The Celebration of Christmas: Difference between revisions

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'''Is it possible for Christians to honestly celebrate the birth of Christ on December 25th?'''  
'''Is it possible for Christians to honestly celebrate the birth of Christ on December 25th?'''  


Of course it is!
Of course it is!


Christmas was never about paganism to my parents, to me or my kids.  
Christmas was never about paganism to my parents, to me or my kids.  But many followers of William Branham love to throw a wet blanket on Christmas.


It was about time spent with family. Christmas is about spending time interacting with family and participating in traditions together that build memories, writing them on the pages of their heartsWe were taught that non-Christians used Santa Claus to take the focus away from Jesus Christ.
When we raise our children with the emphasis on Christ and family, then '''traditions set forth by that family''' are founded on love and wrapped up in fellowship. Many families have adopted traditions created by other families of yesteryear and some families create their own traditionsGrace is knowing we can celebrate family traditions founded on love while not worrying about how others in the past may have had a different focus.  


When we raise our children with the emphasis on Christ and family, then '''traditions set forth by that family''' are founded on love and wrapped up in fellowship. Many families have adopted traditions created by other families of yesteryear and some families create their own traditions.  Grace is knowing we can celebrate family traditions founded on love while not worrying about how others in the past may have had the opposite focus.  
Forgiveness lavished with grace erases the memories of what previous people did on the same days and gives us mercy as we seek to walk forward in Christ with our families.


Forgiveness lavished with grace erases the memories of what previous people did on the same days and gives us mercy as we seek to walk forward in Christ with our families.
Many message churches teach that Christmas is a pagan tradition that should be squelched, ignored and certainly not celebrated.  But '''the Bible teaches that no other Christian is allowed to judge another with respect to the celebration of feasts or holy days.'''


'''Legalism kills Christmas''' and destroys the wonderful family memories that occur as we celebrate together, partake in special family meals, and commune with one during the holiday time.
'''Legalism kills the spiritual benefit of Christmas''' and destroys the wonderful Christ-honoring family times that occur as we celebrate the incarnation together, partake in special family meals, and commune with one another during the holiday time.


=The origins of Christmas=
=The origins of Christmas=
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There are a number of Bible verses that support scripture.  As mentioned above, [[Mixing Law and Grace|the whole issue of law versus grace]] should prevent legalism about Christmas.
There are a number of Bible verses that support scripture.  As mentioned above, [[Mixing Law and Grace|the whole issue of law versus grace]] should prevent legalism about Christmas.


===Colossians 2:!6===
===Colossians 2:16===


:''So '''let no one judge you''' in food or in drink, or '''regarding a festival''' or a new moon or sabbaths...<ref>The New King James Version (Nashville: Thomas Nelson, 1982), Col 2:16.</ref>
:''So '''let no one judge you''' in food or in drink, or '''regarding a festival''' or a new moon or sabbaths...<ref>The New King James Version (Nashville: Thomas Nelson, 1982), Col 2:16.</ref>
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As a result of the above, it is clear that Jeremiah 10 is not referring to a Christmas tree.
As a result of the above, it is clear that Jeremiah 10 is not referring to a Christmas tree.


=References=
=William Branham and Christmas=
 
==How William Branham celebrated Christmas==
 
From conversations with members of the Branham family, we understand that '''William Branham had a Christmas tree in his home every year, right up to his death'''.  In fact, they were mildly embarassed with the last Christmas tree that he purchased in Tucson, as it was apparently a small artificial wind-up metallic tree that played a popular Christmas song as it turned on its base.
 
So based on his actions, it is clear that William Branham was in favour of celebrating Christmas within the family setting.
 
==What William Branham said about Christmas==
 
Unfortunately, like with so many things, William Branham managed to communicate confusion on this issue.  While celebrating Christmas with his family and giving presents to the kids, he also sometimes railed against it over the pulpit.
 
:''And today, that memorial of His birthday, what do they do? They get some tree, cut it down, '''make a Christmas tree''', for the kiddies. But they think... That's all right; '''I'm not kicking against that'''. But the thing of it is, they put more on the Christmas tree than they do for Christ.<ref>THE.DEITY.OF.JESUS.CHRIST_  JEFF.IN 49-1225</ref>
 
:''My, how I can't understand where a rabbit has anything to do with the resurrection (See? No, sir.), or how a Christmas tree has anything to do with the birth of Christ. It's pagan, friends. We've got off the path somewhere.  That's right. But now a real born again man or woman realizes, because there's life within you, tells you that that's wrong. Is that right? <ref>THE.CRUELTY.OF.SIN.AND.THE.PENALTY.THAT.IT.COST.TO.RID.SIN.FROM.OUR.LIVES_  JEFF.IN  V-25 N-4  FRIDAY_  53-0403</ref>
 
