
How Reason
Made the Season
Isn't that supposed to be "The
Reason for the Season?" Nope. This atheist publication tells it like it is. The
real story of Christmas goes something like this.
Once upon a time,
primitive humans living away from the equator recognized some regularities about movements of the
sun. When viewed from a fixed point, the place on the horizon where the sun came
up and went down changed with the seasons. During winter, the sun rose lower in
the sky with shorter days. During summer, the sun rose higher in the sky with
longer days.
Our ancestors were primitive. They lacked our scientific
understanding of reality, material technology and generationally transmitted cultural knowledge. They
were primative, but not
stupid. Even though they lived tens of thousands of years ago, their brains
equaled, or nearly equaled, our potential for observation and reasoning. They
could see what went on, note regularities, and understand much of what they
saw.
Our curious ancestors learned that after the shorter days when the
sun was lower and sunrise farthest south on the horizon, the days would become
longer. With longer days came spring, the growth of vegetation and more animals
to hunt. As our ancestors learned to track sunrise points on the horizon, they
would notice that there was a point at which sunrise moved no farther south,
after which sunrise would begin to move north, with spring following.
Our
cave-man ancestors figured out the winter solstice by reasoning about what they
observed. Later ancestors would devise physical solar calendars that could
identify which day was winter solstice. These physical calendars, like
The winter solstice became a day to
celebrate. As the sun waned into winter, plants went dormant, animals became
scarce and people went hungry. Knowledge of the winter solstice gave people the
hope that the sun was not dying but would return. The winter solstice told
humanity that the sun's warmth would again bring spring's resurrection of plant
and animal life.
When humanity invented spirits and god, they were
associated with meaningful days like the winter solstice. Winter solstice myths
included gods that were born in human form, died, and came back from the dead --
just like the sun seemed to die and be reborn.
Man-gods that died to be
resurrected were sometimes linked with fertility gods who died and rose from the
dead during spring's explosion of new life. These man-gods were sometimes born
and/or resurrected at the winter solstice, other times at the spring equinox
(midway between the summer and winter solstices) -- Passover and Easter
dates.
But how did Christmas become the birthday of Jesus? A bit of
history will help us understand.
Towards the end of the 200s CE (Current
Era),
Romans had
long celebrated winter solstice. Older Saturnalia festival traditions of joyous
and erotic practices survived within Sol Invictus celebrations.
Mithraism was also a
very popular Roman religion, particularly with legionnaires and men. Mithras was the ancient
Indo-Iranian god of light and protector of oaths. Mithras came into the
Mithras had been born in a stable
with animals and shepherds present. The Mithras rituals included the consumption of flesh
from sacrificed bulls, sprinkling of holy bull's blood on congregants, breaking
and eating loaves of bread with the shape of a cross (a Mithraic symbol) impressed on them, drinking wine
mixed with water, altars with crosses, and priests with vestment symbols which
were similar to some Catholic and Orthodox priestly symbols.
The popular
winter solstice sun-god festivals put Christianity at a disadvantage. The date
Jesus was born was unknown, as Paul's letters reveal. Christianity had no
competing birth festival. Popular sun-god festivals would also attract
Christians.
Sometime before 300 CE, Christians began celebrating the
birth of Jesus on the winter solstice, December 25th. After Constantine the
Great (emperor 306-339) made Christianity Rome's state religion, Christian
persecution destroyed the religions of Sol Invictus and Mithras. Some Mithraic symbols and mythology were co-opted into
Christianity.
Christmas, then, is Christianity's version of a winter
solstice sun-god festival copied from competing Roman religions. The winter
solstice, Sol Invictus and
Mithras are the real reasons
for the Christmas season.
The reason for the original winter solstice
celebrations is, however, reason itself. Without the power of reason, primitive humans
would never have been able to observe the sun's movements and figure out the
seasonal day of the winter solstice.
Reason made the
season.
by Howard
Thompson. This article first appeared in the Winter Solstice
Edition, December 19, 1999 of The Texas Atheist, an independent, free e-mail
newsletter. Copyright © 1999 by Howard Thompson
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http://www.atheistalliance.org.
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