Calculating Christmas
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William
J. Tighe on the Story Behind December 25
Many Christians think that Christians
celebrate Christ’s birth on December 25th because the church fathers
appropriated the date of a pagan festival. Almost no one minds, except for
a few groups on the fringes of American Evangelicalism, who seem to think
that this makes Christmas itself a pagan festival. But it is perhaps
interesting to know that the choice of December 25th is the result of
attempts among the earliest Christians to figure out the date of Jesus’
birth based on calendrical calculations that had nothing to do with pagan
festivals.
Rather, the pagan festival of the “Birth
of the Unconquered Son” instituted by the Roman Emperor Aurelian on 25
December 274, was almost certainly an attempt to create a pagan alternative
to a date that was already of some significance to Roman Christians. Thus
the “pagan origins of Christmas” is a myth without historical substance.
A Mistake
The idea that the date was taken from the
pagans goes back to two scholars from the late seventeenth and early
eighteenth centuries. Paul Ernst Jablonski, a German Protestant, wished to
show that the celebration of Christ’s birth on December 25th was one of the
many “paganizations” of Christianity that the Church of the fourth century
embraced, as one of many “degenerations” that transformed pure apostolic
Christianity into Catholicism. Dom Jean Hardouin, a Benedictine monk, tried
to show that the Catholic Church adopted pagan festivals for Christian
purposes without paganizing the gospel.
In the Julian calendar, created in 45 B.C.
under Julius Caesar, the winter solstice fell on December 25th, and it
therefore seemed obvious to Jablonski and Hardouin that the day must have
had a pagan significance before it had a Christian one. But in fact, the
date had no religious significance in the Roman pagan festal calendar
before Aurelian’s time, nor did the cult of the sun play a prominent role
in Rome before him.
There were two temples of the sun in Rome,
one of which (maintained by the clan into which Aurelian was born or
adopted) celebrated its dedication festival on August 9th, the other of
which celebrated its dedication festival on August 28th. But both of these
cults fell into neglect in the second century, when eastern cults of the
sun, such as Mithraism, began to win a following in Rome. And in any case,
none of these cults, old or new, had festivals associated with solstices or
equinoxes.
As things actually happened, Aurelian, who
ruled from 270 until his assassination in 275, was hostile to Christianity
and appears to have promoted the establishment of the festival of the
“Birth of the Unconquered Sun” as a device to unify the various pagan cults
of the Roman Empire around a commemoration of the annual “rebirth” of the
sun. He led an empire that appeared to be collapsing in the face of
internal unrest, rebellions in the provinces, economic decay, and repeated
attacks from German tribes to the north and the Persian Empire to the east.
In creating the new feast, he intended the
beginning of the lengthening of the daylight, and the arresting of the
lengthening of darkness, on December 25th to be a symbol of the hoped-for
“rebirth,” or perpetual rejuvenation, of the Roman Empire, resulting from
the maintenance of the worship of the gods whose tutelage (the Romans
thought) had brought Rome to greatness and world-rule. If it co-opted the
Christian celebration, so much the better.
A By-Product
It is true that the first evidence of
Christians celebrating December 25th as the date of the Lord’s nativity
comes from Rome some years after Aurelian, in A.D. 336, but there is
evidence from both the Greek East and the Latin West that Christians
attempted to figure out the date of Christ’s birth long before they began
to celebrate it liturgically, even in the second and third centuries. The
evidence indicates, in fact, that the attribution of the date of December
25th was a by-product of attempts to determine when to celebrate his death
and resurrection.
How did this happen? There is a seeming
contradiction between the date of the Lord’s death as given in the synoptic
Gospels and in John’s Gospel. The synoptics would appear to place it on
Passover Day (after the Lord had celebrated the Passover Meal on the
preceding evening), and John on the Eve of Passover, just when the Passover
lambs were being slaughtered in the Jerusalem Temple for the feast that was
to ensue after sunset on that day.
Solving this problem involves answering
the question of whether the Lord’s Last Supper was a Passover Meal, or a
meal celebrated a day earlier, which we cannot enter into here. Suffice it
to say that the early Church followed John rather than the synoptics, and
thus believed that Christ’s death would have taken place on 14 Nisan,
according to the Jewish lunar calendar. (Modern scholars agree, by the way,
that the death of Christ could have taken place only in A.D. 30 or 33, as
those two are the only years of that time when the eve of Passover could
have fallen on a Friday, the possibilities being either 7 April 30 or 3
April 33.)
However, as the early Church was forcibly
separated from Judaism, it entered into a world with different calendars,
and had to devise its own time to celebrate the Lord’s Passion, not least
so as to be independent of the rabbinic calculations of the date of
Passover. Also, since the Jewish calendar was a lunar calendar consisting
of twelve months of thirty days each, every few years a thirteenth month
had to be added by a decree of the Sanhedrin to keep the calendar in
synchronization with the equinoxes and solstices, as well as to prevent the
seasons from “straying” into inappropriate months.
