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sunset compares human world holidays
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Okay…I see what you did there. :) But nah, that’s still 13 days. :)
I called it a 14-day shift because the 1st of each month becomes the 14th
^:)
Actually 7 January is 13 days after 25 December, the difference will increase to 14 days in the year 2100 (when the Gregorian calendar does not have a leap year again, but the Julian calendar does).
:)
Christmas is celebrated on Dec 25 by everyone. The reason some Orthodox celebrate in on Jan 7 is because their Churches still use Julian calendar, while the country uses Gregorian, so they get a 14-day shift on all religious holidays (except Easter, since it’s calculated separate from the calendar).
It’s also believed now in some parts of academia that if the birth of Christ actually happened, it was probably sometime during the period 7-4BC, as Herod the Great (yes, that one, who the Bible says ordered the slaughter of innocent children) died in about 4BC.
xD
Except this (I feel should be pointed out) also might not be accurate. It is true that one suggested explanation for the December 25th Christmas date is as an appropriation of Sol Invictus (as established by the Roman emperor Aurelian in 274 C.E.), as well as the Roman Saturnalia festival which traditionally took place in late December. Except Saturnalia ended on the 23rd, and as wikipedia is quick to point out:
And now that I’ve said all that, I hope you won’t take this the wrong way. I’m not trying to start anything or deny there are any pagan influences in Christmas. I freely admit that modern day Christmas is filled with themes and traditions borrowed from other cultures over the course of the years this holiday has existed, and the continued existence of the holiday owes as much to that influence as it does to the Christians. I just rarely see the origin of the holiday discussed much outside of the idea that it was “stolen”, and as it is my favorite holiday I feel a need to add to the conversation.
Thank you.
Latin. and no, it wouldn’t.
Wouldn’t it be whatever the Canadian equivalent of July 4th is? (In terms of holiday rather than calendar date, wise guy.)
@CardStock
Would this pun even work in… Whatever they spoke in that place and time?
The original feast day was celebrating the birth of the Sun God as it was the Winter Solstice, the shortest day of the year. It was sort of a rebirth of the sun sort of festival. And when Christianity took control of Rome, they essentially stole it by adapting their own object of worship to it as Christianity before that had no feast days. It was more or less a way of keeping a feast day from an older tradition rather than scraping it all together and possibly making a new one. This also draws a lot of things into perspective as the original feast day was honoring the Sun God (Jesus being the son of god) and then of course the halos in the vast majority of christian art which represents the sun.
Actually, there is evidence, that Christmas was indeed once a Pagan holiday, the catholic church just made it up to make that holiday into the birthday of Jesus. There is no real evidence, that Jesus have been born on that day.
christmas is a bithday party
Thanksgiving is about a really friendly gathering that took place years ago and Christmas is an adaptation of a pagan holiday?
Don’t quote me on the latter, I have no idea.