercial holiday, its the itme of year when kids get presesnts, and its the itme of yeah adults stress out, put up with family or eat/drink themelfs into oblvion (or all three)

last time I checked jesus hardly had anything to do with it aside from the nativity plays we somtimes has...thats it, mostly it was about santa
I apologise if this comes off as overly antagonistic, but there's a lot that needs to be said.

Firstly, your spelling is quite bad. Sorry, but it is. Won't dwell on that though, as it's not really relevant.

Secondly, the holiday known as "Christmas" is a Christian one. The way you spelt it in the title makes this even more apparent - Christ Mass. However, the date is not. When Christians were thinking of a time they could celebrate their new religious holiday, they fell upon this time of year because it was the winter solstice.
The reason for this was not 'to compete' with any other festival. It was simply convenient - Christians needed a date, and it was already established that they had the day off from work.

Thirdly, while you're right to assume the holiday has been commercialised greatly over the years, it is still primarily a religious festival celebrating Jesus' birth. If that isn't what Christmas is for you, I suppose that's fine, but it -is- a religious occasion and one very significant for a lot of people.
Regardless of your own views, saying Jesus has nothing to do with it could come off as a little offensive/insensitive. I apologise if this wasn't what you were going for, I may be entirely mistaken. There's no tone of voice on forums, obviously. :)

However you are right to think that 25th December isn't -actually- Jesus' birthday. As far as we can tell, it's some time around June/July. :D

EDIT:
AVATAR_RAGE said:
Vault101 said:
Christmas is a Christian holiday. The word Christmas is comes from the combination of the words Christ (Messiah) and mass (as in feast). So yeah Christmas is a day to celebrate the birth of Jesus Christ who Christians believe to be the Messiah.

It was originally a feast day for early Neo-Jewish (early Christians) in which they gathered together and had a large feast to celebrate the birth the Messiah. The date however comes from the when Christianity was introduced into the Roman Empire as it's core religion. To avoid any upheaval the date of the Christmas festival was officially moved to coincide with an already existing, and quite popular pagan festival (the name escapes me). This festival also involved a lot of feasting, and surprisingly it worked. No one complained because everyone ended up feasting together.

Gift giving came at a later date, the idea of gifts at Christmas came from the idea that Jesus Christ was the greatest gift to humankind that God could give. And so people emulate this by giving gifts to those that they love. However this does lead to the commercialisation of Christmas which has occurred over the last century. Weirdly this headlined by the Coke Cola corporation.

I hope this clears things up for you. Oh and in future a little checking when it comes down to grammar and spelling goes a long way.
Also, everything this guy says.
 

ChupathingyX

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Yopaz said:
No, the OP knew a lot more about than you. He didn't wonder if Christmas was a Christian belief.
1. "She", not "he".

He was wondering why Christians seems to believe that it is
2. Because they celebrate it as the brith (not birthday) of Jesus (which I already said) and because the name also connects to Christianity. Therefore some more hardcore Christians would believe that Christmas belongs to them and they must fanatically defend it. Personally, I don't care (which I also already explained).

Stop putting words in my mouth, I don't like it...words don't taste nice.
 

willsham45

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Apr 14, 2009
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If you read the Bible these is nothing about Christmas in it...nor anything about going to church and all that Sunday Marco.

Many religions have celebration at this time of year to make the bleakest time of year a bit more pleasant, and to end the year something nice and not horrid cold. This makes sense in countries that have horrid weather in December.

I suppose from that angle the countries that celebrated got used to celebrating in December and when people were moved to sunnier parts of the world it just stuck.

Cause now a days it is a big day for capitalism as we are told nay ordered to go out buy stuff your ourselves, others, and the house under the promise of acceptance and not being a total reject of society with obviously not fun in them at all. Just try and tell someone you are not doing something for Christmas. You have to force your point though of NO before they give up.
 

Andy of Comix Inc

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I'm reminded of the scene in the Ernest Saves Christmas where he's driving Santa Claus from the airport but he clearly has a "Keep the Christ in Christmas" bumper sticker on his car.
 

AVATAR_RAGE

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Vault101 said:
alright this is somthing that bugs me,

aparently...if your not christian...you dont celebrate christmas? is this an american beliife or somthing?

anyway let me exaplain

now I dont actually know if chrstmases origins were christian Im a VERY sure it actually wansnt, I know baby jesus didnt have his birthday on the 25th of decenmber..and I think christians "stole" the date to compete with another festival

but that aside....

as far as Im concerned christmas thease days generally has nothing to do with religion..no really, my family is not religous....most of Australia is not religous and we (and I imagine alot of Australia) celebrate christmas.....(aside from going to mass of coase)

you know what christmas is? its a comercial holiday, its the itme of year when kids get presesnts, and its the itme of yeah adults stress out, put up with family or eat/drink themelfs into oblvion (or all three)

last time I checked jesus hardly had anything to do with it aside from the nativity plays we somtimes has...thats it, mostly it was about santa
Christmas is a Christian holiday. The word Christmas is comes from the combination of the words Christ (Messiah) and mass (as in feast). So yeah Christmas is a day to celebrate the birth of Jesus Christ who Christians believe to be the Messiah.

