Wardogg & Mykael and others ... As you know I am a creationist and Christian, and many times Wardogg you and I have been more on agreement of things, with Mykael and I being less on agreement of things, but here it is reversed, for Mykael is actually correct.There are multiple origin stories for the Christmas Tree, several of which are pagan. Does this touch a nerve?
And you people laugh at the religious. As long as its not actual "religion" you believe it. It is actually quite comical.
If you attribute cutting down a tree, putting it in your house, putting decorations on it and believing that some mystical man, who posses god-like omniscience upon how moral you have been, brings you presents, to a Christian holiday, I must say sir, your fucking crazy.
My fucking crazy what?
Here are the links you provided as examples... Of course we could also look here. http://www.christmasarchives.com/trees.html
Or maybe this one. http://www.allabouthistory.org/history-of-the-christmas-tree.htm
How about this one. http://www.christmastree.org/history.cfm
You can take the pagan bullshit elsewhere. No one is buying it.
But there are older more reliable references that go back to prior to Jesus' time than the ones you cited. Your links talk more about the xmas tree and how it was displayed, when it was displayed, but does not address too much about the actual origins of Xmas itself.
There were actually many pagan traditions and holidays and here they are in chronological order:#1) The Roman Saturnalia ( a festival dedicated to Saturn, the god of agriculture, and to the renewed power of the sun ) and was first introduced around 217 B.C. to raise citizen morale after a crushing military defeat. Originally it was one day starting on Dec 17, which after gaining popularity lasted for 7 days, although some say 8 - for there is disambiguation there, which would carry that up to Christmas Eve.
#2) Next came Sol with various epithets such as Sol Invictus or Solis Invicti, with the full name being "dies natalis Solis Invicti," which is the birthday of the
invincible sun and the celebration is Dec 25th, which is the Roman date for the winter solstice. This was the first detectable lengthening of daylight hours, and was first celebrated in late 200 A.D. Later the phrase was coined as Natalis Invicti meaning the birthday of the
unconquered one . It had extended epithets later (with added verbage) as it arrived on coins. This holiday was celebrated by pagans, and early Christians rejected it at first. Early Christians
even rejected birthdays down to the 4th century A.D.
#3) Following this holiday was the one called Kalenda, but I may be mispelling it, and it will be hard to find info on that one, other than in the Jewish Talmud, and possibly some ancient writings or old secular books in your library, but I doubt you'd find that one online.
Note: There were many other pagan holidays, prior to the xmas season, and again after the xmas season. I will not name them all.
Here are some cited reference material for you from Online...#1) The Free Dictionary
ThesaurusLegend: Synonyms Related Words Antonyms
Noun 1. Saturnalia - an orgiastic festival in ancient Rome in honor of Saturn
festival, fete - an organized series of acts and performances (usually in one place); "a drama festival"
2. saturnalia - a wild gathering involving excessive drinking and promiscuity
debauch, debauchery, drunken revelry, bacchanalia, bacchanal, orgy, riot
revel, revelry - unrestrained merrymaking
#2) Merriam Webster’s Dictionary
2 singular, plural saturnalias also saturnalia a : an unrestrained often licentious celebration : ORGY b : EXCESS, EXTRAVAGANCE
#3) Msn Encarta Dictionary
Sat•ur•na•li•a [ sàtt?r náylee ? ]
plural noun
Definition:
Roman festival of Saturn: an ancient Roman festival of feasting and revelry in celebration of the god Saturn and the winter solstice.mid-December