. . . . Good evening. You're listening to the Hour of the Time. And I'm Michelle. In an effort to give Bill and his family some time to wrap holiday gifts and enjoy the festivities of the Christmas season, a series of programs has been prepared by which we can all indulge our senses a bit and simultaneously learn something new about the traditions of the holiday. What better gift to give a loved one than real money? Consider for your gift list real silver dollars minted in the birth year of one of your relatives or those beautiful special holiday pressings of silver rounds or gold coins. Imagine how full and heavy a Christmas stocking would be filled with pre-1964 American circulation silver coins or the thrill that would be experienced upon opening a gift box containing a bar of platinum. Don't let this holiday season pass you by without giving a gift that will keep on giving no matter what the future holds. Precious metals. Real money. And remember, with precious metals, all gifts are age-appropriate. No batteries are ever needed. One size fits all. And most importantly, no assembly is required. One size fits all. One size fits all. And most importantly, no söyled accomplished money from glass and a little Appeas. And most importantly, no reward. Maybe there's a deal with just a month losing $5. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Presentation of the Hour of the Time. In the Gospel according to St. Luke, we read, And there were in the same country shepherds abiding in the field, keeping watch over their flock by night. And lo, the angel of the Lord came upon them, and the glory of the Lord shone round about them, and they were sore afraid. And the angel said unto them, Fear not, for behold, I bring you good tidings of great joy, which shall be to all people. For unto you is born this day in the city of David a Saviour, which is Christ the Lord. And this shall be a sign unto you. He shall find the babe wrapped in swaddling clothes, lying in a manger. And suddenly there was with the angel a multitude of the heavenly host, praising God, and saying, Glory to God in the highest. And on earth, peace, goodwill toward men. From this very familiar scriptural reference, it is most enlightening to note that there is absolutely no mention of angels singing in any biblical account of the birth of Christ. Nor are there any other biblical references to angels ever singing. This glaring omission, however, has never stopped ancient or modern Christendom from attributing to angels great vocal and harmonic skills. In virtually every form of Christmas tradition, which by all reasoning has to be reduced to nothing more than the doctrines of men, angels sing, burst forth in glorious anthems of praise, play golden harps, and probably dance on the heads of pins in great numbers. Most historians credit the emperor Constantine with turning the celebration of the birth of Christ into a Christianized version of the pagan Roman Saturnalia festival. However, this mixing into paganism actually began as early as the second century A.D. And it is in that century that we find the first recorded instructions to early Christians to celebrate the nativity in song, just like the angels in the Gospel of Luke, even though no angels ever sang to anyone at any time. Clement, who flourished in the first century, admonished early Christians with these words, quote, Brethren, keep diligently the feast days, and truly, in the first place, the day of Christ's birth, end quote. This appears to be the earliest reference to the Feast of the Nativity. As early as the year 129 A.D., Telesphorus, Bishop of Rome, instituted the custom of celebrating the nativity with the songs of Noel or Christmas carols. In his decretal epistle, Telesphorus says that it was ordained, quote, That in the holy night of the nativity of our Lord and Savior, they do celebrate public church services, and in them solemnly sing the angels hymn, because also the same night he was declared unto the shepherds by an angel, as the truth itself doth witness. Close quote. Telesphorus simply failed to note that, technically, there was no angel hymn, as in the scriptural record the angels are said to have spoken and not sung to the shepherds. Nevertheless, with the words of Telesphorus, there is a definite statement that the Gloria in Excelsis Deo was the first carol of the church, meaning the church that developed into the Catholic church. As to the precise day upon which it was sung, we are left in no doubt since Theophilus, Bishop of Caesarea, also in the 2nd century AD, recommended, quote, The observance, or celebration, of the birthday of our Lord shall be, on what day soever, the 25th of December shall happen. End quote. And with that religious edict, we have the first official recognition that the ancient Roman Saturnalia festival would be equated with the birth of Christ. Constantine, in the 4th century, had very little to do but to put his official stamp of approval on activities which had already been well underway for at least a century. It has never been any great secret that our December celebration of the birth of Christ has nothing whatsoever to do with that birth other than bearing a name designation by virtue of Roman decree. It is well known that the Emperor Constantine, in his efforts to unify the Roman Empire, did his best to combine and co-mingle long-established pagan traditions with the newer beliefs of the early Christians, thus preventing the division of the empire on religious grounds. December 25th, long celebrated as the winter festival of the Saturnalia, replete with its merriment, merriment, drunkenness, gift-giving, and song-singing seemed a likely candidate with which to connect the birth of Christ for the benefit of those early Christians. How