Are we to understand that Christians stole Christmas and Easter? This has to be the most under-reported event to date.
You're a Bill Thomas Halo Burgeran. A religion unto itself.
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Are we to understand that Christians stole Christmas and Easter?
It would be more accurate to say the Christians 'adapted' the pagan traditions & celebrations for their own use, renaming them in the process.
This has to be the most under-reported event to date.
Well, it's hardly breaking news, and it definitely isn't popular with those who believe 'Jesus is the reason for the season', but it's historical truth, nonetheless.
And before someone goes off on a 'Christian bashing' rant, here's another bit of historical truth: the Puritans did not agree with celebrating Christmas, and outlawed it among their own people.
We all need to remember that our beliefs are not necessarily shared by the next guy.....
Well, it's hardly breaking news, and it definitely isn't popular with those who believe 'Jesus is the reason for the season', but it's historical truth, nonetheless.
And before someone goes off on a 'Christian bashing' rant, here's another bit of historical truth: the Puritans did not agree with celebrating Christmas, and outlawed it among their own people.
We all need to remember that our beliefs are not necessarily shared by the next guy.....
If ya ask me, it's over-reported. Every friggin' year somebody has to point out that Christmas used to ba a pagan holiday. Sheesh. Enough already. We know it!Are we to understand that Christians stole Christmas and Easter? This has to be the most under-reported event to date.
If ya ask me, it's over-reported. Every friggin' year somebody has to point out that Christmas used to ba a pagan holiday. Sheesh. Enough already. We know it!
It's almost as bad as every year there's a slew of yahoos who get bent out of shape with, "Put Christ back in Christmas!" because they are utterly clueless and think that the word Xmas is a secular attempt to remove the religious tradition from Christmas by taking the "Christ" out of "Christmas". It was Christian monks who first started using the Greek letter "X" (Chi), the first letter in "Christos", which in Hebrew and Greek means "Messiah" or "the anointed one", and was frequently also used along with "P" (Rho), the Greek second letter of "Christos" to form the ChiRho symbol for Christ: ☧ which is a symbol often used to represent Christ in Catholic, Protestant and Orthodox Christian Churches.
The Chi Rho with a wreath symbolizing
the victory of the Resurrection, above
Roman soldiers, circa 350 AD.
The Xmas means, literally, Christ's Mass, despite the objections of Christians who don't even know their own history.
Shorthand and saving space were exactly why the monks started using it, too.True, but I think 'most' people who use the X just mean it as shorthand, saving space... and why save 5 letters! Just put the name in.. IMO!
Dale
If ya ask me, it's over-reported. Every friggin' year somebody has to point out that Christmas used to ba a pagan holiday. Sheesh. Enough already. We know it!
Except 'we' don't all know it, just as we don't all know about the monks who first 'took the Christ out of Christmas' [or appeared to, to the uneducated, which includes me].
We learn something new every year, lol.
It's almost as bad as every year there's a slew of yahoos who get bent out of shape with, "Put Christ back in Christmas!" because they are utterly clueless and think that the word Xmas is a secular attempt to remove the religious tradition from Christmas by taking the "Christ" out of "Christmas". It was Christian monks who first started using the Greek letter "X" (Chi), the first letter in "Christos", which in Hebrew and Greek means "Messiah" or "the anointed one", and was frequently also used along with "P" (Rho), the Greek second letter of "Christos" to form the ChiRho symbol for Christ: ☧ which is a symbol often used to represent Christ in Catholic, Protestant and Orthodox Christian Churches.
The Chi Rho with a wreath symbolizing
the victory of the Resurrection, above
Roman soldiers, circa 350 AD.
The Xmas means, literally, Christ's Mass, despite the objections of Christians who don't even know their own history.