H
Hisalone
Guest
Why are you still here?And who made you an “authority” of translating God’s word to us?
This thread is becoming more ridiculous by each post.
Why are you still here?And who made you an “authority” of translating God’s word to us?
This thread is becoming more ridiculous by each post.
And what if you don’t know your adopted child’s actual birthday? Say the child is an orphan foundling whose birth was never officially recorded and both parents dead or abandoned it somewhere?Of course.
But its not like the early church would not know Jesus’actual birtday. In the 1st century it was not that important.
We like protestant train wrecksWhy are you still here?
My initial question was why celebrate Christs birth on a day that isnt His birthday.And what if you don’t know your adopted child’s actual birthday? Say the child is an orphan foundling whose birth was never officially recorded and both parents dead or abandoned it somewhere?
An educated guess might be made as to the child’s approximate age, but you couldn’t hope to know its specific birthday. Would you not nonetheless chose A date on which to celebrate each year the fact and miracle of that child’s birth and life?
Because we don’t know his real birthdayMy initial question was why celebrate Christs birth on a day that isnt His birthday…
It is okay for the Church to do that, because She has the Christ-given authority to bind and loose.…So is it OK since we dont know His birthday to just pick a day?
I learned from the link you provided earlier in this thread (wiki) that it was because the ancients didn’t celebrate the birth of the “gods.”My initial question was why celebrate Christs birth on a day that isnt His birthday.
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Why was the date not chosen which was His birthday?
BINGO! I think you hit the nail on the head.Maybe thats what you real issue is: Not Christmas, but the Church’s claim to have the Christ-given authority to bind and loose.
Think about what you just said.Its not when Christ was born.
December 25th mixes the holy with the profane.
Christ with pagan…
I agree dinaiad!!! I think it would be wonderful if Christ’s birthday was celebrated EVERY DAY!!! What do you think of THAT Hisalone?So…those of us who believe that He may have been born at a different time of the year get to celebrate His birth twice, and that is a VERY good thing.
If I did I would think that Jesus’ birth was on December 25th![]()

Actually God uses Rolex, which many Catholics possess, so I think they’re still good.Catholics have rejected Gods times and Gods season therfore have thrown away the compass and clock God uses.
OK - so you are saying that if it so happened that YOU didn’t know which day YOU were born on, YOU would be upset with us for choosing, on the same day each year for consistency’s sake, to celebrate the fact of your birth and life, as every person deserves to have theirs celebrated? And if we choose a date which is meaningful for you or us (say the dayte that we first met you), you’d get upset?My initial question was why celebrate Christs birth on a day that isnt His birthday.
Can we say today with all certainty which day Christ was born?
No
So is it OK since we dont know His birthday to just pick a day?
As with an adoptive child who I did not know which day was the birhtday I would chose a day which was closest by guesswork
the child appears to be 18 mos old so I will chose a day 18 mos ago.
Is it terribly wrong to celebrate Christs birth on Dec 25th?
No
Why was the date not chosen which was His birthday?
the problem is that town in the middle of the metropolis, you don’t want to be caught wearing your business suit when some revelers approach you with a bucket of waterI checked and both the East and the West do observe it on the same day (June 24th).
That sounds like a fun celebration, especially given the heat you’d be feeling in that part of the world.
some kids in orphanages do not have their actual birth datesOK - so you are saying that if it so happened that YOU didn’t know which day YOU were born on, YOU would be upset with us for choosing, on the same day each year for consistency’s sake, to celebrate the fact of your birth and life, as every person deserves to have theirs celebrated? And if we choose a date which is meaningful for you or us (say the dayte that we first met you), you’d get upset?
As other posters have pointed out, 25 December is very significant, falling as it does around the time of Feast of Lights, Hannukah, which nicely ties in with the idea of Christ being the Light of the World coming in to dispel the darkness.
Believe it or not, there ARE people in this world who for whatever reason simply DO NOT know which day of the year they were born on, and cannot even guess. For example, if I were found wandering the streets as a twenty-year old with amnesia and my identity were never discovered. A doctor or scientist could guess my approximate (probably not my exact) age, but they wouldn’t be able to pin it down to the month, so basically I could be born at any time of the year about two decades ago. By your logic such a person doesn’t deserve to have their birth celebrated ever.
Another thing - why don’t I hear all this same angst and palaver in relation to us calling the year 2009 AD, since all of the same arguments apply? Jesus almost certainly wasn’t born in 1AD, more likely in around 4-6 BC, so why aren’t you insisting that we cease and desist using ‘2009’, since that date doesn’t refer to any significant period of Jesus’ life either?
True. I’m trying to broaden the examples beyond children to adults, though, as approximate DOB is much easier to narrow down with a child than with an adult. A baby or toddler you can often narrow the age down to within a few months at least. You can’t, however, say of an adult ‘this man/woman is 35 years and about 2 (or 6 or 10) months old’, for example, just by looking at them.some kids in orphanages do not have their actual birth dates
An early Christian tradition is that Jesus was conceived and crucified on the same day of the year. The crucifixion would have been shortly after the Vernal Equinox. Therefore the birth would have been shortly after the Winter Solstice. Thus, December 25 is an excellant choice to celebrate Christ’s birthday.Whether individual or collective the position is nothing but arrogance.
No, its Biblical TruthWhether individual or collective the position is nothing but arrogance.
Yes, we do.Indeed, as St. John the Baptist said “I must decrease so that he may increase”, so we celebrate the Birth of Christ on the Winter Solstice, and the birth of St. John on the Summer Solstice.
Actually I don’t know if Catholics celebrate St. John then, but we do.
You’re amusing when you fruitlessly ask questions that (you think) you already know the answer to. If you’re going to make statements just to stroke your own ego, keep it a private affair.Peter and Paul know the same God I know.
Do you?