The Pagan and Anti-Semitic Roots of New Year’s Day

I am about to do something new; Even now it shall come to pass, Suddenly you shall perceive it: I will make a road through the wilderness And rivers in the desert.

Isaiah

43:

19

(the israel bible)

January 1, 2020

4 min read

PAPAL DECREE

The Julian calendar was enacted by Julius Caesar in 46 BCE to reform the Roman calendar. The Gregorian calendar was decreed in 1582 by papal bull by Pope Gregory XIII, replacing the Julian calendar. The decree was not recognized outside of the Catholic Church so the days on which Easter and related holidays were celebrated by different Christian churches diverged. Currently the world’s most widely used civil calendar, the Gregorian calendar was adopted in stages with some countries incorporating the system in the late 16th Century while others joined in as late as the 20th century. 

Despite the papal decree, many Catholics were quite aware of the pagan roots of their calendar. Cardinal John Henry Newman discussed this in The Essay on the Development of Christian Doctrine, published in 1878. 

“The rulers of the Church from early times were prepared, should the occasion arise, to adopt, to imitate, or to sanctify the existing rites and customs of the population, as well as the philosophy of the educated class. The use of temples and those dedicated to particular saints, and ornamented on occasion with branches of trees (wreaths), incense, lamps, candles, votive offerings on recovering from illnesses, holy water, holy days and seasons (the entire Church calendar), use of calendars, processions, blessings on the fields, sacerdotal vestments, the ring in marriage, chants, the Kyrie Eleison — are all of Pagan origin, and sanctified by adoption into the Church.”

 

Many of the names of the months and days of the week have their roots in paganism:

  • Janus: named for the god Janus. It was originally the 11th month.
  • February named for the pagan Roman festival of purification. It was originally the 12th month.
  • March named for the god Mars, the Roman god of war. This was originally the first month.
  • April named for the Greek goddess of love, Aphrodite. The latin aprilis indicates a time of fertility. 
  • May this month is named for the Roman goddess Maia, a deity of growth and increase.
  • June named for the goddess Juno, the wife of Jupiter, also known as the Queen of Heaven.
  • Sunday this day is in honor of the sun god.
  • Monday this day is in honor of the moon goddess.
  • Tuesday this day is in honor of the Norse god of war, Tiu, or Tyr, the son of Odin, or Woden.
  • Wednesday this day is in honor of the chief Norse god Odin, or Woden.
  • Thursday this day is in honor of the Norse god of thunder, Thor, who is the oldest son of Odin.
  • Friday this day is in honor of the Norse goddess Frigg, She is the goddess of darkness, goddess of the sky, and goddess of love. She is the wife of Odin.

Saturday this day is in honor of the Roman god Saturn.

 

THE JEWISH-BIBLICAL NEW YEAR

The Gregorian calendar is based on the solar cycle, putting it at odds with the Hebrew calendar which is lunisolar, established by witnesses reporting to the Sanhedrin upon seeing the new moon. 

It is important to note that the Roman calendar that preceded the Julian calendar observed an eight-day week called the nundinal cycle. This put it directly at odds with the seven day week described in the Bible as embedded in the creation of the world. And the Sabbath was moved from the seventh day to the first day, Sunday, named for the pagan sun god.

The Mishnah (oral law) identifies four distinct new-year dates:

The 1st of Nisan is the new year for kings and festivals; the 1st of Elul is the new year for the cattle tithe… the 1st of Tishri is the new year for years, of the years of release and jubilee years, for the planting and for vegetables; and the 1st of Shevat is the new year for trees—so the school of Shammai; and the school of Hillel say: On the 15th thereof.  Rosh Hashanah 1:1

The Bible refers to the holiday of Passover as falling on the 15th day of the first month. 

This month shall mark for you the beginning of the months; it shall be the first of the months of the year for you. Exodus 12:2

Since Passover is required to be celebrated in the spring, it should fall around, and normally just after, the vernal (spring) equinox. Most Jews recognize the first day of the month of Tishrei, described in the Bible as the seventh month, as the New Year.

THE CHRISTIAN NEW YEAR AND ANTI-SEMITISM

The tradition of beginning the new year on January 1 was based on the Roman calendar and remained so in the Julian Calendar though by the Middle Ages, some countries began the new year on December 25. It is believed this mid-winter new year was based on its proximity to the solstice, a pagan celebration of the sun god’s rebirth. Naming the first month after the pagan god Janus was appropriate since he was depicted as having two faces, one looking forward and the other looking back. Scholars have suggested that the drunken parties that characterize New Year’s celebrations have their roots in orgies meant as a form of service to the pagan gods.

Christianity perhaps inaccurately adopted December 25 as the birthday of Jesus and January 1 as the seventh day after his birth and therefore the day of his circumcision. The Council of Nicaea in 325 CE been formally ratified theologically that day as symbolizing the supersession of the Church over the Jews as God’s chosen people.

At the same time, Pope Sylvester, whose sainthood day and the day he was buried is commemorated on December 31, convinced Roman Emperor Constantine to prohibit Jews from living in Jerusalem. At the Council of Nicaea, too, Sylvester promulgated a host of new anti-Semitic legislation. It is for this reason that January first was frequently marked throughout history by the burning of synagogues, Jewish books, and other acts of Jew-hatred. Ironically, New Year’s day is known in Israel as Sylvester.

One such anti-Semitic New Year’s Day event took place in 1577 when Pope Gregory XIII, who established the Gregorian calendar, decreed that all Roman Jews had to attend a Catholic conversion sermon given in Roman synagogues after Friday night services. The penalty for not doing so was death. Then, on New Year’s Day of the next year, the Pope signed a law forcing Jews to pay for a “House of Conversion” whose purpose was to convert Jews to Christianity. Three years later on New Year’s day, he ordered the confiscation of all the Roman Jewish community’s Hebrew scrolls and books.

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