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One of the upper comments on a BlackPilled video link (Rudolph the jewish Reindeer) featured a question about whether Christmas is a “Christian” holiday.

This bears a clear response.

In the pagan Roman Empire, prior to AD 274, there was no major holiday celebration of a “winter festival” on December 25. In that year, Emperor Aurelian established Sol Invictus on this date as his own pagan holiday for dual purposes. First, as an attempt to salvage the rapidly decaying state brought about by its hedonism and corruption - “Birth of the Unconquered Sun,” and second as a response to the increasingly popular celebrations from the decentralized (pre-Roman Catholic) set of Christians as the marking and remembrance of Christ’s birth.

As to the date, itself, there was tradition held among the early Church fathers that the date of death of a “Saint” or “prophet” fell on his date of conception. As such, they calculated the date of Christ’s death on a particular first century Passover. There was debate as to which year, resulting in a divide between “eastern” (April 6) and “western” (March 25) believers.

By tracking the date of birth forward 9 months from each supposed crucifixion/conception date, two leading scholars arrived at a purported birth date. Hippolytus (AD 170-240), working from the March 25 crucifixion date, established December 25 as the date of Christ’s birth. Subsequently, Clement of Alexandria (AD 150-215) arrived at January 6 - certain orthodoxies continue to contend that Christmas should be celebrated on January 6.

While the argument that a Saint would be conceived and die on the same calendar date is fallacious, it still should be understood that Christmas as a tradition, remembrance and celebration pre-dated the Roman pagan Sol Invictus by roughly a century.

So, yes, Virginia, Christmas is a Christian holiday.

One of the upper comments on a BlackPilled video link (Rudolph the jewish Reindeer) featured a question about whether Christmas is a “Christian” holiday. This bears a clear response. In the pagan Roman Empire, prior to AD 274, there was no major holiday celebration of a “winter festival” on December 25. In that year, Emperor Aurelian established *Sol Invictus* on this date as his own pagan holiday for dual purposes. First, as an attempt to salvage the rapidly decaying state brought about by its hedonism and corruption - “Birth of the Unconquered Sun,” and second as a response to the increasingly popular celebrations from the decentralized (pre-Roman Catholic) set of Christians as the marking and remembrance of Christ’s birth. As to the date, itself, there was tradition held among the early Church fathers that the date of death of a “Saint” or “prophet” fell on his date of conception. As such, they calculated the date of Christ’s death on a particular first century Passover. There was debate as to which year, resulting in a divide between “eastern” (April 6) and “western” (March 25) believers. By tracking the date of birth forward 9 months from each supposed crucifixion/conception date, two leading scholars arrived at a purported birth date. Hippolytus (AD 170-240), working from the March 25 crucifixion date, established December 25 as the date of Christ’s birth. Subsequently, Clement of Alexandria (AD 150-215) arrived at January 6 - certain orthodoxies continue to contend that Christmas should be celebrated on January 6. While the argument that a Saint would be conceived and die on the same calendar date is fallacious, it still should be understood that Christmas as a tradition, remembrance and celebration pre-dated the Roman pagan *Sol Invictus* by roughly a century. So, yes, Virginia, Christmas is a Christian holiday.

(post is archived)

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Deuteronomy 12:32 would like a word with you. You dont get to add religious observances at a whim. Doing so is explicitly prohibited.

[–] 1 pt (edited )

Go get circumcised, then, too. And skip that bacon on Ocho De Poal. Don’t forget the other 600 civil and ceremonial laws.

There was a time and purpose for that law, and it isn’t today or for us.

God directly addressed two major struggles for Israel with this prohibition: the first being their faithless hearts latching on to false gods and their festivals, rituals and traditions, the second being greedy priests adding holidays and rituals in order to swell the coffers of the Tabernacle/Temple.

That prohibition, just like the rest of the law, was fulfilled and completed in Christ on the cross after His perfect life. We are no longer under the yoke of the law. It doesn’t save. It doesn’t sanctify.

In Christ, first crucified and now risen, seated on His Throne in Heaven as God the Son, we have perfect liberty, and when acting through the filling of His Spirit we have the guidance to do what is right. We are still obliged to follow the civil law of the government over us, such as eschewing murder and theft, but there is no written “commandment” of Scripture we now abide under other than to walk in the Spirit through avoidance of and perennially seeking forgiveness for sin.

James advised us to remember the poor and to avoid idolatry. Paul spoke to the Fruits of the Spirit and Works of the Flesh, and all else flows from embracing one while departing from the other.

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Keep making excuses for being a degenerate and see how that works out for you.