American Minute with Bill Federer
Christmas Day: Date revealed by Levite calendar & celebrated through the ages!
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Christianity
is the
largest religion in the world,
approximately a
third of the world's population,
according to
Pew Research Center
(2015).
Christmas Day
could possibly be considered
the most celebrated religious holiday on the planet.
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The
date of Christmas
on
December 25
has been studied for centuries.
Some think that since it was in the
winter, shepherds would not have been in the field with their flocks,
but this argument loses credibility when one considers the
moderate climate of Bethlehem in December, with an average daily temperature of around 50 degrees,
similar to
Florida or Texas.
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Some think
December 25
was chosen to
erase the pagan Roman winter solstice festival of Saturnalia,
but this is discounted when one realizes the
winter solstice is December 21-22,
with celebrations beginning as early as
December 17
and lasting no later than
December 23.
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To track down
the traditional date of Christmas
, it is first necessary to determine the
date
of the
conception of John the Baptist.
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The Gospel of Luke,
chapter 1, explained how
John the Baptist's
father,
Zechariah,
was a
Levite priest,
of the
family of Abijah:
"In the time of Herod king of Judea there was
a priest
named
Zechariah,
who belonged to the
priestly division
of
Abijah;
his wife
Elizabeth
was also
a descendant of Aaron."
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King David
divided the
Levite priests
into
24 family groups,
called
"divisions"
or
"courses,"
which
took turns ministering at the altar
in Jerusalem for
a week at a time,
twice-a-year.
This rotating schedule, called
sacerdotal rota system,
is recorded in I Chronicles 24:
"The sons of Aaron
... served as the priests ...
David separated them into divisions
for their appointed
order of ministering ...
The
first
lot fell to
Jehoiarib,
the second to Jedaiah,
the third to Harim,
the fourth to Seorim,
the fifth to Malkijah,
the sixth to Mijamin,
the seventh to Hakkoz,
the
eighth
to
Abijah
..." (The list continues through the twenty-four family divisions.)
The family course of
Abijah
served in the annual cycle on the
8th week
and the
32nd week.
Solomon
initiated the courses when he dedicated the First Temple in mid-10th century BC. 2 Chronicles 8:12-14 records:
"Solomon
... in keeping with the ordinance of his father
David,
he
appointed the divisions of the priests for their duties."
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The Jewish calendar
is based on
lunar cycles,
while
the Roman calendar
is based on
solar cycles.
When was
Abijah's course
in the
Roman calendar?
The Babylonian Talmud
(trans. Rabbi Dr. Isadore Epstein, The Soncino Press Ltd., NY, 1990), confirmed in Arachin 11B that the
priestly family of Jehoiarib
was on duty when the
First Temple was burned
on the
9th day of the Jewish month Av,
c.587 BC.
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Josef Heinrich Friedlieb confirmed in his 1887 book,
The Life of Jesus the Redeemer,
that when the
Second Temple was burned,
the
priestly course
of
Jehoiarib
was
again on duty.
Since it is known that
the Second Temple
was destroyed in
early August, 70 AD,
on the
9th day of Av,
and that the first priestly
course of Jehoiarib
was
on duty that week,
then
seven weeks later
would be
the course of Abijah,
which would be the
second week
of
the Jewish month of Tishri.
This week, on
the Roman calendar,
occurred the last week in
September.
This is exact week in which took place the
Day of Atonement, Yom Kippur
--
the 10th day of Tishri,
and the
Feast of Tabernacles, Sukkoth -- the 15th day of Tishri.
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The Dead Sea Scrolls
confirmed the order of the
Levite family courses,
as revealed by Israeli scholar
Shemaryahu Talmon
in his research published in 1958 from the
Qumran Dead Sea Scrolls
(Parchment No. 321-4Q321).
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All this evidence seems to indicate that
c.1-4 BC,
at the end of the
reign of King Herod
in Judea,
Zechariah
, the father of
John the Baptist,
would have been
serving in the Temple
the
last week of September.
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His wife,
Elizabeth
, would have conceived soon after, being pregnant with
John the Baptist,
known as "The Forerunner" of Jesus.
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The
Byzantine Rite Church Calendar
commemorates
September 23
as the date of the
conception of John the Baptist,
as does the
second-century work
Protoevangelium of Saint James.
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The
Gospel of Luke
recorded:
"When
Zechariah’s division
was on duty and he was serving as
priest before God,
he was chosen by lot, according to the custom of the priesthood,
to go into the temple
of the
Lord
and burn incense ...
All the assembled worshipers were praying outside.
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... Then an
angel of the Lord
appeared to him, standing at the right side of the altar of incense.
When
Zechariah
saw him, he was startled and was gripped with fear.
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... But the
angel
said to him: 'Do not be afraid,
Zechariah;
your prayer has been heard. Your wife
Elizabeth
will bear you
a son,
and you are to call him
John.'"
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Luke's Gospel
clearly states that
Elizabeth
was in her
6th month of pregnancy
when she was
visited by
her younger
cousin Mary.
