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December Religious Holidays: It's The Most Wonderfully Holy Time Of The Year

December Religious Holidays

First Posted: 12/ 2/2011 10:23 pm Updated: 12/ 3/2011 10:30 am

By Nancy Haught
Religion News Service

(RNS) A quick glimpse at a calendar is one way to see how religiously diverse the United States has become.

This year, December, a month that encompasses the Christian and Jewish celebrations of Christmas and Hanukkah, includes spiritually significant days for Muslims, Buddhists, Pagans and Zoroastrians.

Yes, Zoroastrians: Scholars estimate there are 6,000 followers of the centuries-old tradition in North America.

Here's a quick look at some of the sacred days that illuminate the last month of 2011.

Dec. 5, Ashura, the 10th day of the first month on the Islamic calendar. Sunnis, the largest group of Muslims, remember that the Prophet Muhammad fasted in solidarity with Jews who were observing Yom Kippur, the Day of Atonement. Shiites recall the death of Muhammad's grandson in battle, an event that led to their differences with the Sunnis.

Dec. 6, the feast of St. Nicholas. Some Christians revere the fourth-century bishop of Myra, a Greek province in Asia Minor. His reputation for piety may have inspired the legend of Santa Claus. The tradition of leaving gifts for children on St. Nicholas Day began in the Low Countries and spread to North America with Dutch immigrants.

Dec. 8, Bodhi Day. Buddhists recall that Siddhartha Gautama vowed to sit under a tree in what is now Bodhgaya, India, and not to rise until he was enlightened. The title Buddha means "awakened one."

Roman Catholics observe this day as the feast of the Immaculate Conception, believing that Mary, the mother of Jesus, was born without sin.

Dec. 12, the feast of Our Lady of Guadalupe. Observed by Catholics, especially those of Hispanic descent, the story of Guadalupe recounts a 16th-century apparition of Mary to Juan Diego, a poor Indian, on a hillside near what is now Mexico City.

Dec. 20, the Jewish festival of Hanukkah begins at sunset on this date and continues for seven more nights. It is a remembrance of an effort to restore the Temple in Jerusalem after a period of desecration. Faithful Jews found only enough oil to light the temple lamp for one day, but the flame burned for eight.

Dec. 21, Yalda, the Zoroastrian celebration of the winter solstice.

Dec. 22, Yule or winter solstice, the shortest day in the Northern Hemisphere. Juul, a pre-Christian festival observed in Scandinavia, featured fires lit to symbolize the heat, light and life-giving properties of the returning sun. Wiccans and other pagan groups celebrate Yule.

Dec. 25, Christmas, observed by Christians since the Middle Ages as the birth of Jesus. Some Orthodox Christians follow a different calendar, and Christmas may fall on a different date.

Dec. 26, Zoroastrians observe the death of the prophet Zarathushtra, known in the West as Zoroaster. Tradition says he lived in what is now Iran in about 1200 B.C. His teachings include the idea of one eternal God; seven powerful creations: sky, water, earth, plants, animals, humans and fire; and that life is a struggle between good and evil.

This is also the starting date for Kwanzaa, a weeklong, modern African-American and pan-African celebration of family, community and culture. For some people who keep Kwanzaa, the festival has spiritual overtones in its emphasis on imani, Swahili for "faith."

(Nancy Haught writes for The Oregonian in Portland, Ore.)

