Comments
CaliSummerDream t1_j2e3ne2 wrote
And the wrong month. He was born in the summer, as evidenced by the appearance of the shepherds.
Telemere125 t1_j2e5mvu wrote
Meh, average temps in that area of the world in late Dec are lows of 40 and highs of 60. That’s perfect weather to have sheep in a field. Not saying the timeline is correct, but that argument isn’t why
itay162 t1_j2f30pq wrote
Also winter is the rainy season here, and that's when the grass grows
PeaAffectionate5667 t1_j2e98hv wrote
Even 2000 years ago?
Addicted_To_Lazyness t1_j2edivj wrote
Some parts of the world might have changed a little but overall it takes way more than 2000 years for the world's climate to drastically change naturally
WiartonWilly t1_j2fg202 wrote
The Middle East was green and wet 2000 years ago. Now it’s a desert.
Addicted_To_Lazyness t1_j2fmnks wrote
Yup that's what i said, some parts changed a lot but the planet (especially temperature-wise) is overall the same
I-seddit t1_j2ffixp wrote
I love the Newsradio episode where Y2K happens 4 years early because of this...
Telemere125 t1_j2e63b6 wrote
Because Dec 25 is the end of Saturnalia, celebration of the god Saturn, in the Roman pantheon. It was adopted by the Christians because there was already a big celebration that happened every year on that day so it was easier to integrate it into their religion and make it seem like their god was being celebrated.
yirzmstrebor t1_j2eb3lz wrote
It's also the Birthday of Mithras, an Indo-Iranian god who had become popular with Roman soldiers, and just 2 days before the Birthday of the Egyptian god Osiris. Notably, both of these deities have myths involving their death and resurrection. It's also close enough to the Winter Solstice that Christians were able to syncretize the celebration of Yule/Jule as Christianity moved into Northern Europe. This celebration was often connected with Odin/Woden, who has a myth wherein he sacrificed himself to himself on the World Tree.
Telemere125 t1_j2ee4s1 wrote
Oh yea there’s dozens of religious celebrations around winter solstice, usually celebrated sometime around Dec 20-25. Nothing revolutionary for the Christians to celebrate a major event then
yirzmstrebor t1_j2ejb09 wrote
And, as the shortest day/longest night of the year, it's commonly associated with death and resurrection/rebirth, so the themes fit nicely with Jesus.
SetTheWorldAfire t1_j2f531p wrote
Jesus is the sun, the light of our world, born in the east and the reason for the seasons
thunderchungus1999 t1_j2fbhjj wrote
IIRC it this because in the northern hemisphere December usually tends to be at the height of winter (lack of production or active field plowing) and the longest night is the ideal setting dor a reunion in a holding protected from the elemental dangers of a harsh winter night, especially when you consider that before the development of advanced engineering then all resources would have to be pulled into one fortress since civilian homes couldnt hold that many people.
Inside_Beginning75 t1_j2fqkk3 wrote
But also a bunch of Romans converted. It wasn't to make Christmas seem legit, just convenience for the growing population of roman christians and christians through out the Roman empire.
Telemere125 t1_j2frfxy wrote
No Roman converted their holiday for the convenience and pleasure of a Christian. Romans hunted Christians pretty extensively from Nero’s rule in 64 CE until 313 CE when Constantine the Great declared toleration. However, you’re other point “for the convenience of the growing population of Roman Christians” is exactly what co-opting the ceremony for Christian purposes means, as I originally said.
RSwordsman t1_j2djqvx wrote
It's most commonly thought that Dec. 25 isn't his actual birthday. It was chosen for its closeness to pagan holidays to make Christianity more palatable to the local faithful.
DeadlyKitten9513 t1_j2dkwvc wrote
Just some more Christians in history changing things to stamp out paganism
UpsetIncome2344 t1_j2e59wl wrote
You know as a Christian myself. I have never thought about it that way.
Music_Girl2000 t1_j2fhf6q wrote
A common misconception is that AD stands for After Death, meaning after the death of Christ, but it actually stands for Anno Domini, a Latin phrase that translates to "the year of our Lord". Thus, Christ was born in the year 1 AD. He died in the year 33 AD. Though his actual birthday was April 6, not December 25.
Jumpy-Progress t1_j2fjkyf wrote
Just curious, where does April 6 come from? I've never heard that before
Music_Girl2000 t1_j2fk4d8 wrote
Bible historians have deduced that approximate date due to context clues. Not all of them agree on the exact date, but that's the average of all the estimates I've found.
Jumpy-Progress t1_j2fmceu wrote
Oh ok. I know I've heard it was probably spring, but I'd never heard a specific date before. I also read that we have the whole manager thing all wrong, too.
Showerthoughts_Mod t1_j2dhen9 wrote
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HamarticDownfall t1_j2e8r8e wrote
Tis to commemorate Jesus's first new years, he got absolutely mortal
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I-seddit t1_j2ffoki wrote
honestly it was even more confusing for the people at the time, "why is it year one again????". Very frustrating, most people thought it was the calendar vendors doing it to make more money.
lookingForPatchie t1_j2eqg6o wrote
And it sucks, because winter solstice is on 21st of december, which is the actual reason we celebrate christmas. Has been celebrated for thousands of years before Jesus came around. Would've been the perfect time to start the year. So make it 21st if anything.
Boatster_McBoat t1_j2fvbgp wrote
Solstice, Christmas, New Year's = same event + poor calendar management over several millennia
digital_disposition t1_j2dwosf wrote
They also didn't even write the first Bible till like 130 years after Jesus died.
Wellfooled t1_j2fameg wrote
The Bible is a compilation of 66 different books. Some were written thousands of years before Jesus was on earth (the earliest were written by Moses about 1512 BCE)
The earliest book written after Jesus ( Matthew) was written circa 41 CE.
The last Bible books written were around 96-98 CE by John.
jacobb11 t1_j2fjn81 wrote
> Some were written thousands of years before Jesus was on earth (the earliest were written by Moses about 1512 BCE)
The old testament is believed by historians to have been written over a period of time starting a bit more than a thousand years before Jesus. Almost certainly not by Moses. Your main point stands, of course.
Inside_Beginning75 t1_j2fqp1q wrote
Not all historians
xwing_n_it t1_j2dk13p wrote
...and it's actually the wrong year as well. If I recall they figure Jesus was born at least four years B.C.