Allan J. Macdonald

A Jolly Folly?


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some believers to place an overemphasis on Christ’s birth and the events surrounding it, as they sought to prove that he was truly man, truly God, and truly one. The Alexandrian school argued that Christ was the Divine Word made flesh (see John 1:14), while the Antioch school held that he was born human and infused with the Holy Spirit at the time of his baptism (see Mark 1:9–11). A feast celebrating Christ’s birth gave the church an opportunity to promote the intermediate view that Christ was Divine from at least the time of his incarnation.

      There are no extant records (minutes) of the Council of Nicaea and Constantine appears to have been the decision-maker. He decreed that Jesus was divine and coequal with God the Father. While his decision is theologically correct, one wonders if he made it in part because it suited him to merge Jesus with his sun-god!

      We quote Schaff, whose source is Eusebius of Caesarea (c. 275–339):

      The moment the approach of the emperor was announced by a given signal, they all rose from their seats, and the emperor appeared like a heavenly messenger of God, covered with gold and gems, a glorious presence, very tall and slender, full of beauty, strength, and majesty. With this external adornment he united the spiritual ornament of the fear of God, modesty, and humility, which could be seen in his downcast eyes, his blushing face, the motion of his body, and his walk. When he reached the golden throne prepared for him, he stopped, and sat not down till the bishops gave him the sign. And after him they all resumed their seats. . . .

      A few decades later it had become established in the eastern part of the church also. Writing in 400, John Chrysostom, from Antioch, who had become the chief or “arch” bishop of Constantinople, was aware of the date being associated with pagan gods but clearly saw no problem in adopting the date as a celebration of Jesus’ supposed birthday, commenting:

      Earlier in 386, he delivered the Christmas homily in his home town of Antioch on December 25 and called the festival, “the fundamental feast, or the root, from which all other Christian festivals grow forth.”

      Rome fell to the Barbarians in the fifth century and the Roman Empire in the west effectively came to an end (although continuing in the east for another millennium until falling to Sunni Muslim Turks in 1453). Its end began with the sacking of Rome by the Goths in 410. Into this vacuum, the papacy provided continuity with the past and continued to establish both religious and secular influence.

      Pope Innocent I was followed by Pope Leo (“the Great”), who is credited with saving Rome from physical destruction by his diplomacy with Attila the Hun in 452 (the Huns being Eurasian nomads who had migrated west into Europe around 370 AD) and the Vandals (from North Africa) in 455. Pope Gelasius I was the first to take to himself the title, “Vicar of Christ,” in 494 and he also invented St. Valentine’s Day on February 14, in an attempt to combat the persistent legacy of the Roman festivals of Lupercalia and Juno Februata, the most sexually promiscuous of all the Roman festivals. Of great significance is the fact that the victorious Barbarians adopted Christianity (i.e., either Roman Catholicism or Arianism) as their own religion. The first to do so was Clovas I, king of the Franks who became a Roman Catholic in 492.

      In 567, Pope John III called the Council of Tours, France, at which the celebration of Christmas in the West on December 25 was formally combined with the celebration of the Epiphany in the East on January 6, to form the “Twelve Days of Christmas.”

      At the Council of Mâcon (581) it enjoined that from Martinmas (November 11), the second, fourth, and sixth days of the week should be fasting days. At the close of the sixth century, Rome, under Pope Gregory (“the Great”), adopted the rule of the four Sundays in Advent.

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      Augustine of Canterbury (not to be confused with Augustine of Hippo, N. Africa, 354–430), had been a Benedictine monk in Rome, when in 595 he was chosen by Pope Gregory I to Christianize England. Whether or not the Celtic Church further north had already introduced Christmas, Augustine certainly did. On Christmas Day 598, he is said to have witnessed the baptism of 10,000 converts to Christianity.

      Christmas Day began to achieve Europe-wide prominence after Charlemagne’s coronation as Holy Roman Emperor on December 25, 800, by Pope Leo III in Rome. Charlemagne was a Frank and inaugurated the Carolingian Dynasty, laying the foundations for the modern states of France and Germany. (The Holy Roman Empire encompassed the Netherlands, Belgium, Luxembourg, present-day Germany, western Poland, the Czech and Slovak Republics, Austria, Switzerland, as well as parts of eastern France, northern Italy, and Slovenia. It developed a complex legal and political structure. Its central figure was the emperor, whose position combined ancient Roman pretensions of universal and divinely sanctioned rule, with the Germanic tradition of elected kingship. By 1600 it was a mere shadow of its former glory, as its German heartland had been split into a mass of princes and states. It would continue in name until 1806 when it and its coalition of states were defeated by Napoleon.)

      In Germany, Christmas was formally established by the Synod of Mainz in 813.

      The synod or Council of Chelsea in 816 was called by the King of Mercia (the kingdom of Mercia incorporating all of Britain south of the Humber, minus Wales and the west of Cornwall). The Council enforced the observance of Christmas on December 25, this date formerly being called “Mothers Night,” a vigil in honor of the rebirth of the new sun. King Edmund the Martyr (of East Anglia) was anointed on Christmas Day in 855.

      By the ninth century, priests, deacons, and choirs with antiphonal singing were acting the parts of the magi and shepherds during mass on Christmas Day, some churches even suspending a star from the roof which was then pulled to make it move!

      Around 950, Christmas was adopted in Norway by King Hakon the Good. There had existed a pagan Yule feast that had been celebrated in the eighth century, if not earlier, and occurred in mid-January throughout most of Scandinavia. King Hakon transferred it to December 25th. King Æthelred of England, who reigned from 978 to 1016, ordained in his laws that Christmas was to be a time of peace and concord among Christian men, when all strife must cease. King William I of England (“the Conqueror”) was crowned on Christmas Day 1066. The anglicized word Christmas, a contraction of “Christ’s mass,” first appeared in writing in 1038 but did not assume common usage in Britain until after the Norman invasion. Prior to that, the festival was always referred to