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By Nancy Haught Religion News Service (RNS) A quick glimpse at a calendar is one way to see how religiously diverse the United States has become. This year, December, a month that encompasses t...
By Nancy Haught Religion News Service (RNS) A quick glimpse at a calendar is one way to see how religiously diverse the United States has become. This year, December, a month that encompasses t...
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michelesda
My micro-bio is empty.
05:50 PM on 12/07/2011
Most religions, and most notably Christianity, seem to celebrate this season in one way or another. It's interesting, though, to note what Christmas has traditionally meant to most people: evergreens and holly, mistletoe, feasting, gift-giving, Santa Claus and his elves, etc. In other words, not much to do with Jesus. It's doubtful how many reindeer there ever were in Jerusalem, or whether many in the Bible population wore stockings. People may have long forgotten the heathenry of all that "Yuletide" meant to their ancestors, but, interestingly, they still seem to be practicing it as their real religion.
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rich3324
Likes: Chasing villagers. Dislikes: Fire
02:23 PM on 12/05/2011
Merry Christmas
Happy Chanukah
Joyous Kwanza
Have a good Eid al-Adha
Prosperous Winter Solstice
An Enlightened Bodhi Day
Zippy Zarathosht Diso
A burning Yule
Fabulous Festivus
06:22 PM on 12/18/2011
Ah, TreatChristmasLikeJustAnotherEventmas is here.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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FreedToChoose
...excepting when I'm not.
11:53 AM on 12/05/2011
And some tribal groups celebrate Father Sun going into his Winter house, then coming out to begin the return journey to his Summer house. I wonder if Winter solstice ceremonies began in fear that the Sun, setting farther and farther in the South (or North in the Southern hemisphere) was about to leave humankind starnded without its benefits, like life itself, then when the Sun reversed its path, the ritual was deemed a success never to be forgotten again?
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infinite array
Try not to stare too long into the abyss.
09:07 AM on 12/05/2011
Bugger religion. Break out the eggnog and rum, light the fire, and let's sit and enjoy ourselves.
06:24 PM on 12/18/2011
What a courageous statement, here on the Net where all things religion are damned for sport.
07:09 AM on 12/05/2011
A truly oxymoronic time.
03:29 AM on 12/05/2011
To me Christmas is my favorite time of the year; the cooler days, sometimes with snow, being able to spend quality time with my family; Christmas is a time of giving not just focused on material possession giving; but giving of your time, yourself to others; but sadly when in stores everyone is out for themselves and are very rude to others; saw a 20-30 year old cuss out an elderly lady over a shopping cart; so sad to treat someone that way and to use the language that would make a sailor blush in public like that was in my opinion inexcuseable; we should all try to promote good cheer during this holiday season and throughout the year also would be nice
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Sheldon archer
Our facebook is Yuyun Archer
08:36 PM on 12/04/2011
For most people it's It's The Most Wonderfully commercial time of the year followed by the poorest time of the year.
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08:27 PM on 12/04/2011
Nice try to fit all you could find to fit the Christian/Solar calender.
Muslims and , most likely Buddhists, don't have a thing called December.
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02:33 PM on 12/04/2011
"The day will come when the mystical generation of Jesus, by the Supreme Being as his father, in the womb of a virgin, will be classed with the fable of the generation of Minerva in the brain of Jupiter."

-- Thomas Jefferson, letter to John Adams, April 11, 1823
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QuarkGluonSoup
02:52 PM on 12/04/2011
Thomas Jefferson also wrote that no young person at the time (1820s) would die anything but a Unitarian. a Unitarian! this during the Second Great Awakening.

Should we also quote Jefferson's writings on race?
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
04:37 PM on 12/04/2011
Wishful thinking on Jefferson's part. And to your point about Jefferson's writings on race, they were dreadful, but I hardly think that fact makes his other thoughts invalid, for example, the one about all men being created equal.

Incidentally, the Bible has some positive moral teachings but also quite a few in favor of slavery, infanticide, subordinated roles for women, and stoning people to death. Do the ugly ideas make the good ones wrong?
07:22 PM on 12/04/2011
Interesting, isn't it? Those who depend on selective quotation always, when called out for the practice, accuse the accuser!
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BeeJayCeee
I still loathe Thatcher
02:25 PM on 12/04/2011
Nothing "holy" about this time of year. People were celebrating the lengthening days and the slow climb out of winter's grip to better harvests and hunting long, long, long before any of this fairy tale nonsense was dreamt up. Let's try dealing in facts for a change, shall we?
Kate Fletcher
crooked timber
06:21 PM on 12/04/2011
I am in favor of all holidays that come with desserts.
12:22 PM on 12/04/2011
What a ridiculous Christian-centric article!