Six months
after the
end of September
is the
end of March
,
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Luke, chapter 1: 26-35:
"In the sixth month of Elizabeth’s pregnancy, God
sent the
angel Gabriel
to Nazareth, a town in Galilee, to
a virgin
pledged to be married to a man named
Joseph,
a descendant of David.
The virgin’s name
was
Mary.
The
angel
went to her and said, 'Greetings, you who are highly favored!
The Lord is with you.'
Mary
was greatly troubled at his words and wondered what kind of greeting this might be.
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... But the
angel
said to her, 'Do not be afraid,
Mary;
you have found favor with
God.
You will conceive
and
give birth
to
a son,
and you are to call him
Jesus.
He will be great and will be called
the Son of the Most High.
The Lord God
will give him the throne of his father David, and he will reign over Jacob’s descendants forever;
his kingdom will never end.'
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... 'How will this be,'
Mary
asked the
angel,
'since
I am a virgin?'
The
angel
answered,
'The Holy Spirit
will come on you, and the power of
the Most High
will overshadow you.
So the holy one to be born
will be called
the Son of God.
Even
Elizabeth your relative
is going to have
a child in her old age
, and she who was said to be unable to conceive i
s in her sixth month.
For no word from
God
will ever fail ...'"
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Luke
continued:
"At that time
Mary
got ready and hurried to a town in the hill country of Judea, where she entered
Zechariah’s home
and greeted
Elizabeth.
When
Elizabeth
heard
Mary’s
greeting, the baby leaped in her womb, and
Elizabeth
was filled with the
Holy Spirit.
In a loud voice she exclaimed: 'Blessed are you among women, and
blessed is the child you will bear!
But why am I so favored, that
the mother of my Lord
should come to me? As soon as the sound of your greeting reached my ears, the baby in my womb leaped for joy.
Blessed is she who has believed that the
Lord
would fulfill his promises to her!'”
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The respected Early Church Father
St. John Chrysostom
(349-407), Archbishop of Constantinople, accepted that
Zachariah
was
in the Temple
the
week of the Day of Atonement and Feast of Tabernacles.
Susan K Roll wrote in
Toward the Origins of Christmas
(1995, pp. 100-101):
"Chrysostom's
third argument follows ... that
Zachariah
was ...
priest
during the
Feast of Tabernacles in the year John the Baptist was conceived.
Chrysostom
counts off the months of
Elizabeth’s pregnancy,
and dates
Mary’s conception
from the
sixth month of Elizabeth’s ...
then counts off another
nine months
to arrive at the
birthdate of Christ."
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Therefore, if
Zachariah
ministered at the altar at
end of September,
and
Elizabeth conceived shortly thereafter,
then
Mary conceived by the Holy Spirit six months later, March 25,
the date the liturgical church calendar celebrates as the
Feast of the Annunciation.
Nine months
after
March 25
is
December 25,
the traditional date of
the birth of Jesus.
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Early Christians
were
predominantly Jewish.
According to historian
Josephus, Jewish families did not celebrate birthdays:
"The
law does not permit
us to make festivals at the
birth
of our children."
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Early believers were more interested in the dates of:
- Passover, when Jesus Christ was crucified as the “the Lamb of God”; followed by
- His being in the tomb on the Feast of Unleavened Bread; then
- His rising from the dead on the Feast of First Fruits.
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It was not until large numbers of
Gentiles
became Christians that interest was given to celebrating the
date of Christ’s birth.
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One of the earliest recorded celebrations of
Christmas
on
December 25
was in the middle of the
second century AD,
in Antioch, (present-day Turkey).
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In 336 AD,
Roman Emperor Constantine
, observed
Christmas
on
December 25,
as did Pope Julius in 350 AD, and Pope Liberius in 354 AD.
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Christmas Day, December 25th
went on to become one of the
most important dates
in
Western Civilization.
In 496,
Clovis, King of the Francs,
was baptized with 3,000 of his soldiers on
Christmas Day
at Rheims, France by Saint Remigius.
The name
Clovis
evolved into
Louis,
which was the name of 22 French kings.
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In 526, during the reign of Christian
Emperor Justinian,
the scholarly monk
Dionysius Exigus
thought it inappropriate that dates were still being recorded in relation to the
reign of anti-Christian tyrant Emperor Diolcetian
-
“anno Diocletiani."
Dionysius Exigus
began making notations marking down dates in relation to the
birth of Jesus
-
“anno Domini,”
which in Latin means
“in the year of the Lord's reign.”
Gradually, this method of
recording all dates in relation to Christ’s birth
became
the most accepted dating system in the world.
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Clarence E. Manion,
dean of Notre Dame's College of Law, whose 1951 book
Keys to Peace
sold millions of copies, wrote:
"The
long march of measured time
suddenly stopped. It then did
an about-face
and started to
march in another direction
and to a different drum straight through the ensuing centuries of
Christ
and
Christendom
...
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...
B.C. (before Christ)
and
A.D. (Anno Domini, the year of our Lord)
mark each one of the only reliable milestones along the path of world history ...
The end of the first
time-chain,
and the beginning of the second,
came together
on
the night
that
Christ
was born in
Bethlehem
...
