What is "Christmas" called in the East?

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It’s really always been the Nativity of the Lord According to the Flesh
That’s how it’s referred at the declaration in the Roman Martyrology.
 
Christ’s Mass=Christmas Or Xmas to stamp out the Christ in the term all together

  • W * R * O * N * G *
    !!!***
The X in the spelling Xmas (properly X’mas) is the first letter of the Greek spelling XPICTOC. It occurs in such forms as Xn and Xnity.
 
**Accordingly, the Armenians celebrate Christmas on January 18th and the Greek Orthodox celebrate on January 6th. **

Not accurate.

Those Orthodox (and Eastern Catholics) who follow the Old Calendar celebrate Christmas on 25 December, but it falls on the day labelled 7 (not 6) January on the New Calendar.
 
Hey I was just wondering…

Instead of calling it Christmas, do the Eastern Orthodox or Eastern Catholics call it “Christdivineliturgy”

I doubt you do, but there’s a lot of things I don’t know about differences in our holidays.
There are differences among roman catholics as well. Those differences are culturally (historically) based. German call Christmas Weinachten (old word for “holy night”). Czech and Slovak languages use word Vanoce/Vianoce (it has the same meaning as Weinachten).
 
Not accurate.

Those Orthodox (and Eastern Catholics) who follow the Old Calendar celebrate Christmas on 25 December, but it falls on the day labelled 7 (not 6) January on the New Calendar.
No he was quite accurate enough. He was speaking in terms of liturgical calendars and as such it matters not whether those calendars happen to match the secular calendar or not.

John
 
Hello,
In Croatian it would be:

SRETAN BOZIC! Merry Christmas!

Or BOZICNI POZDRAV… Christmas Greetings…

In Serbian it’s:

MIR BOZI! CHRISTOS SE RODI!

God’s Peace! Christ is Born!

you would answer VO ISTINU SE RODI!

Truely He is Born!

Hope this helps…
Thanks. I was really looking for:

Christ is Born! Glorify Him!

In Croatian.
 
Hello,

Thanks. I was really looking for:

Christ is Born! Glorify Him!

In Croatian.
Well, seeing as 95% of Croatians are Roman Catholic, they wouldn’t use this greeting. They would SRETAN BOZIC!

Those Croatians who are Greek Catholic say HRISTOS ROZDAJETSJA! SLAVITE JEHO!

Hope this helps…
 
**Accordingly, the Armenians celebrate Christmas on January 18th and the Greek Orthodox celebrate on January 6th. **

Not accurate.

Those Orthodox (and Eastern Catholics) who follow the Old Calendar celebrate Christmas on 25 December, but it falls on the day labelled 7 (not 6) January on the New Calendar.
Actually not correct as you see from my prior link
 
Actually not correct as you see from my prior link
I believe bpbasilphx was simply trying to correct the dating of the Eastern Orthodox/Catholic Old Calendar celebration of Christmas/Nativity (25 December/7 January) … not the Armenian Church’s.

BTW, thank you for the link to www.armenianchurch.net … an excellent and very informative site! 👍
 
Christ’s Mass=Christmas Or Xmas to stamp out the Christ in the term all together

  • W * R * O * N * G *
    !!!***
The X in the spelling Xmas (properly X’mas) is the first letter of the Greek spelling XPICTOC. It occurs in such forms as Xn and Xnity.
This is of course lost on the majority, so for them it may as well mean “ex” or “crossed out”. Christ is certainly missing in much of the worlds celebration of Christmas.

John
 
This is of course lost on the majority, so for them it may as well mean “ex” or “crossed out”. Christ is certainly missing in much of the worlds celebration of Christmas.

John
So true. That’s what the priest’s message at the Orthodox Church was about…
 
Yeah, the proper term for the feast in the Latin Church would be “The Solemnity of the Nativity of Our Lord According to the Flesh”.
 
This is of course lost on the majority, so for them it may as well mean “ex” or “crossed out”. Christ is certainly missing in much of the worlds celebration of Christmas.

John
The X may have come with the introduction of Morse Code. The users of the code replaced Cross or Christ with X. So Xmas=Christmas, RR Xing=RailRoad crossing, Xtal=Crystal (a lot of radios were crystal sets. A lot shorter!
X= - … -
Christ = -.-. … .-. … — -
 
Just for everyone… you have the wrong day for Christ’s birth… Armenians have always kept the orginal date

Just for those interested

projects.ascp.am/holidays/xmas/why%20armenian_celebrate%20eng.htm

ARMENIAN CHRISTMAS

Why Armenians Celebrate Christmas on January 6th?

Armenian Christmas," as it is popularly called, is a culmination of celebrations of events related to Christ’s Incarnation. Theophany or Epiphany (or Astvadz-a-haytnootyoon in Armenian) means “revelation of God,” which is the central theme of the Christmas Season in the Armenian Church. During the “Armenian Christmas” season, the major events that are celebrated are the Nativity of Christ in Bethlehem and His Baptism in the River Jordan. The day of this major feast in the Armenian Church is January 6th. A ceremony called “Blessing of Water” is conducted in the Armenian Church to commemorate Christ’s Baptism. It is frequently asked as to why Armenians do not celebrate Christmas on December 25th with the rest of the world. Obviously, the exact date of Christ’s birth has not been historically established—it is neither recorded in the Gospels. However, historically, all Christian churches celebrated Christ’s birth on january 6th until the fourth century. According to Roman Catholic sources, the date was changed from January 6th to December 25th in order to override a pagan feast dedicated to the birth of the Sun which was celebrated on December 25th. At the time Christians used to continue their observance of these pagan festivities. In order to undermine and subdue this pagan practice, the church hierarchy designated December 25th as the official date of Christmas and January 6th as the feast of Epiphany. However, Armenia was not effected by this change for the simple fact that there were no such pagan practices in Armenia, on that date, and the fact that the Armenian Church was not a satellite of the Roman Church. Thus, remaining faithful to the traditions of their forefathers, Armenians have continued to celebrate Christmas on January 6th until today. In the Holy Land: January 18thIn the Holy Land, the Orthodox churches use the old calendar (which has a difference of twelve days) to determine the date of the religious feasts. Accordingly, the Armenians celebrate Christmas on January 18th and the Greek Orthodox celebrate on January 6th. On the day before Armenian Christmas, January 17th, the Armenian Patriarch together with the clergy and the faithful, travels from Jerusalem to the city of Bethlehem, to the Church of Nativity of Christ, were elaborate and colorful ceremonies take place. Outside, in the large square of the Church of Nativity, the Patriarch and his entourage are greeted by the Mayor of Bethlehem and City officials. A procession led by Armenian scouts and their band, advance the Patriarch into the Church of Nativity, while priests, seminarians and the faithful join in the sing of Armenian hymns. Afterwards, church services and ceremonies are conducted in the Cathedral of Nativity all night long and until the next day, January 18th.
Is it January 6 in the Julian calendar? Or in the Gregorian calendar. If Gregorian, what date does that correspond to on the Julian calendar?
 
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