Wednesday, December 15, 2021

what does Christmas mean to you?

 


  

The real purpose of Christmas is to celebrate the birth of Jesus, but that is not the only reason that this time of the year is special.

For one thing, the Christmas holiday is not the only religious holiday that occurs this time of the year.

Chanukah is celebrated in December by Jewish people, but the exact date varies every year.

Ashura is an Islamic holiday that occurs on the tenth day of Muharram, the first month in the Islamic lunar calendar. For Muslims, Ashura marks the day in which the Islamic prophet Musa was saved by Allah when He parted the Sea while leading the children of Israel to the land of Israel. Furthermore, for Muslims, it marks the day on which the Battle of Karbala took place, resulting in the martyrdom of Husayn ibn Ali, the grandson of the Islamic prophet Muhammad and a member of the Household of Muhammad. In Christian religions, Musa is known as Moses.

Saint Nicholas Day, also called the Feast of Saint Nicholas, observed on 5 December or on 6 December in Western Christian countries, and on 19 December in Eastern Christian countries using the old church Calendar, is the feast day of Saint Nicholas of Myra; it falls within the season of Advent. It is celebrated as a Christian festival with particular regard to Saint Nicholas' reputation as a bringer of gifts, as well as through the attendance of church services.

Bodhi Day is the Buddhist holiday that commemorates the day that the historical Buddha, Siddhartha Gautama (Shakyamuni), experienced enlightenment, also known as bodhi in Sanskrit and Pali. According to tradition, Siddhartha had recently forsaken years of extreme ascetic practices and resolved to sit under a peepal tree, also known as a Bodhi tree (Ficus religiosa), and simply meditate until he found the root of suffering, and how to liberate oneself from it. The holiday is celebrated on December 8.

The winter solstice occurs on December 21 or 22, and marks the official start of winter. However, it is also a religious holiday for Hindus, Iranians, Chinese and Japanese, Jews, and in Scandinavian countries.

 If you want to wish someone a Merry Christmas, that is perfectly fine. However, there is also nothing wrong with saying “happy holidays”, since that is actually more reflective of the season.

https://whomadewhat.org/how-many-religious-holidays-take-place-in-december/

Gift giving at this time of the year has a very long history. In fact, it precedes the birth of Christ.

Gift-giving started long before Christmas was set as a day to remember Christ's birth. While Christmas became a tradition in the fourth century, gift-giving during holidays is of Roman origin. It was part of a celebration offered to the Roman god Saturn who was viewed to be the god of agriculture who gave vegetation and fruitfulness all year round.

The celebration lasted for seven days through the 17th to the 23rd of December. The gift giving ceremonies were seen as a way of gaining fortune for the next year. People initially gave simple gifts like candles, cheap wines, fruits, nuts and the like.

To a large degree, our modern celebration of Christmas is patterned after Saturnalia, which is a pagan holiday. You definitely should not share that information with any Christian evangelicals, since it may prove hazardous to their health.

https://www.christiantoday.com/article/whats-the-history-behind-gift-giving-on-christmas/103233.htm

The modern version of Christianity actually started in England in the 1840’s.

The Victorian era still epitomises the spirit of Christmas, and Charles Dickens immortal story ‘A Christmas Carol’ has ensured its longevity and image as the idyllic Christmas period.  Indeed they were giving out gifts in Victorian times, but more often than not a single simple gift was the order of the day, rather than the current mass of extravagant gifts often given out nowadays.  This gift was often a very simple item, perhaps home-made items such as a cake, clothes, or a doll.  For those more affluent and with children, the manufacture of toys (often wooden) was introduced.  Pinning down an exact date is difficult, but it is generally acknowledged that the Victorian tradition of Christmas gift giving started around the 1840s. In addition, the first known commercially produced Christmas Card was designed by John Callcott Horsley of London in 1843.  Together with cards and decorations, the Victorian era saw the introduction of many of the Christmas traditions currently enjoyed. 

