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According to Jehovah's Witnesses' official history book, it was the research of R.H.Barber which exposed the real origins of Christmas customs. Barber presented the results of his research to the headquarters staff at the Watch Tower Society, and Christmas festivities were no longer observed by branch offices after 1926. In 1928, the Governing Body of Jehovah's Witnesses directed that the information be presented in a radio broadcast and in the pages of the predecessor magazine to Awake!. Rutherford was a member of the Governing Body at the time.

http://watchtower.org/e/19981215/article_02.htm
http://watchtower.org/e/20001215/
http://watchtower.org/e/20041215/article_01.htm
http://watchtower.org/e/19981215/
http://watchtower.org/e/rq/article_11.htm


Jehovah's Witnesses love and respect and honor Christ. They do NOT celebrate so-called "Christmas" because "Christmas" does NOT celebrate Christ; "Christmas" celebrates the pagan Saturnalia. Jesus was not even born in December. Nearly all so-called Christmas customs dishonor Christ.

(Jeremiah 10:2-5) This is what Jehovah has said: "Do not learn the way of the nations at all... 3 For the customs of the peoples are just an exhalation, because it is a mere tree out of the forest that one has cut down, the work of the hands of the craftsman with the billhook. 4 With silver and with gold one makes it pretty. With nails and with hammers they fasten them down, that none may reel. ...the doing of any good is not with them."

By contrast, it's tragic that the one holiday Christ actually *DID* ask Christians to commemorate is entirely ignored by almost all of Christendom. It is, of course, the Memorial of Christ's death, sometimes called "the Last Supper" or "the Lord's Evening Meal".

(1 Corinthians 11:23-25, NWT) The Lord Jesus in the night in which he was going to be handed over took a loaf... Keep doing this in remembrance of me.” 25 He did likewise respecting the cup.. Keep doing this... in remembrance of me.”

(1 Cor 11:24, 25, NEB) "Do this as a memorial of me.”


Christ Jesus himself personally celebrated and explained the significance of that Last Supper to his followers (see Matthew 26:26-29). Christians who commemorate the Last Supper have done so on the same Jewish calendar date as Jesus did, Nisan 14, which generally falls between late March and mid-April. Interestingly, Christians in the centuries immediately after Christ's impalement were sometimes called "Quartodecimans" which literally mean "Fourteen-ers", because the early Christians were well-known for this true holy day.

How would Jesus feel to learn that the holiday he commanded was widely ignored, while his so-called followers chose to celebrate a pagan false god and their own traditions of men? We don't need to wonder.

(Matthew 15:6-9) You have made the word of God invalid because of your tradition. 7 You hypocrites, Isaiah aptly prophesied about you when he said, 8 ‘This people honors me with their lips, yet their heart is far removed from me. 9 It is in vain that they keep worshiping me, because they teach commands of men as doctrines.’”

Learn more:
http://watchtower.org/e/lmn/article_08.htm
http://watchtower.org/e/rq/article_11.htm
http://watchtower.org/e/20041215/article_02.htm
http://watchtower.org/e/20011115/article_02.htm
http://watchtower.org/e/20050101a/
http://watchtower.org/e/jt/

2007-06-06 01:14:57 · answer #1 · answered by achtung_heiss 7 · 1 1

The previous answer is probably as close as you will get.

I find it interesting, though, that Jehovah's Witnesses object to Christmas because it is a pagan celebration that was remade into a Christian celebration, losing all of its pagan connotations along the way and replaced with Christian meanings. As we know it today, there is nothing pagan about Xmas but JW's hold on to those pagan beginnings.

On the other hand, they don't hesitate to celebrate wedding anniversaries using customs that were derived from what they consider "pagan" celebrations such as birthdays. Didn't the custom of having a cake to celebrate a special occasion originate with the "birthday" cake? Do Jehovah's Witnesses object to "anniversary" cakes?

2007-06-06 11:41:56 · answer #2 · answered by steervase 2 · 0 1

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