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Birthday Celebrations
#1

Assalamu alaikum everyone,


I just wanted to share some interesting information I found about birthday celebrations.


ORIGINS OF BIRTHDAY CUSTOMS


What are the origins of some of the customs used to celebrate


birthdays? Following are some secular publications and their comments


of these origins.


The German periodical "Schwنbische Zeitung" (magazine supplement Zeit


und Welt) of April 3/4, 1981 on page 4 stated: "The various customs


with which people today celebrate their birthdays have a long


history. Their origins lie in the realm of magic and religion. The


customs of offering congratulations, presenting gifts and celebrating


- complete with lighted candles - in ancient times were meant to


protect the birthday celebrant from the demons and to ensure his


security for the coming year. . . . Down to the fourth century


Christianity rejected the birthday celebration as a pagan custom."


The book The Lore of Birthdays (New York, 1952) by Ralph and Adelin


Linton, on pages 8, 18-20 had this to say: "The Greeks believed that


everyone had a protective spirit or daemon who attended his birth and


watched over him in life. This spirit had a mystic relation with the


god on whose birthday the individual was born.


The Romans also subscribed to this idea. . . . This notion was


carried down in human belief and is reflected in the guardian angel,


the fairy godmother and the patron saint. . . . The custom of lighted


candles on the cakes started with the Greeks. . . . Honey cakes round


as the moon and lit with tapers were placed on the temple altars of


[Artemis]. . . . Birthday candles, in folk belief, are endowed with


special magic for granting wishes. . . . Lighted tapers and


sacrificial fires have had a special mystic significance ever since


man first set up altars to his gods. The birthday candles are thus an


honor and tribute to the birthday child and bring good fortune"


This same book, on page 20, also had this to say about the


traditional greeting of 'Happy Birthday': "Birthday greetings and


wishes for happiness are an intrinsic part of this holiday. . . .


originally the idea was rooted in magic. The working of spells for


good and evil is the chief usage of witchcraft. One is especially


susceptible to such spells on his birthday, as one's personal spirits


are about at the time. . . . Birthday greetings have power for good


or ill because one is closer to the spirit world on this day."


And Horst Fuhrmann, professor of medieval history at the University


of Regensburg, made this comment about birthdays: "The birthday


celebration was in honor of one's guardian angel or god, whose altar


was decorated with flowers and wreaths; sacrifices were offered to


the god of festival, friends offered congratulations and brought


gifts." Furthermore, he stated in the German newspaper "Süddeutschen


Zeitung": "Great prominence was given the birthday parties held for


the emperor, replete with parades, public banquets, circus plays, and


the hunting of animals: spectacles disgusting to the [early]


Christians."


------------------------------------------------------------ ---


[part of an article from a Christian's site]


Origin of Birthdays


Then where did birthdays come from? The astonishing answer is from


the pagan practice of astrology! Thousands of years ago, when men


looked up into the night sky and charted the stars, they invented


calendars and calculated the birth dates, to the very hour, of kings,


rulers and their successors. These ancient pagan astrologers


meticulously examined horoscopes and birthday omens because they


believed that the fate of the rich and powerful might affect an


entire society. Even to this day, men have been putting their trust


in horoscopes instead of God.


In ancient Egypt, the pharaohs ordered businesses to close on their


birthdays and gave enormous feasts for hundreds of servants. In


ancient Greece, wealthy males joined birthday clubs composed


exclusively of men who shared their birth date. Once a month, the


club celebrated with a feast. When a member died, he left money to


help pay for future parties. In Persia, noblemen observed their


birthdays by barbecuing an ox, a camel and a donkey and serving


hundreds of small cakes to the celebrants.


In ancient Rome, the emperor gave huge parties in honor of his own


birthday, which included parades, circuses, and gladiatorial combat.


The celebration of days was so important to the average Roman citizen


that the Roman calendar designated a majority of days for some form


of celebration—including many birthdays of gods and famous men.


The Roman calendar, with its emphasis on continual celebration, has


had great influence on modern society. Consider the following quote


about the origin of the Roman calendar:


“Our [Roman] calendar is not Christian in origin. It descends


directly from the Egyptians, who originated the 12 month year, 365


day system. A pagan Egyptian scientist, Sosigenes, suggested this


plan to the pagan Emperor Julius Caesar, who directed that it go into


effect throughout the Roman Empire in 45 B.C. As adopted it indicated


its pagan origin by the names of the months—called after Janus, Maia,


Juno, etc. The days were not named but numbered on a complicated


system involving Ides, Nones, and Calends. It was not until 321 A.D.


that the seven-day week feature was added, when the Emperor


Constantine (supposedly) adopted Christianity. Oddly enough for his


weekdays he chose pagan names which are still used.” (Journal of


Calendar Reform, Sept. 1953, p. 128.)


Modern birthday parties and celebrations by children take their form


mainly from Germany, where the birthday child received gifts, chose a


menu and received a candle-ringed butter or jam cake. The lighted


candles for the cake may have originated from the birthday of the


Greek moon goddess Artemis. Pagan worshippers honored her every month


with moon-shaped honey cakes. Because the moon glows with light, the


cakes were decorated with lighted candles.


Saying “happy birthday” to friends and loved ones was society’s


superstitious way of protecting them from evil spirits. Birthday


thumps, bumps, pinches, etc., were said to bring luck and send away


evil spirits. Party snappers, horns and other noisemakers were also


intended to scare off bad-luck spirits.


It should now be clear that birthdays are not only unbiblical, they


are pagan!


"The knowledge of the hypocrite is in his speech, yet the knowledge


of the believer is in his actions"

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Birthday Celebrations - by laian - 12-20-2004, 09:54 PM

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