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Chuck,
I don't believe many people think 12/25 is the day Christ was born. That is the day they celebrate Christ's birthday. wrote in message oups.com... John H. wrote: On Sat, 03 Dec 2005 16:59:05 -0500, Harry Krause wrote: Harry, celebrating the birth of these Jews should be done on the day of their births. I have no problem with that. Christmas celebrates the day of one particular Jew's birth, Jesus. You may find that galling, but it's a fact. -- John Wishing you the best as we celebrate the birth of our Lord, Jesus Christ. Nonsense. As far as I know, there isn't a single biblical scholar willing to state any specific day of the year as the birthday of Jesus. December 25 was chosen to allow the Christ-mass to supplant Germanic solstice festivals. And *that's* a fact. Christmas was rarely celebrated as anything more than just another minor feast day on the annual religious calendar until some time in the early 19th century. When you read Acts, do you see examples of early Christians celebrating Christmas and Easter? How about Paul's letters to all the early churches, do you read any exhortations to be sure to remember to celebrate Christmas on December 25, or Easter on the first Sunday after the first full moon following the spring equinox? Funny how so many people *insist* that Jesus was born on December 25, exactly, but don't have a problem with Easter wandering all around the calendar from year to year. |
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