Apart from the difficulty Christians would
have had in following—or perhaps even being accurately informed about—the
dating of Passover in any given year, to follow a lunar calendar of their
own devising would have set them at odds with both Jews and pagans, and
very likely embroiled them in endless disputes among themselves. (The
second century saw severe disputes about whether Pascha had always to fall
on a Sunday or on whatever weekday followed two days after 14 Artemision/Nisan,
but to have followed a lunar calendar would have made such problems much
worse.)
These difficulties played out in different
ways among the Greek Christians in the eastern part of the empire and the
Latin Christians in the western part of it. Greek Christians seem to have
wanted to find a date equivalent to 14 Nisan in their own solar calendar,
and since Nisan was the month in which the spring equinox occurred, they
chose the 14th day of Artemision, the month in which the spring equinox
invariably fell in their own calendar. Around A.D. 300, the Greek calendar
was superseded by the Roman calendar, and since the dates of the beginnings
and endings of the months in these two systems did not coincide, 14
Artemision became April 6th.
In contrast, second-century Latin
Christians in Rome and North Africa appear to have desired to establish the
historical date on which the Lord Jesus died. By the time of Tertullian
they had concluded that he died on Friday, 25 March 29. (As an aside, I
will note that this is impossible: 25 March 29 was not a Friday, and
Passover Eve in A.D. 29 did not fall on a Friday and was not on March 25th,
or in March at all.)
Integral Age
So in the East we have April 6th, in the
West, March 25th. At this point, we have to introduce a belief that seems
to have been widespread in Judaism at the time of Christ, but which, as it
is nowhere taught in the Bible, has completely fallen from the awareness of
Christians. The idea is that of the “integral age” of the great Jewish
prophets: the idea that the prophets of Israel died on the same dates as
their birth or conception.
This notion is a key factor in
understanding how some early Christians came to believe that December 25th
is the date of Christ’s birth. The early Christians applied this idea to
Jesus, so that March 25th and April 6th were not only the supposed dates of
Christ’s death, but of his conception or birth as well. There is some
fleeting evidence that at least some first- and second-century Christians
thought of March 25th or April 6th as the date of Christ’s birth, but
rather quickly the assignment of March 25th as the date of Christ’s
conception prevailed.
It is to this day, commemorated almost
universally among Christians as the Feast of the Annunciation, when the
Archangel Gabriel brought the good tidings of a savior to the Virgin Mary,
upon whose acquiescence the Eternal Word of God (“Light of Light, True God
of True God, begotten of the Father before all ages”) forthwith became
incarnate in her womb. What is the length of pregnancy? Nine months. Add
nine months to March 25th and you get December 25th; add it to April 6th
and you get January 6th. December 25th is Christmas, and January 6th is
Epiphany.
Christmas (December 25th) is a feast of
Western Christian origin. In Constantinople it appears to have been
introduced in 379 or 380. From a sermon of St. John Chrysostom, at the time
a renowned ascetic and preacher in his native Antioch, it appears that the
feast was first celebrated there on 25 December 386. From these centers it
spread throughout the Christian East, being adopted in Alexandria around
432 and in Jerusalem a century or more later. The Armenians, alone among
ancient Christian churches, have never adopted it, and to this day
celebrate Christ’s birth, manifestation to the magi, and baptism on January
6th.
Western churches, in turn, gradually
adopted the January 6th Epiphany feast from the East, Rome doing so
sometime between 366 and 394. But in the West, the feast was generally
presented as the commemoration of the visit of the magi to the infant
Christ, and as such, it was an important feast, but not one of the most
important ones—a striking contrast to its position in the East, where it
remains the second most important festival of the church year, second only
to Pascha (Easter).
In the East, Epiphany far outstrips
Christmas. The reason is that the feast celebrates Christ’s baptism in the
Jordan and the occasion on which the Voice of the Father and the Descent of
the Spirit both manifested for the first time to mortal men the divinity of
the Incarnate Christ and the Trinity of the Persons in the One Godhead.
A Christian Feast
Thus, December 25th as the date of the
Christ’s birth appears to owe nothing whatsoever to pagan influences upon
the practice of the Church during or after Constantine’s time. It is wholly
unlikely to have been the actual date of Christ’s birth, but it arose
entirely from the efforts of early Latin Christians to determine the
historical date of Christ’s death.
And the pagan feast which the Emperor
Aurelian instituted on that date in the year 274 was not only an effort to
use the winter solstice to make a political statement, but also almost
certainly an attempt to give a pagan significance to a date already of
importance to Roman Christians. The Christians, in turn, could at a later
date re-appropriate the pagan “Birth of the Unconquered Sun” to refer, on
the occasion of the birth of Christ, to the rising of the “Sun of
Salvation” or the “Sun of Justice.”
The author refers interested readers
to Thomas J. Talley’s The Origins of the Liturgical Year (The
Liturgical Press). A draft of this article appeared on the listserve
Virtuosity.
William
J. Tighe is a contributing editor of Touchstone.
“Calculating Christmas” first appeared
in the
December, 2003 issue of Touchstone.
Copyright © 2003 the Fellowship of
St. James. All rights reserved.
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