Steven Cromack
Emperor Constantine I. Detail of the mosaic in Hagia Sophia. |
The Punic Wars made some Romans very wealthy and drastically increased the number of slaves. As wealthy tyrants battled for control, many plebeians yearned for equality, identity, as well as an end to envy and despair. Out of their misery came the annual celebration known as Saturnalia. “Io Saturnalia” was a shout that embodied the reign of Saturn, a time during which there were bountiful harvests and universal plenty. The Greek satirist Lucian recorded a conversation between Cronus, known as Saturn by the Romans, and his priest about the holiday celebrated between December 17 and 25:
Drinking and being drunk, noise and games and dice, appointing of kings and feasting of slaves, singing naked, clapping of tremulous hands, an occasional ducking of corked faces in icy water—such are the functions over which I preside.
By the 4th Century, the Emperor Constantine converted to Christianity and spent his reign trying to make Christianity the official religion of the Empire. In an attempt to convert the masses, he chose December 25 as the birthdate of Jesus with the hope that celebrating the birth of the deity would attract the pagans by absorbing the festival of Saturnalia. Throughout the Middle Ages, Christmas was celebrated with partying, gift giving, and drunkenness. In many cases, Church officials oversaw and encouraged the festivities.
This is why the Puritans hated the holiday with every fiber of their being. In his book The Battle for Christmas, Stephen Nissenbaum shows how Christmas changed from a holiday of drunkenness into the quintessential American holiday. The Reverend Increase Mather of Boston declared that the only reason people celebrated the holiday on December 25 was that “the Heathen’s Saturnalia was at that time kept in Rome, and they were willing to have those Pagan Holidays metamorphosed into Christian ones.”
So, the Pagan traditions had no serious contribution argument...?
ReplyDeleteChristmas was until the 19th Century mainly a Roman Catholic Holiday. It's actually a season that lasts 12 days. Protestants for many decades if not centuries either downplayed it, or ignored it completely. Calvinists, Puritans, and others looked at Christmas as nothing more than a neo-pagan Catholic thing full of drunks and debauchery. But, even in Catholic nations, there was a wide difference in how it was celebrated. For the Italians, Epiphany was a time for gift-giving; in Central Europe, Heilige Nacht (Christmas Eve) and the Feast of Saint Nicholas were time when gifts were exchanged. The Irish and Polish societies used Christmas as a time for charity (no stranger looking for a hot meal would be turned away on Christmas).
ReplyDeleteThe period before the Christmas Season (Advent) used to be about as strict as Lent still is. The forty days before Christmas was a time for alms giving and abstention, and anticipation