If one takes all religions into account, there are holidays all year long.

But I guess if you think there is something special about Christmas, then it just must be the case that other religions have chosen to have holidays in December just to honor Jesus.

Case is in point: Chanukah.  Chanukah is not a December holiday.  It is a Kislev holiday.  Kislev is a month in the Jewish calendar.  And Chanukah is a minor holiday in Judaism.

The fact that a lot of religions have holidays near the winter solstice...especially holidays involving light-related symbols and traditions...is because people have long liked to brighten up the long dark days of this time of year and have wished to celebrate the fact that the amount of daylight does once again begin to increase.
07:23 PM on 12/04/2011
What blog post are you responding to? I ask because it doesn't seem to be this one.
11:31 PM on 12/04/2011
"December Religious Holidays: It's The Most Wonderfully Holy Time Of The Year"

Hope that helps.
tamazul
Badges? What Badges?
11:56 AM on 12/04/2011
Ah, yes! This time of year brings much merriment....and dollars, to the merchants.
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Disillusioned One
Illusion is for those unable to face reality.
07:42 PM on 12/04/2011
....and greed. I began to feel the 'bah humbug' bug when a 12 year old relative that I had purchased several gifts for asked after opening them, "Is this all I'm getting?" His mother was sitting close by and never even said a word. He had gotten an abundance of presents from others and expected the same from me. The then 12 year old is in his 20's now and I never even hear from him, haven't since I stopped buying gifts. Ah, the wonderful spirit of the season! Gimmee, gimmee, gimmee.
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CMR64
u hurt my feeling
08:38 AM on 12/04/2011
Merry Christmas and Happy Birthday Jesus ...and yes ( in a stern intellectual frowning voice) the Holiday is not really the birth of Christ...and what else would those atheists say ..oh yeah ...
Bah Humbug !
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frant52
02:09 PM on 12/04/2011
Atheists? So if someone doesn't agree with your version of religion then they must be atheist? Okay, well so much for tolerance...
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CMR64
u hurt my feeling
06:04 PM on 12/04/2011
yeah atheist I didn't say Muslim or anybody else i said atheist
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BeeJayCeee
I still loathe Thatcher
02:21 PM on 12/04/2011
People have been celebrating at this particular time of the year for millennia before your fictional Jesus-god was dreamt up. Christians stole it in an act of cultural genocide.
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CMR64
u hurt my feeling
06:05 PM on 12/04/2011
lol
07:25 PM on 12/04/2011
Bet you came up with that all by yourself.
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Jeff Rosenbury
08:12 AM on 12/04/2011
I guess the war on Christmas is over. Christmas lost.

Kwanzaa is now a week long holiday. Christmas starts on December 6 when we celebrate the buying of gifts.

Time was Christmas was a twelve day holiday starting with the Feast Nativity when we celebrated the birth of Jesus and continuing to the Epiphany on 6 Jan.

I guess we can always join the atheists in their celebration of Santa and money. Happy Holidays!
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BeeJayCeee
I still loathe Thatcher
02:26 PM on 12/04/2011
"I guess we can always join the atheists in their celebratio­n of Santa and money."

Isn't there an admonition against bearing false witness in the book you hold so dear?
07:30 PM on 12/04/2011
Save for those pop atheists who carry on as if they invented and patented reason, most nonbelievers simply don't believe. And they do it respectfully and quietly, like most believers.

This whole secular vs. sacred bit is a media invention which gives reporters something to do other than their actual jobs.
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Hillbilly49
Don't tell me you are a Christian; let me guess.
08:06 AM on 12/04/2011
I love Christmas as I love all pagan holidays.