*sigh* Your own links support exactly what I said, but I figured I would supply some others:
Jesus was most likely born in late September. (though some early Christians also said April):
http://www.new-life.net/chrtms10.htmThe early Church picked December 25th to supplant the already celebrated Pagan festivals:
http://www.beliefnet.com/story/96/story_9604_1.htmlThose are directly from RELIGIOUS websites, hardly any ones dealing with frothing hatred.
As I said, your own links support what I said:
In part, the Christmas celebration was created by the early Church in order to entice pagan Romans to convert to Christianity without losing their own winter celebrations.[11][10] Certain prominent gods and goddesses of other religions in the region had their birthdays celebrated on December 25, including Ishtar, Sol Invictus and Mithras.
The specific date of celebration for Jesus' birth ... is generally believed to have been influenced by the dates of pre-Christian festivals ... rather than having been based on historical data or reference.
Want more evidence?
From the Encyclopedia Brittanica:
Encyclopedia Britannica, Vol VI Pg 945; Vol 7 Pg 202: "The myth of Mithra formed the origin of the cult of Mithraism, which flourished in the Roman Empire and was for a time the chief rival of Christianity.... One of be most well known festivals of ancient Rome was the saturnalia, a winter festival celebrated from December 17-24. Because it was a time of wild merry making and domestic celebra6ons, businesses, schools, and law Courts were closed so that the public could feast, dance, gamble, and generally enjoy itself to the fullest. December 25, the birthday of Mithra, the Iranian god of light and the contract and the day devoted to the invincible sun, as well as the day after the Saturnalia, was adopted by the church as Christmas, the nativity of Christ, to counteract the effects of these festivals."
From:
http://www.bible.ca3. Day: We have absolutely no idea
a. Dec 25 was birthday of Mithra, Iranian "GOD OF LIGHT"
b. Liberius, Bishop of Rome, ordered adoption of Dec 25 in 354 AD
c. Jesus birthday was celebrated as the "LIGHT OF THE WORLD"
d. He felt this would turn the pagan feast into a "Christian" feast
So lets look back at what you quoted. I claimed:
1) The original Christians had no major festival for Christ's birth.
Seeing as how Christmas was created over 300 years after he died, I'd say this is accurate, yes?
2) Biblical evidence points to Christ being born nowhere near December
Well, I guess late September is KIND OF close, so I may be a bit wrong, but it certainly is NOT December. The opposing idea, Aprilish, is likewise not December. They know it could not possibly BE December, because no shepherds had flocks out at that time, because it was too cold. Flocks were brought in sometime in early October, and the bible clearly states that angels appeared to the shepherds in the fields.
3) The church wished to supplant existing pagan festivals, and picked having Christmas on December 25th in order to do so.
Every single piece of items posted supports this, including your own! The church DID invent a major festival on December 25th, claiming it to be celebrating Christ's birth, and DID do it to supplant the older festivals.
So lets see, I made 3 claims, and have supported them all from biblical or religious websites, and the Encyclopedia Brittanica. Care to explain how my position is not well-supported?
Now, do YOU have any proof that celebrations of the births of messiahs on dates OTHER than when they were born is common in religions? You might find that hard to prove, given a distinct lack of true messianic figures in major religions, but by all means, I'd love to see your evidence.
In any case, a mere statement of historical fact is hardly "froth-filled spew". It WAS intended to drive followers away from the other festivals, and thus by its very nature was excluding all non-Christians, since it is, of course, religion-specific, and had a specific intent to try and convert people.
Lastly, how many times do I have to explain that I do not in any way hate Christianity? What I hate are the dogmatic institutionalized CHURCHES, not the faith itself. If you actually read the teachings of Jesus himself, there's some amazing stuff in there, that is about impossible for any reasonable person to disagree with. It is the independent-thought-stifling hierarchical dogma of major church organizations that I object to.
Anyway, how about some support for YOUR contentions, given that I've proved mine, and shown how ridiculous your personal diatribe against me was?
-Arlos