My holiday season has been lovely so far. I have enjoyed time with friends and family. I have been able to share some gifts with people I love...gifts that (I hope) will improve their experience of life this coming year.
But in the quiet spaces of this season, I have been considering the roots of what we celebrate. I already knew that many of our holiday traditions pre-dated any religious attachments to this season. As I pondered it, someone shared this article that explained exactly what I was thinking. (It's located via the link, but I am also posting the text.)
http://www.livescience.com/25779-christmas-traditions-history-paganism.html
"When you gather around the Christmas tree or stuff goodies into a
stocking, you're taking part in traditions that stretch back thousands
of years — long before Christianity entered the mix. Pagan, or non-Christian, traditions show up in this beloved winter
holiday, a consequence of early church leaders melding Jesus' nativity
celebration with pre-existing midwinter festivals. Since then, Christmas traditions have warped over time, arriving at their current state a little more than a century ago. Read on for some of the surprising origins of Christmas cheer, and find out why Christmas was once banned in New England.
1. Early Christians had a soft spot for pagans
It's a mistake to say that our modern Christmas traditions come
directly from pre-Christian paganism, said Ronald Hutton, a historian at
Bristol University
in the United Kingdom. However, he said, you'd be equally wrong to
believe that Christmas is a modern phenomenon. As Christians spread
their religion into Europe in the first centuries A.D., they ran into
people living by a variety of local and regional religious creeds.
Christian missionaries lumped all of these people together under the umbrella term "pagan,"
said Philip Shaw, who researches early Germanic languages and Old
English at Leicester University in the U.K. The term is related to the
Latin word meaning "field," Shaw told LiveScience. The lingual link
makes sense, he said, because early European Christianity was an urban
phenomenon, while paganism persisted longer in rustic areas. Early Christians wanted to convert pagans, Shaw said, but they were also fascinated by their traditions. "Christians of that period are quite interested in paganism," he said.
"It's obviously something they think is a bad thing, but it's also
something they think is worth remembering. It's what their ancestors
did."
Perhaps that's why pagan traditions
remained even as Christianity took hold. The Christmas tree is a
17th-century German invention, University of Bristol's Hutton told
LiveScience, but it clearly derives from the pagan practice of bringing
greenery indoors to decorate in midwinter. The modern Santa Claus is a
direct descendent of England's Father
Christmas, who was not originally a gift-giver. However, Father
Christmas and his other European variations are modern incarnations of
old pagan ideas about spirits who traveled the sky in midwinter, Hutton
said.
2. We all want that warm Christmas glow
But why this fixation on partying in midwinter, anyway? According to
historians, it's a natural time for a feast. In an agricultural society,
the harvest work is done for the year, and there's nothing left to be
done in the fields. "It's a time when you have some time to devote to your religious life,"
said Shaw. "But also it's a period when, frankly, everyone needs
cheering up." The dark days that culminate with the shortest day of the year — the winter solstice — could be lightened with feasts and decorations, Hutton said. "If you happen to live in a region in which midwinter brings striking
darkness and cold and hunger, then the urge to have a celebration at the
very heart of it to avoid going mad or falling into deep depression is
very, very strong," he said.
Stephen Nissenbaum, author of the Pulitzer Prize finalist "The Battle for Christmas", agreed. "Even now when solstice means not all that much because you can get rid of the darkness with the flick of an electric light switch, even now, it's a very powerful season," he told LIveScience.
3. The Church was slow to embrace Christmas
Despite the spread of Christianity, midwinter festivals did not become
Christmas for hundreds of years. The Bible gives no reference to when Jesus was born, which wasn't a problem for early Christians, Nissenbaum said. "It never occurred to them that they needed to celebrate his birthday," he said. With no Biblical directive to do so and no mention in the Gospels of
the correct date, it wasn't until the fourth century that church leaders
in Rome embraced the holiday. At this time, Nissenbaum said, many
people had turned to a belief the Church found heretical: That Jesus had
never existed as a man, but as a sort of spiritual entity.
"If you want to show that Jesus was a real human being just like every
other human being, not just somebody who appeared like a hologram, then
what better way to think of him being born in a normal, humble human way
than to celebrate his birth?" Nissenbaum said. Midwinter festivals, with their pagan roots, were already widely
celebrated, Nissenbaum said. And the date had a pleasing philosophical
fit with festivals celebrating the lengthening days after the winter
solstice (which fell on Dec. 21 this year). "O, how wonderfully acted
Providence that on that day on which that Sun was born … Christ should
be born," one Cyprian text read.
4. The Puritans hated the holiday
But if the Catholic Church gradually came to embrace Christmas, the
Protestant Reformation gave the holiday a good knock on the chin. In the
16th century, Christmas became a casualty of this church schism, with
reformist-minded Protestants considering it little better than paganism,
Nissenbaum said. This likely had something to do with the "raucous,
rowdy and sometimes bawdy fashion" in which Christmas was celebrated, he
added. In England under Oliver Cromwell, Christmas
and other saints' days were banned, and in New England it was illegal
to celebrate Christmas for about 25 years in the 1600s, Nissenbaum said.
Forget people saying, "Happy holidays" instead of "Merry Christmas," he
said. "If you want to look at a real 'War on Christmas,' you've got to look at the Puritans," he said. "They banned it!"
5. Gifts are a new (and surprisingly controversial) tradition
While gift-giving may seem inextricably tied to Christmas, it used to be that people looked forward to opening presents on New Year's Day. "They were a blessing for people to make them feel good as the year
ends," Hutton said. It wasn't until the Victorian era of the 1800s that
gift-giving shifted to Christmas. According to the Royal Collection,
Queen Victoria's children got Christmas Eve gifts in 1850, including a
sword and armor. In 1841, Victoria gave her husband, Prince Albert, a
miniature portrait of her as a 7-year-old; in 1859, she gave him a book
of poetry by Alfred, Lord Tennyson. All of this gift-giving, along with the secular embrace of Christmas,
now has some religious groups steamed, Nissenbaum said. The consumerism of Christmas shopping
seems, to some, to contradict the religious goal of celebrating Jesus
Christ's birth. In some ways, Nissenbaum said, excessive spending is the
modern equivalent of the revelry and drunkenness that made the Puritans
frown. "There's always been a push and pull, and it's taken different forms,"
he said. "It might have been alcohol then, and now it's these glittering
toys."
After all these thoughts and some other readings on the topic, I decided there were true Yule/Winter Solstice traditions that I really enjoy. The tree and other evergreens bring greenery and life into the home to be celebrated during a time that seems dark and cold. While gifts were never really an addition until later times, I enjoy letting people know I value and love them with a thoughtful gift for the year to come. Because the Winter Solstice occurs on the shortest day/longest night of the year, the next morning can be greeted with optimism and the knowledge that the days will now become longer, with more sunlight. It is a great time to meditate on renewal, care for others, and the year to come. Even minus the traditions that have been added through the years, these are all beautiful things to observe each year!
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