December 25
The history of Christmas dates back over
4000 years. Many of our Christmas traditions were celebrated
centuries before the Christ child was born. The 12 days of
Christmas, the bright fires, the yule log, the giving of
gifts, carnivals(parades) with floats, carolers who sing while
going from house to house, the holiday feasts, and the church
processions can all be traced back to the early Mesopotamians.
Many of these traditions began with the
Mesopotamian (美索不达米亚) celebration of New Years. The
Mesopotamians believed in many gods, and as their chief god -
Marduk (马杜克,古代巴比伦人的主神,原为巴比伦的太阳神). Each year as winter arrived
it was believed that Marduk would do battle with the monsters
of chaos. To assist Marduk in his struggle the Mesopotamians
held a festival for the New Year. This was Zagmuk, the New
Year's festival that lasted for 12 days.
The Mesopotamian king would return to the temple
of Marduk and swear his faithfulness to the god. The
traditions called for the king to die at the end of the year
and to return with Marduk to battle at his side.
To spare their king, the Mesopotamians used the
idea of a "mock" king. A criminal was chosen and dressed in
royal clothes. He was given all the respect and privileges of
a real king. At the end of the celebration the "mock" king was
stripped of the royal clothes and slain, sparing the life of
the real king.
The Roman's celebrated their god Saturn. Their
festival was called Saturnalia which began the middle of
December and ended January 1st. With cries of "Jo Saturnalia!"
the celebration would include masquerades (化妆舞会) in the
streets, big festive meals, visiting friends and the exchange
of good-luck gifts called Strenae (lucky fruits).
"Jo Saturnalia!" was a fun and festive time for
the Romans, but the Christians though it an abomination (深恶痛绝)
to honor the pagan (异教) god. The early Christians wanted to
keep the birthday of their Christ child a solemn and religious
holiday, not one of cheer and merriment as was the pagan
Saturnalia.
But as Christianity spread they were alarmed by
the continuing celebration of pagan customs and Saturnalia
among their converts. At first the Church forbid this kind of
celebration. But it was to no avail (徒劳). Eventually it was
decided that the celebration would be tamed and made into a
celebration fit for the Christian Son of God.
Some legends claim that the Christian
"Christmas" celebration was invented to compete against the
pagan celebrations of December. The 25th was not only sacred
to the Romans but also the Persians whose religion Mithraism
(密特拉教,奉祀密特拉神的宗教,纪元后最初3世纪内传至罗马帝国) was one of Christianity's
main rivals at that time. The Church eventually was successful
in taking the merriment, lights, and gifts from the
Saturanilia festival and bringing them to the celebration of
Christmas.
摘自中国日报网站(J-04)