| Dear Rev. Know-It-All,
Please don’t think me an illiterate Catholic,
but I was asked when Jesus was born and I couldn’t really answer. I’ve
searched and cannot find any data. I know that if anyone can find the answer,
you can!
Yours,
Natalie Bourne
Dear Natalie,
Your question does not betoken illiteracy.
Au contraire! (That’s French for “Ain’t no way!")
Those people who think that Jesus was born
on December 25th of the year 1 AD are sadly mistaken. Let me explain.
There was a monk who lived around 500 AD,
named Dionysius
Exiguus (or Dennis the short, or little Dennis). He thought
it inappropriate to mark time by the dates of pagan Roman emperors, so
he decided to figure out just how many years before his time Jesus had
been born. The Romans, who by that time were Christians, were remembering
the birth of Jesus on Dec. 25th, probably in order to de-emphasize the
Roman feast of the Saturnalia which was a really good time had by all,
if you were pagan, that is. Saturnalia was a week long debauch in the old
Roman style. Christians needed something to distract them, and in the East
they had been celebrating the birth of the Lord on Jan. 6th as part of
the feast of the Epiphany.
Don’t be alarmed by this. We have George
Washington’s birthday on a Monday no matter when the date actually falls,
and we wait to celebrate Uncle Fred’s birthday until he’s out on parole
or some such. The first to comment on the date of Christ’s birth was
St. Clement of Alexandria who lived around 200 AD. He seems to favor a
date of November 18 or possibly January 6th or perhaps sometime in spring.
A huge part of the problem is the coordination of ancient calendars with
modern. Which particular ancient Egyptian calendar was St. Clement using?
Who knows? December 25th is probably as good a date as any and it falls
between Nov. 18th and Jan. 6th.
Some might point out the Bible text: “the
shepherds were abiding in the field keeping watch over their flocks.”
Shepherds abide in the field during spring, not winter. I’ve been to
Shepherds’ Field in Bethlehem. It’s a hill with a cave that shepherds
in Bethlehem have always used and it’s essentially down the street from
the cave of the Nativity where Jesus was born. “Shepherds abiding in
the field” gives us no information about the time of the Nativity of
the Lord. So, go ahead. Enjoy Dec. 25th, or Jan. 6th, when there are discounts
at all the major retailers, or if you prefer, November 18th which is a
much quieter day.
Of equal difficulty is figuring out the
year of Christ’s birth. Most scholars think Herod died in 7 or 4 BC.
Jesus was born while Herod was still alive, though in the process of a
painful, lingering death that made him crazier and crueler than usual.
Some aficionados of the question point out that Herod may have died in
1 or 2 BC and there were plenty of astronomical and astrological events,
from supernovas to planetary conjunctions, that could have qualified as
the Star of Bethlehem, so we don’t know the exact year of Jesus, birth.
Suffice it to say that Christ was born sometime before Herod died, that
is anywhere from 7 to 1 BC.
This confusion is more significant than
you may think. First of all, it places Jesus once more in the ranks of
the poor and unsung. In ancient times, the birth dates of the rich and
powerful were remembered. The poor were forgotten, as they often still
are. By the time people were asking “Oh, by the way, when was Jesus born?”
The only person who had “cherished these things in her heart” was also
dead and assumed into heaven like Elijah. They always remembered where,
but not quite when. From the earliest days, they pointed out the cave where
he had been born. It was a place of pilgrimage from the earliest days.
The question was “when,” never “where.” He was a poor boy born
to die a criminal’s death. This is important.
Second, remember all the fuss about the
Millennium? The television shows, the storing of bottled water, the prophets
of doom? I think that mine was the only computer that died. It was
quite old. I suspect that my ancestors brought it over on the boat with
them from the old country. I sat around watching the general apocalyptic
panicked thinking. Golly, the millennium was nearly ten years ago and it
really went quite well.
We should learn two things from this. One:
Don’t get your religion from television. Television producers are clueless
and most TV reporters only know what they read on the back of the hair
spray bottle. Two: Don’t panic. “The kingdom of this world has the
Kingdom of our God and of His Christ.” The so-called “Millennium”
came and went without mishap. There are lots of new things to panic about.
People regularly come up to me inviting me to move to the Canadian wilderness
to escape the wrath to come. They forget what Jesus said. “When
you see these thing, lift up your heads and rejoice, for your salvation
is at hand.” Our God is bigger than any disaster that humanity
can dream up.
There is one birth date that we should
consider and know well, the day that Christ was born in our hearts. “Amazing
grace how sweet the sound... How precious did that grace appear, the hour
I first believed.” Can you remember that hour that you decided to give
your life to Christ? Perhaps it was your First Holy Communion or your Confirmation,
or a retreat or parish mission. Perhaps it was some quiet moment when in
the stillness of your heart you asked Him to be your Lord. That moment
was His birthday and yours. If you haven’t yet had “that hour” it
is never too late to ask Him to be born in you as your Lord and your Savior.
Rev. Know-It-All

The
Question Was
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When was Jesus
born? |
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