:''And then I want to take this time to express to each and every one of you, how grateful I am to you for your Christmas cards and gifts, and things that was received at our house. I certainly thank you with all my heart. It certainly did us good this morning when... '''I got a little boy, small enough yet to kind of want a Christmas tree, and we had it in the room'''. And this morning, go under there, I found several gifts from my church here, and my friends from around different places, that had come in, '''laying under the tree'''.<ref>GOD'S.WRAPPED.GIFT_  JEFF.IN  V-14 N-8  SUNDAY_  60-1225</ref>
 
:'''''Christmas is no more a worship; it's a celebration: drinking, gambling, carousing, just pagan to the limit.''' And it's not... And I wanted to... Maybe after Christmas I'll speak again on Christmas (You see?), so that it won't deprive the little... But you can't tell that to little children like that. They see little fellows on Christmas night getting Christmas presents and things like that; they don't understand it. See? They just--they're too little. And we've got to remember them, that they are--that they have things in common. We've got to bring ourself down to remember them little fellows...<ref>CHRISTIANITY.VERSUS.IDOLATRY_  JEFF.IN  V-8 N-2  SUNDAY_  61-1217</ref>
 
:''And then I want to take this time to express to each and every one of you, '''how grateful I am to you for your Christmas cards and gifts, and things that was received at our house'''. I certainly thank you with all my heart. It certainly did us good this morning when... '''I got a little boy, small enough yet to kind of want a Christmas tree, and we had it in the room'''. And this morning, go under there, I found several gifts from my church here, and my friends from around different places, that had come in, '''laying under the tree'''. And I don't have words to express to you what I, how I appreciate every one of them. And may the God of heaven bless you richly is my prayer. And now...<ref>GOD'S.WRAPPED.GIFT JEFF.IN 60-1225</ref>
 
:''God bless each one of you. '''I want to say again for the nice Christmas presents that each one give me.''' The church give me a new suit, oh, how I appreciate it. And I got two new suits for Christmas. My brother, the little church down in Macon, Georgia, down there, Brother Palmer, sent me a new suit. And the Tabernacle give me a new suit, and there's so many nice things give in, and--and Christmas gifts in the line of money. Which, the division of income tax tells me that if it's a Christmas present and wrote "Christmas present" or a "Birthday present," anything, you can accept it; otherwise that I have to... It--it goes into the work, which is all right. And I sure thank each and every one of you, wife and I, and the children, and all of us express our gratitude to each, every one of you, so nice. We wish we could go back and give each one of you a present back, but you just can't do that, you know, you just... My, I--I couldn't do that. I wish I could, but I--I just couldn't.<ref>YOU.MUST.BE.BORN.AGAIN_  JEFF.IN  V-11 N-5  SUNDAY_  61-1231M</ref>
 
:''Why, they started buying Christmas present months ago, and what is it but a '''heathen trait'''. There's nothing about it godly. Oh, they try to say, "Give gifts, to the wise men." That's just a--a oasis for a devil's excuse. You want to give something, it's your life to Christ. Don't give to one another; give it to Him. That's what He died for. That's His purpose of coming. See?<ref>THE.FALLING.APART.OF.THE.WORLD_  JEFF.IN    62-1216</ref>
 
:''But I think '''the church has got a little present here for the little kiddies after while'''. I was just looking it over back there. Oh, you'll want to stay after Sunday school; just hold on (See?), 'cause I think they've got some presents back there for the little fellows, to give out this morning. And well, now, you little fellows remember, while we're doing this... I want to make this clear. It's not Santa Claus, 'cause that's a story that someday you'll learn that's nothing to it. But it's from Jesus Christ, the Truth of all Truth this is, the Son of God. And we're giving you this little present this morning because it's letting you know that one time God gave the greatest present could ever be give to the human race: His Son. And we have a poor way of expressing it. And there's nothing we can give to compare with that, but just as mortals, one to another, we do that.<ref>THE.REPROACH.FOR.THE.CAUSE.OF.THE.WORD_  JEFF.IN  V-2 N-16  SUNDAY_  62-1223</ref>
 
:''And the people has turned into buying whiskey, and--and gambling, and fashions. And a--a man that... '''a merchant that can sell his goods through Christmas time can live the rest of the year, almost'''. See? It's such a great holiday, commercial. And poor little kids on the street; their parents are not able to--to visit them with a--a present, like from Santa Claus, and they walk down the street, and their little dirty hands and their little red eyes. I--I just hate to see it come along. '''It ought to be a solemn day of worship to God''', instead of a heartache and a headache and the things that's done. There's nothing to Christ about that. But we're right in the midst of all this now.<ref>WHO.DO.YOU.SAY.THIS.IS_  PHOENIX.AZ  V-6 N-9  SUNDAY_  64-1227</ref>
 
