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Christan’s ..why Do You Celebrate Christmas?

Why do you celebrate Christmas when it is a pagan holiday i am Christan and i don’t celebrate it.
A Roman calendar drawn up by a “Christian” in 354 A.D. (The Codex Calendar of 354) shows December 25 to be the birthday of Sol Invictus. Not only is it listed as a pagan birthday; but, it is listed as the most important pagan birthday of the whole year. It was celebrated in the Roman Circus with extra chariot races. This is the sun god that Constantine the Great worshipped while claiming to be a “Christian.” His coins state that he was “committed to Sol Invictus.” Constantines’ form of “Christianity” continues to influence Christianity today. December 25th is just one example. Satan wants to be “God.” The first four commandments tell us who “God” really is. Satan hates that and has done everything possible to abrogate those commandments. Calling December 25th the birthday of Jesus is nothing less than sticking a pagan god in the face of the “God” of the Bible – a direct violation of the first commandment.
The bottom line is that there are no reliable historical documents that would place the birth of Jesus on December 25th. On the other hand, there is overwhelming documentation that the birthday of many of the sun gods of antiquity was recognized as December 25th.
The abominable worship of Tammuz, as spoken of in the book of Ezekiel, is related to December 25th. Today visitors to Bethlehem are taken to a subterranean cave, under the “Church of the Nativity” and are told that Jesus was born there on December 25th. It was Helena, the mother of Constantine, who declared that site to be the birth place of Christ. Jesus was not born there. It is a pagan sun worship cave in honor of Tammuz. The “church” historian Jerome, who wrote the Latin “Vulgate” tells us that Tammuz was worshipped there. He ought to know. His school was right next door. In fact, the back door of his school leads into the temple of Tammuz. In spite of all these facts, thousands of unknowing Christians bow down and kiss the spot in the niche where the idol of Tammuz was placed. Although theologians know, they will not tell people the truth. They will be held accountable. look up christmas history and then tell me are you still going to celebrate it?

No Responses to “Christan’s ..why Do You Celebrate Christmas?”

  1. Mischief Man says:

    The Church stole our holiday and tried to remake it as a Christian one to destroy our indigenous european religions. Most Christians today are unaware of that history, or just don’t really care because they’re not zealots. Celebrating Christmas on the 25th isn’t sticking a pagan God in the face of the Biblical God, its sticking the false God of the Bible into what was a beautiful and ancient “pagan” tradition.
    If you’re against celebrating “pagan” things maybe you should stop being Christian, as all the elements of the biblical stories were stolen from “pagan” myth.
    A lot of awesome things used to be illegal in the US, because the Eurotrash that washed up here were insane religious zealots.

  2. ☯ Tao ☯ Mushroom says:

    I have never understood why Christians do what they do.
    I tried, as a theologian, to revise Christianity into some workable, meaningful faith; but Christianity lost me when I began defining the meaning of the term “Messiah”; and went through the “messianic prophecies”.
    Not a Christian anymore.

  3. Quick q says:

    Truth that not all Christians celebrate Christmas. However, Christmas is very commercialized and the typical celebration revolves around shopping. Nevertheless, Christmas as a holiday celebration brings family together and some pretty darn good eating and gift sharing.

  4. Asabout says:

    ”Christan’s …….’. Why is there the assumption that ALL Christians celebrate this thing.
    Not all do, and there is an increasing number who like you are choosing not to partake of it. Some for reasons of it’s links to paganism others for general reasons.

  5. Lizzyyyy says:

    It is just a day where a lot of Christians choose to acknowledge and celebrate Christ’s birth. I am well aware he was born sometime in the Spring but all that matters is that you acknowledge his birth, not just on Christmas.

  6. Darrin says:

    Most of us know that Jesus was not born in December. It is just the day that has been set aside to celebrate His birth.
    His death is far more important, but obviously if he was not born, he could not die…..>

  7. hmmm says:

    Yes but not for the reason or the way you think. Nobody knows what day Jesus was born. His birth deserves observance.

  8. seeking says:

    hello
    We don’t know Jesus’ actual birthday,some have said it may have been close to being between july-oct.We’ll use that until the true date is revealed,until the true date is revealed we celebrate what is been told us.Only when the date is shown can we celebrate the actual birthday.We don’t worship the date because it can be changed,we worship the reason for the date’ the birth of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ’. the one that came to die for the sin of the world that whosoever will might be saved.If the date isn’t revealed then we can’t be held accountable for what you don’t know.If Jesus had not be revealed as the Savior would you be accountable for what you didn’t know? I don’t think so otherwise you’d be punished for something you weren’t aware of making God unrighteous.God said when the gospel has been spread across the world for an witness ..then the end will come.So everyone will have an opportunity to know the truth before the end comes,which makes God righteous giving everyone an opportunity to hear and make an choice.Christmas is an celebration of an person not just an date,when you celebrate an family member’s or friends birthday ,are you happy about the date or for the person born on that date? the person could be born on another date and wouldn’t you be just as happy? if they didn’t know their birthday (maybe because of lost records or being orphaned ) giving them another date would be in order ,wouldn’t it? the day is important because of the person or the whatever else happened upon it not the other way around.

  9. harperta says:

    Most Christians celebrate the idea of the birth of Jesus. That it happens to fall near (not on) a former pagan holiday is of no issue or consequence. When Christianity first started you had two types of converts, former Jewish and former polytheists. In order to make the ‘new’ faith of Christianity more palatable for these converts, the early church fathers appropriated the time around the Winter Solstice as the time to honor the birth of the son of God. Don’t make more of this than it is.
    If you do not wish to celebrate the birth of Jesus at this time, then don’t. In all honesty it is more a secular than sacred time of festival in this modern age anyway.

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