The Christmas
Story
The idea of celebrating Jesus' birth was done to
counteract pagan holidays celebrated in Rome during
the Winter Solstice. Church leaders thought
Christmas celebrations were more likely to be
popular if they coincided with the traditional
festivals and merrymaking during the Winter
Solstice.
Although some Christmas celebrations are secular,
the religious aspect of Christmas remains central to
celebrations. This is evident in church services
such as Midnight Mass and primarily in the many
forms of the Nativity, or Christmas Story, presented
wherever people celebrate Christmas.
That story started in Nazareth in Galilee about two
thousand years ago.
Mary, a young woman, was engaged to a carpenter
named Joseph. An angel appeared to her one day and
told her she was with child. She couldn't understand
how that could happen because due to her circumspect
nature, she had not laid in bed with Joseph. The
angel explained however, that the child would be
special as he would be the Son of God and his name
was to be Jesus. Mary and Joseph then got married
soon after the angel's appearance.. But about the
time when Mary was to have the baby, the couple had
to travel far away to Bethlehem, Joseph's
birthplace, to pay a special tax.
It was difficult for them to find a place to stay
because many other
people were in Bethlehem to pay their taxes. After
many rejections, one innkeeper offered a room in his
stable where they could spend the night. That's
where Jesus, the Holy Child and Son of God was born
and then wrapped in bundles of cloth and placed in a
manger for a cradle.
In the same hours that Mary was giving birth,
shepherds who were in a
field that overlooked Bethlehem saw an extremely
bright star over the sky in Bethlehem. They had
never seen anything like it and had feelings of
curiosity and scariness. An angel appeared and told
them the 'good news' that the Son of God had been
born in Bethlehem.
The shepherds left their flocks to go to Bethlehem
to find the baby. When they reached the stable, they
were filled with immense joy at seeing Jesus. They
fell to their knees and worshipped Him. They also
told Mary and Joseph about the bright star and the
angel appearing to say Jesus would be the Savior of
the world.
The bright star was also seen by Wise Men in the
east. The Wise Men, who studied the stars, learned
that a new and great ruler would appear whenever an
extraordinarily bright star appeared in the sky.
Three of them therefore set out to find the new
ruler. They first visited King Herod in Jerusalem
because they thought the child would be born in the
palace. But when they asked to see the child who
would be the new ruler, King Herod was very worried
as he thought he would be removed from the throne.
King Herod told the Wise Men that when they found
the baby, they should return and tell him so that he
could also worship the baby.
The Wise Men used the star as a guide to go to
Bethlehem where they found Mary, Joseph and Baby
Jesus who they worshipped and offered gifts of gold,
frankincense and myrrh. The Wise Men are celebrated
in some Christmas celebrations on Jan. 6, known as
the Epiphany to mark the date when they found Jesus.
Later in the night the three Wise Men had a dream in
which an angel told them that King Herod wanted to
kill Baby Jesus. They left Bethlehem to return to
the East but didn't return to Jerusalem to tell King
Herod where they had found the child. Joseph also
had a dream soon after the Wise Men left in which an
angel appeared and told him to take Mary and Jesus
to Egypt because Herod had ordered that Jesus be
killed. In an effort to kill Jesus after the Wise
Men did not return to inform him of the baby's
whereabouts, Herod later ordered that all baby boys
in Bethlehem should be killed. But by then Mary and
Joseph had left
with Baby Jesus.