:''And now, you say, "Well, the rest of them's all Santa Claus and going on like they do; why, we just might as well do it." No, sir! No, '''this is not a pagan celebration to us''', this is a sacred hour. If there had been no Christmas, there would been no resurrection. If there been no Christmas: there'd been no love, there'd been no peace, there'd been no hereafter for the believer; if there'd been no Christmas.<ref>GOD'S.GIFTS.ALWAYS.FIND.THEIR.PLACES_  JEFF.IN  V-6 N-13  SUNDAY_  63-1222</ref>
 
==Was this another example of William Branham adopting the doctrine of the Jehovah's Witnesses?==
 
There are several examples of William Branham adopting [[Michael the Archangel|doctrinal positions that were similar to those of the Watchtower Society (the Jehovah's Witnesses)]].
 
“… those who celebrate Christmas do not honor God or Christ, but honor pagan celebrations and pagan gods.” This declaration in an Awake! magazine of December 8, 1988 (page 19) sums up the Watchtower Society’s teaching on the holiday — a teaching that the Society’s magazines reemphasize each December lest some of the flock forget and erroneously conclude ‘tis the season to be jolly.
 
Criticism of Christmas in those articles focuses first of all on the date. Religious and secular sources are quoted to establish the well-known fact that the actual date of the Savior’s birth is unknown. The articles then attack selection of December 25th as an arbitrary date to celebrate the event, because pagans were already holding winter festivals on that date. The implication is that the Church did not try to supplant the pagan festival with a Christian one, but rather that the Church merely attached a new name to the old holiday so that believers could join in.
JW articles go on to trace the Christmas tree to pagan worship; they focus on greed and commercialism that surfaces during the Christmas shopping season; they point out that the holiday is celebrated in oriental lands where the general population makes no pretense of being believers in Christ.
 
From all of this they argue that Christmas is a pagan holiday inappropriate for Christians to share in.  Interestingly, however, The Watchtower did not always express this viewpoint. The organization’s founders and early leaders celebrated Christmas and encouraged others to do the same:
 
:''“Christmas Day,” in celebration of our dear Redeemer’s birth, has for long centuries been celebrated on December 25th; and although it is now well known that this date is in error, and that it more properly corresponds with the date of the annunciation to Mary, nine months before our Lord was born, and that he was born about October 1st,—nevertheless, since the Lord has given no instructions whatever upon this subject, and since it is proper to do good deeds and think good thoughts upon any day, it cannot be improper, in harmony with general usage, for us to remember in a social way our dear Redeemer’s birth at this time.<ref>Zion’s Watch Tower, December 15, 1898, page 370</ref>
 
 
:''It matters not particularly that December 25 is not the anniversary of our Lord’s birth, according to the Scriptural account; that really he was born about September 25, nine months later. One day, as well as another, will serve us to commemorate our Savior’s birth in the flesh, as a gift of God’s love to a condemned and dying world.<ref>Zion’s Watch Tower, December 15, 1908, page 379</ref>


<References/>
The early Watchtower leaders who felt this way were just as familiar as today’s leaders with the resemblance between pagan customs and certain Christmas traditions. They welcomed opportunities to share with others in honoring Christ, while today’s leaders seem more eager to keep followers separated from non-JW relatives and neighbors. (Some form of isolation from outsiders is a common thread found in many mind-control cults. With some groups this separation is accomplished by physically withdrawing into a commune, while in other cults members continue living in the outside world but withdraw from social contact with non-members.)
 
Participation in Christmas celebrations is not optional for Jehovah’s Witnesses. The ban is enforced by elders who make up judicial committees that sit in judgment of any who celebrate the holiday, even in some small way. This has been a firmly held position of the Watchtower Society since 1928.<ref>David A. Reed, Answering Jehovah’s Witnesses: Subject by Subject, electronic ed. (Grand Rapids: Baker Book House, 1997).</ref>
 
=Christmas and Paganism=
 
BAH! HUMBUG! These two words are instantly associated with Charles Dickens’s immortal fictional antihero, Ebenezer Scrooge. Scrooge was the prototype of the Grinch who stole Christmas, the paradigm of all men cynical.
 
We all recognize that Ebenezer Scrooge was a mean person—stingy, insensitive, selfish, and unkind. What we often miss in our understanding of his character is that he was preeminently profane. “Bah! Humbug!” was his Victorian use of profanity.
 
Not that any modern editor would feel the need to delete Scrooge’s expletives. His language is not the standard currency of cursing. But it was profane in that Scrooge demeaned what was holy. He trampled on the sanctity of Christmas. He despised the sacred. He was cynical toward the sublime.
 