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...
The first CHRISTMAS DAY
thus stands as
the Great Divide
for the
timing and recording
of
all people, things and events
that have lived or
taken place upon this earth."
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President Trump
stated December 2017:
"Whatever our beliefs, we know that
the birth of Jesus Christ
and the story of this incredible life
forever changed the course of human history."
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On CHRISTMAS DAY, 597 A.D.,
10,000 Anglo-Saxons
were baptized in England on the banks of the Swale sea inlet between the isle of Sheppey and Kent by
St. Augustine of Canterbury
and his companion missionaries.
St. Augustine
had also baptized
King Ethelbert of Kent.
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On CHRISTMAS DAY, 800 A.D.,
Charlemagne
was crowned Holy Roman Emperor in St. John Lateran Church, Rome, Italy.
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His grandfather,
Charles Martel,
had stopped the Muslim invasion of France in 732 AD.
Forty-six years after
Charlemagne
was crowned, 11,000 Muslims invaded Rome and desecrated the graves of St. Peter and St. Paul in 846 AD, after which
Pope Leo IV
built the
wall around the Vatican.
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King Edmund of East Anglia
(England), was crowned on CHRISTMAS DAY in 855 A.D.
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Otto II
was crowned Holy Roman Emperor on CHRISTMAS DAY in 967 A.D. by Pope John XIII in Rome.
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After his death, his son,
Otto III,
was crowned King of Germany in Aachen on CHRISTMAS DAY in 983 A.D.
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On CHRISTMAS DAY, 1000 A.D.,
St. Stephen
was crowned King of Hungary.
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His pious son,
St. Emeric,
whose name in Italian is
Amerigo,
was the namesake of
Amerigo Vespucci,
the explorer mapmaker
for whom the continent of America was named.
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On CHRISTMAS DAY, 1013 A.D., the Danish Viking
Sweyn Forkbeard
was crowned King of England.
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On CHRISTMAS DAY, 1025 A.D.,
Mieszko II Lambert
was crowned King of Poland.
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On CHRISTMAS DAY, 1046 A.D.,
Henry III
of Germany and his wife, Agnes, were crowned Holy Roman Emperor and Empress by Pope Clement II.
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On CHRISTMAS DAY, 1066 A.D.,
William the Conqueror
was crowned King of England at Westminster Abbey, London.
This same year a Muslim became "offended" at a Jewish administrator in Granada, Spain, and stirred up a riot which killed nearly all of the 4,000 Jews in the city.
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King Bolesaw II
the Generous, who built numerous churches and monasteries across Poland, was crowned on CHRISTMAS DAY in 1076 A.D.
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The Norman conqueror
Roger II,
after driving out Muslim occupiers, was crowned King of Sicily on CHRISTMAS DAY in 1130 A.D.
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Stephen of Blois
was crowned King of England on DECEMBER 26, 1135 A.D.
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Eric V
was crowned King of Denmark on CHRISTMAS DAY in 1259 A.D.
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John II
was crowned King of Castile and Leon on CHRISTMAS DAY in 1406 A.D.
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President John Quincy
Adams stated in Newburyport, July 4, 1837:
"In the
chain of human events,
the birthday of the nation is indissolubly linked with the
birthday of the Savior
...
It forms a leading event in the progress of
the Gospel dispensation.
"
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On CHRISTMAS, DECEMBER 24, 1946,
President Truman
stated:
"
The message of Bethlehem
best sums up our hopes tonight.
If we
as a nation, and the other nations of the world,
will accept it, the star of faith
will
guide us into the place of peace
as it did the shepherds on that
day of Christ's birth long ago."
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President Ronald Reagan
stated in 1983:
"CHRISTMAS is a time ... to open our hearts to ... millions forbidden the freedom to worship a
God who so loved the world
that
He gave us the birth of the Christ Child
so that we might learn to love.
The message of
Jesus
is one of hope and joy.
I know there are those who recognize CHRISTMAS DAY as the birthday of a wise teacher ... then there are others of us
who believe that he was the Son of God, that he was divine."
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President Donald Trump
stated in his 2017 Christmas message:
"We're thrilled to think of the people across the nation and all across the continent whose spirits are lifted by
the miracle of Christmas.
For Christians, this is a Holy season - the
celebration of the birth of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ."
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On December 5, 2019,
President Trump
stated:
"Christians
give thanks that
the Son of God
came into the world
to save humanity."
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The Gospel of John
3:16-18, states:
"For God so loved the world
that
He gave his only begotten Son,
that
whoever believes on him
should not perish but
have everlasting life.
For
God
sent not the
Son
into the world to condemn the world, but that
the world through him might be saved."
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Clarence E. Manion
of the University of Notre Dame stated:
"The first CHRISTMAS DAY
... is ... the
one place
on the long, long trail of time where
the magnetic needle of history stands vertical and points up."
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Schedule Bill Federer for informative interviews & captivating PowerPoint presentations: 314-502-8924
wjfederer@gmail.com
American Minute is a registered trademark of William J. Federer. Permission is granted to forward, reprint, or duplicate, with acknowledgment.
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