 

https://www.dluk.info/christmas-gift-sending-tradition-history-origin.html#:~:text=Christmas%20gift%20giving%20started%20around%20the%201840s%3B%20also,of%20many%20of%20the%20Christmas%20traditions%20currently%20enjoyed.

Santa Claus himself if based heavily on a character that originated in Eastern Christian culture in the 4th century. The character brought toys and candy on Christmas Eve to well-behaved children, and coals to naughty children. He was helped by elves, who made toys at the North Pole. He also had flying reindeer who helped him deliver his gifts.

In the middle of the 19th century, caricaturist and editorial cartoonist created the image of Santa Claus that we are familiar with today.

In 1931, Coca-Cola commissioned illustrator Haddon Sundblom to paint Santa for Christmas advertisements. Those paintings established Santa as a warm, happy character with human features, including rosy cheeks, a white beard, twinkling eyes and laughter lines.

 


Sundblom drew inspiration from an 1822 poem by Clement Clark Moore called “A Visit from St. Nicholas” —commonly known as “Twas the Night Before Christmas.”

 There has long been debate about whether Santa Claus is real.

In 1897, Dr. Philip O'Hanlon, a coroner's assistant on Manhattan's Upper West Side, was asked by his then eight-year-old daughter, Virginia O'Hanlon (1889–1971), whether Santa Claus, a legendary character, really existed. O'Hanlon suggested she write to The Sun, a then prominent New York City newspaper, assuring her that "If you see it in The Sun, it's so. In so doing, Dr. O'Hanlon had unwittingly given one of the paper's editors, Francis Pharcellus Church, an opportunity to rise above the simple question and address the philosophical issues behind it.

Church was a war correspondent during the American Civil War, a time that saw great suffering and a corresponding lack of hope and faith in much of society. Although the paper ran the editorial in the seventh place on the page, below even one on the newly invented "chainless bicycle", it was both noticed and well received by readers. According to an anecdote on the radio program The Rest of the Story, Church was a hardened cynic and an atheist who had little patience for superstitious beliefs, did not want to write the editorial, and refused to allow his name to be attached to the piece. More than a century later it is the most reprinted editorial in any newspaper in the English language.

 https://tohell-andback.blogspot.com/2020/12/yes-virginia-there-is-santa-claus.html

One of the most remarkable Christmas celebrations in history occurred in 1917, when opposing forces in 1917 laid down their arms and sang Christmas carols with each other.

Christmas has always been, and should always be, a religious holiday. However, there are leaders in the Catholic church today who feel it should ONLY be a religious holiday.

One of those individuals is Bishop Antonio Stagliano of Rome, who recently told some young Italian kids that Santa was an imaginary character. Naturally, he received a lot of criticism for his comments.

https://www.nytimes.com/2021/12/14/world/europe/italy-bishop-santa-claus.html

For more than 100 years, parents have debated about telling their children that Santa is real. A single mom named Vanessa McGrady wrote into the Washington Post recently about how she handled the situation with her daughter.

Here is her answer:

“Santa is real,” she said, reaching for some explanation of why the whole Santa/Tooth Fairy/Easter Bunny charade isn’t actually a lie. “He’s the spirit of generosity. When kids are little, they need a character like him to understand the concept of giving. But now that you’re older, you don’t need him. You even get to be a Santa yourself and give things to other people,” I told her. “So, the Easter Bunny is the spirit of renewal and springtime. And the Tooth Fairy is the spirit of your changing body. They may not be actual creatures, but they’re real symbols about important things.

She seemed fine with this and agreed to not tell younger kids who still believe.

The following Christmas came amid a crush of Lands’ End catalogues. We threw our usual party. Santa knocked on the window. He came through the door with a booming “ho, ho, ho!” and made his way to an armchair.

How you celebrate Christmas is entirely up to you, but the musical group Pentatonix has some suggestions for you:

 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pFjdfjrtf1Q&list=RDpFjdfjrtf1Q&start_radio=1