It was originally a feast day for early Neo-Jewish (early Christians) in which they gathered together and had a large feast to celebrate the birth the Messiah. The date however comes from the when Christianity was introduced into the Roman Empire as it's core religion. To avoid any upheaval the date of the Christmas festival was officially moved to coincide with an already existing, and quite popular pagan festival (the name escapes me). This festival also involved a lot of feasting, and surprisingly it worked. No one complained because everyone ended up feasting together.

Gift giving came at a later date, the idea of gifts at Christmas came from the idea that Jesus Christ was the greatest gift to humankind that God could give. And so people emulate this by giving gifts to those that they love. However this does lead to the commercialisation of Christmas which has occurred over the last century. Weirdly this headlined by the Coke Cola corporation.

I hope this clears things up for you. Oh and in future a little checking when it comes down to grammar and spelling goes a long way.
 

TheBelgianGuy

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ThreeWords said:
l3o2828 said:
Well, Christmas as a give a present to someone day is entirely comercial.

But christmas as a celebration of of Jesus as a figure of christianity has been going since the 4th century.
And yes, lately only the hardcore christians remember the meaning of christmas in a truly pure way.
Yeah, this, pretty much. The reason that it doesn't occur on the date of Jesus' actual birthday (Somewhere in June/August) is that it was set up to coincide with the Roman festival of Saturnalia, to allow a smooth transition from one religion to another when Rome went Christian.
Uhm no. The exact date of Jesus' birth is not known. It is not mentioned in the Bible. Therefore a Roman Bishop in the 3rd century calculated that 25th of december was a probable date of his birth.

Every day in the Roman Empire was a local holiday SOMEWHERE, in SOME CULTURE. To state that therefore Christian holidays are Pagan in origin is faulty logic at best.

I'm sure a lot of people were born on the same day as I am. THAT DOES NOT MAKE THEM RELATED TO ME.

The Roman Saturnalia was celebrated on the 17th of December. You hear me? THE SEVENTEENTH. Not the 25th. First introduced in the 3rd century BC, to raise morale after a defeat against the Carthaginians, this holiday became so popular with the Roman people that later they turned it into a week of orgies and merrymaking, till the 23rd of December. THIS WAS AFTER THE HOLIDAY LOST ANY RELIGIOUS MEANING TO THE ROMANS.
That's right, Imperial Romans often saw older religious festivals basically the way most of us see them now. As fun days you don't have to go to work.

Guess we didn't invent that either.
 

BabyRaptor

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I don't celebrate Christmas, I celebrate Yule.

That said...Christmas is mainly a commercial thing nowadays, be it stores trying to sell things or religious "leaders" hawking the "Take Christmas back!" faux persecution line to make money. It's long not been about Jesus or generosity.
 

flamingjimmy

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Christmas is about seeing your family and getting presents, who gives a crap about Jesus? He's no-where near as important as my family or my stuff.
 

Yopaz

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Jun 3, 2009
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ChupathingyX said:
Yopaz said:
No, the OP knew a lot more about than you. He didn't wonder if Christmas was a Christian belief.
1. "She", not "he".

He was wondering why Christians seems to believe that it is
2. Because they celebrate it as the brith (not birthday) of Jesus (which I already said) and because the name also connects to Christianity. Therefore some more hardcore Christians would believe that Christmas belongs to them and they must fanatically defend it. Personally, I don't care (which I also already explained).

Stop putting words in my mouth, I don't like it...words don't taste nice.
The name connects it to Christianity. That's seriously all you can come up with that makes this a Christian holiday? I already explained to you that the name is based on language not stone cold facts. If I celebrate Christmas and say I do it to celebrate the birth of Pablo Picasso does that make it so just because I can convince a few thousands to join me in it? I also find it funny that you, the person quoting me and removing all the text from it so you wont have to address it in full complains about me putting words into your mouth. So after obscuring what I say you accuse me of putting words into your mouth. How classy of you.
 

snagli

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Zen Toombs said:
Also, Santa is St. Nicholas, a Catholic Bishop. Just throwing that out there.
Oh wow, I'm surprised anyone actually remembered that. In the Netherlands we don't use Santa on December 25th, but St. Nicholas on December 5th, and presents are given on that day, not
Christmas. Santa was created when the Americans needed a figure of good will and a reason to give presents. A Greek from Turkey just wasn't going to cut it for them, so they created a fat white guy who lives on the North Pole.
 

masticina

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Oh I personally don't mind Christians enjoying Yule

Oh yeah didn't you know that yet. Well see The Christian Church kinda repackaged older holidays. Because people didn't want to give up their old holidays! So Christmas has little to do with Christ! It is Yule repackaged so Christians can enjoy it.

