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ATHEIST
FOUNDATION OF AUSTRALIA INC
CHRISTMAS(S) or
CHRISTMYTH??
by Keith S Cornish
TRUTH
or FICTION? ...Let us examine the
evidence.
There are four gospels in the New Testament but only
Matthew and Luke include reference to the virgin
birth. The gospel of Mark was the first to be written
but not until about sixty years after the supposed
event. Paul, writing in the fifties, also was unaware
of a virgin birth.
Surely
it is significant that these two first Christian
writers knew nothing about something that looms so
largely in Christianity today.
With
Mark's gospel in hand, Matthew and Luke introduced
the virgin birth though they disagree in regard to
the father of Joseph. They followed the same sequence
of later events, though they certainly embellished
the story.
The
first chapter of Luke tells of the miraculous
impregnation of Mary's cousin Elisabeth to produce
John the Baptist. Six months later the angel Gabriel
informed the Virgin Mary that the Holy Ghost would
'come upon' her and make her pregnant also.
Not 'by your leave' or 'may it be so' - just 'this is
how it will be' without any option.
How did
Mary, or how does anyone, identify an angel? Have
they wings or special clothing? By a remarkable
coincidence these two acts of annunciation and
impregnation of a virgin and the birth and adoration
were portrayed sixteen centuries earlier, when Egypt
was ruled by Amenhotep III and can be seen today in
the Temple of Amen at Luxor.
As
Matthew says, Mary was engaged to Joseph and, when it
became evident that she was pregnant, he was upset to
find that he was a cuckold, but an angel explained
the situation to him in a dream. No doubt Mary
explained the source of her pregnancy to her parents
and friends, as a virgin would do today. 'Virgin'
births were common in those far away times but not so
now.
Luke
pin-points the time of the birth as when Augustus
ordered a census of the 'whole' world.
There was a limited census of the Roman citizens in 8
AD but that would not apply to the Jews. There was no
reason for Joseph to go to Bethlehem and certainly
none that made it necessary for Mary to go.
Joseph
had trouble finding accommodation in Bethlehem.
Probably his relatives had died out or were swamped
by the influx, for even the inn had no room, so Jesus
was born in a stable and laid in a manger.
Today
the birth is celebrated on December 25th but Luke
says it occurred when there were shepherds attending
their sheep by night, so it could not have been in
mid-winter.
An
angel announced the event to the shepherds and
suddenly there was with the angel a heavenly
host praising god (Yahweh). When the
performance ended the shepherds proceeded to
Bethlehem, found the infant Jesus and made known what
the angels had told them. Obviously the angels were
close to the earth because it is necessary to have
air for the transition of sound. Angels must have
special means of propulsion through the void to
'heaven' as wings are useless without air.
We
return now to the version of Matthew who says that
Jesus was born in the days of Herod, the king, who
died in 4 BC (this is a discrepancy of 12 years from
the birth date given by Luke.)
Wise
men came from the east to worship Jesus, for they had
seen his star. This troubled Herod, who demanded to
be told where Jesus should be born and, when told, he
instructed the wise men to go, confirm the news and
report back. Guided by the star, the wise men went to
Bethlehem and the star now stood precisely over the
place of the birth. It must have been a very little
star and only about 100 metres above the stable to be
directly above it.
The
wise men worshipped Jesus and presented their
treasures of gold, frankincense and myrrh. They did
not undertake a long arduous journey to present
trifling gifts so the substantial bounty intended for
Jesus must have been dispersed while he was a baby,
for he claimed to be poor and he advocated poverty.
Being
warned in a dream by Yahweh, they did not report to
Herod and returned home by another route. After they
had departed, Joseph was warned by an angel in a
dream to flee to Egypt with his family. This he did
by night.
Herod
ordered the slaughter of all the infants two years
old and under throughout the area. The Jewish
historian at that time, Josephus, records the
barbarous acts of Herod but, strangely, does not
mention this one.
When
Herod was dead, behold, an angel of the Lord appeared
in a dream to Joseph in Egypt, saying: Take the young
child and his mother into the land of Israel. This
Joseph did but when he heard that Herod's son,
Archelaus, was now the ruler, he was afraid.
Notwithstanding, being warned by Yahweh in a
dream, he turned aside and came and dwelt in a city
called Nazareth. There is no reliable record of
Nazareth existing in that period. Joseph was ignorant
that Galilee was also ruled by another of Herod's
sons.
It goes
to show just how important angels and dreams were to
Yahweh as a means of imparting vital messages to
human beings.
Since
the days of Sigmund Freud, Yahweh has not been using
dreams but concentrating on visions of the Virgin
Mary or her image to deliver his messages.
The
winter solstice has always been a time for
celebration in the Northern Hemisphere. Christians
just took over the Roman Saturnalia festival.
Let
us still celebrate this time, not as a Christian
festival, but in its original context.

The
scene in the Temple of Amen depicting from left the
Annunciation, Conception, Nativity and Adoration.

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