Christmas is a holiday, indeed the world’s most joyous holiday. It is called a “holiday” because the day is holy. It is a day when businesses close, when families gather, when churches are filled, and when soldiers put down their guns for a 24-hour truce. It is a day that differs from every other day.
 
Every generation has its abundance of Scrooges. The church is full of them - a kind of legalist.  We hear endless complaints of commercialism. We are constantly told to put Christ back into Christmas. We hear that the tradition of Santa Claus is a sacrilege. We listen to those acquainted with history murmur that Christmas isn’t biblical. The Church invented Christmas to compete with the ancient Roman festival honoring the bull-god Mithras, the nay-sayers complain. Christmas? A mere capitulation to paganism.
 
And so we rain on Jesus’ parade and assume an olympian detachment from the joyous holiday. All this carping is but a modern dose of Scroogeism, our own sanctimonious profanation of the holy.
 
Sure, Christmas is a time of commerce. The department stores are decorated to the hilt, the ad pages of the newspapers swell in size, and we tick off the number of shopping days left until Christmas. But why all the commerce? The high degree of commerce at Christmas is driven by one thing: the buying of gifts for others. To present our friends and families with gifts is not an ugly, ignoble vice. It incarnates the amorphous “spirit of Christmas.” The tradition rests ultimately on the supreme gift God has given the world. God so loved the world, the Bible says, that He gave His only begotten Son. The giving of gifts is a marvelous response to the receiving of such a gift. For one day a year at least, we taste the sweetness inherent in the truth that it is more blessed to give than to receive.
 
What about putting Christ back into Christmas? It is simply not necessary. Christ has never left Christmas. “Jingle Bells” will never replace “Silent Night.” Our holiday once known as Thanksgiving is rapidly becoming known simply as “Turkey Day.” But Christmas is still called Christmas. It is not called “Gift Day.” Christ is still in Christmas, and for one brief season the secular world broadcasts the message of Christ over every radio station and television channel in the land. Never does the church get as much free air time as during the Christmas season.
Not only music but the visual arts are present in abundance, bearing testimony to the historic significance of the birth of Jesus. Christmas displays, creches, Christmas cards, yard displays all remind the world of the sacred Incarnation.
 
Doesn’t Santa Claus paganize or at least trivialize Christmas? He’s a myth, and his very mythology casts a shadow over the sober historical reality of Jesus. Not at all. Myths are not necessarily bad or harmful. Every society creates myths. They are a peculiar art form invented usually to convey a message that is deemed important by the people. When a myth is passed off as real history, that is fraud. But when it serves a different purpose it can be healthy and virtuous. Kris Kringle is a mythical hero, not a villain. He is pure fiction—but a fiction used to illustrate a glorious truth.
 
What about the historical origins of Christmas as a substitute for a pagan festival? I can only say, good for the early Christians who had the wisdom to flee from Mithras and direct their zeal to the celebration of the birth of Christ. Who associates Christmas today with Mithras? No one calls it “Mithrasmas.”
 
We celebrate Christmas because we cannot eradicate from our consciousness our profound awareness of the difference between the sacred and the profane. Man, in the generic sense, has an incurable propensity for marking sacred space and sacred time. When God appeared to Moses in the burning bush, the ground that was previously common suddenly became uncommon. It was now holy ground—sacred space. When Jacob awoke from his midnight vision of the presence of God, he anointed with oil the rock upon which he had rested his head. It was sacred space.
 
When God touches earth, the place is holy. When God appears in history, the time is holy. There was never a more holy place than the city of Bethlehem, where the Word became flesh. There was never a more holy time than Christmas morning when Emmanuel was born. Christmas is a holiday. It is the holiest of holy days. We must heed the warning of Jacob Marley: “Don’t be a Scrooge” at Christmas.<ref>R. C. Sproul, “Right Now Counts Forever: Marley’s Message to Scrooge,” ed. R. C. Sproul Jr., Tabletalk Magazine, December 1993: Marley’s Message to Scrooge (Lake Mary, FL: Ligonier Ministries, 1993), 5–6.</ref>
 
 
=External References=


*[http://thehomespunlife.com/legalism-almost-killed-our-christmas/ The Homespun Life - How Legalism Almost Killed Our Christmas]
*[http://thehomespunlife.com/legalism-almost-killed-our-christmas/ The Homespun Life - How Legalism Almost Killed Our Christmas]
*[http://midwestapologetics.org/blog/?p=803 Christmas Misconceptions: Legalism or Liberty?]
*[http://midwestapologetics.org/blog/?p=803 Christmas Misconceptions: Legalism or Liberty?]
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[[Category:Doctrines]]
[[Category:Legalism]]
[[Category:The Message]]