There are even staunch Christians who do not support Christmas. Nor would it make sense for Jesus to be born on 25 December...

And yes the idea of gift giving and the coca cola stuff. Well it is what it is!

In the end it is a great moment to enjoy friends and family at the end of the year. The cold dark days are on the turn. The sun is returning to us and guess what SUN = LIFE.

The Sun will Rise again and with that Life will return, hence it is worth a party!
 

retyopy

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What you're talking about is technically called Xmas, and it celebrates not Christian values, but consumerism and giving gifts to the kiddies. So hooray Xmas, and boo Christmas, I'd rather have gifts than goodwill for all mankind!
 

Tourmeta

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We call it Jul in Scandinavia after "wheel", it was some celebration of the year that had gone 'round before christians took over I believe. I also believe presents happened a long time before "christmas".
 

personion

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It's not there date that counts, it's the fact that Christians can get together and celebrate their beliefs, give gifts to others and generally have a good time. It's been secularized of course, and now anyone and everyone can contribute to our consumerist society and buy buy buy! Now, it's less about Jesus and more about buying as much stuff as possible. While I like the idea of Christmas, I'm a bit disturbed by the facts.

Actually, this video pretty sums up my thoughts! http://www.godlimations.com/webfolder/adventconspiracy/christmas.html

I don't hate secularization as its an inevitable part of our society, but I do wish more Christians could do what it says to do in the video.
 

Jandau

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If you want to get technical about it, Christmas predates Christianity anyway. It's was originally a fairly widespread holiday in various old religions centering around the winter solstice. When Christianity was spreading, it adopted that date to represent the birth of Christ to help integrate it with the old religions and ease the transition. So Christmas isn't a Christian holiday anyway.

The whole christmas tree thing is another such leftover from the olden days, same thing with Easter and the whole Rabbit & Eggs thing (spring fertility festivals). Also, Christianity did other similar things to help integrate with old religions, like turning old gods into Christian saints, allowing locals to continue worshipping the figures they always did.

And yes, Christmas has transcended Christianity as such. Christians still celebrate the spiritual aspect of it, but for the people of Earth at large, it's a commercial holiday and not neccesarily in a bad way. It gives people of all religions and creeds a day to get together and be with their families and friends.
 

Vault101

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Sep 26, 2010
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Lyri said:
Vault101 said:
alright this is somthing that bugs me,

aparently...if your not christian...you dont celebrate christmas? is this an american beliife or somthing?

anyway let me exaplain

now I dont actually know if chrstmases origins were christian Im a VERY sure it actually wansnt, I know baby jesus didnt have his birthday on the 25th of decenmber..and I think christians "stole" the date to compete with another festival

but that aside....

as far as Im concerned christmas thease days generally has nothing to do with religion..no really, my family is not religous....most of Australia is not religous and we (and I imagine alot of Australia) celebrate christmas.....(aside from going to mass of coase)

you know what christmas is? its a comercial holiday, its the itme of year when kids get presesnts, and its the itme of yeah adults stress out, put up with family or eat/drink themelfs into oblvion (or all three)

last time I checked jesus hardly had anything to do with it aside from the nativity plays we somtimes has...thats it, mostly it was about santa
You're speaking from a none religious stand point right?
Hence why you assume it to be a none religious holiday and actually thought that it wasn't to do with the birth of the baby J.C.

Commercialism has completely obliterated religious holidays, lets be honest here. Whilst Christmas now to most people about the giving of gifts, it is in fact a celebration of the birth of Jesus.
Christians are now trying to take back what is rightfully theirs, you're not a Christian so you shouldn't be celebrating Christmas, just like you're not celebrating Divahli or other different holidays belonging to other religions. They're no more in the wrong than anyone else.
whats rightfully theirs? as everyone has pointed out to me you could argue that it was never "rightfully theirs" in the first place
 

ultimateownage

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Feb 11, 2009
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I'm an Atheist and I still celebrate it. The Christian part of it has gone down a lot, and it was never a Christian holiday originally anyway.
This is just going to attract the Religion and Politics idiots into here.

*EDIT*
Can someone correct the OP's spelling? I don't want to have to get a suspension for doing something as simple as that, again.