logical it must have seemed at the time to correlate the birth of the S-U-N God with the birth of the S-O-N of God. The celebration of the Saturnalia had long been observed by the ancient Romans and before them by the Greeks as a form of Mithraism or pagan sun worship. This winter festival was called the Nativity of the S-U-N Sun. Its official name was Natalis Invicti or Nativity of the Unconquered Sun, S-U-N. And of course, the devotion to the sun gods stretches many thousands of years back in history to the Zep-Tepi or earliest times of the gods of ancient Egypt. Constantine was the most successful of all in his efforts to mix paganism and Christian belief, although such a mixture was already well established by his day. In the partying and revelry of the annual pagan winter solstice season, the admonitions of St. Paul to the Galatians were quickly forgotten. In Galatians, chapter 4, verses 9-11, Paul writes, Howbeit then, when ye knew not God, ye did service unto them which by nature are no gods. But now, after that ye have known God, or rather are known of God, how turn ye again to the weak and beggarly elements whereunto ye desire again to be in bondage? Ye observe days and months and times and years. I am afraid of you, lest I have bestowed upon you labor in vain. Nevertheless, even to this day, most people continue to be observers of days, especially if some religious custom can be attached to them or if one gets a feel-good, charitable glow from the experience. Christians and non-Christians alike get caught up in the celebratory hysteria of the holiday season, a season most notably marked by great music and most traditionally by the carols we have all come to enjoy. Perhaps my greatest pleasures of the holiday season are the carols and the more popular secular music which has become associated with the general madness of December. recognizing the pagan origin of some of our Christmas carols has never stopped that music from speaking deeply to us or from moving us in some way emotionally, nor does that knowledge lessen our enjoyment of the music. When we hear or sing, everybody knows, a turkey and some mistletoe help to make the season bright. We are not actively participating in the ancient Celtic ritual of worshiping the sacred mistletoe. So please recognize that there is a balance to all things in life including Christmas. With that balance in mind and with those words of introduction out of the way, let's proceed into history. Essentially pastoral, few are the carols which do not in some way celebrate the season with its joys and cares picturesquely glancing at the shepherds and their flocks though neither one nor the other would be out freezing in the wintry Judean hills much later than October. According to Eastern custom, in the late summer or early autumn of the year, a farmer in the biblical lands would often hire shepherds to keep their flocks in his field overnight. In this way, the sheep's manure would fertilize his field. In December, the month in modern times when Jesus Christ's birth is celebrated, it is far too cold for shepherds to watch their sheep at night in fields or pastures. The coldest temperatures, frost, heavy rains and even snow occur from November to February at those latitudes of the Middle East. Shepherds would not be grazing sheep at night during those months, nor would a Roman registration, taxation, or census be conducted during that time of year because travel would be so difficult. Acknowledging that the birth of Christ most probably occurred during the month of September, we are once again thrown back into the pagan custom of singing in the winter solstice and its accompanying New Year season. A mere alteration of the date of the celebration didn't stop first and second century Christians from attaching their festival to the ancient pagan ritual, and by Constantine's day, one might naturally assume that if the emperor said it was okay, God must also approve. And so it has been for more than fifteen hundred years. We have become observers of days, ascribing to Christ the same so-called birthday as that of a pagan god, and we celebrate that birth by performing rituals and customs of pagan origin without a second thought, even to the point of singing the same songs originally sung in homage to the fertility of spring, the abundance of summer, the gods of the autumn harvest, and the invocation of the gods in anticipation of the new year. Some of those pagan songs have become our most beloved Christmas carols. The celebration of Christmas Day on December 25th is most definitely a concession to paganism. The custom of celebrating the seasons of the year in song is ancient and universal. All over the world, about this season of the winter solstice, popular festivities were held. Thus, the Persians opened to the new year with agricultural ceremonies, which also had their counterpart in China. The sacred books of the East emphasize the religious significance of such things. Says the Zend Avesta, quote, He who sows corn sows holiness. He makes the law of Mazda grow higher and higher. He makes the law of Mazda as fat as he can with a hundred acts of adoration, a thousand oblations, ten thousand sacrifices, end quote. Mazda? Ah, yes, paganism accompanies even modern industry. The Athenians had three sacred plowings, including one at the time of the winter solstice, while the old Druids chose this same season to march in great solemnity to gather the sacred mistletoe, inviting all the world to assist, singing, The new year is at hand, gather the mistletoe. Yuletide, an Anglo-Saxon term for merry, or the merry feast, corresponded with the winter solstice and the new year's holidays. Some have thought that julos, the month in which the winter solstice occurs in that language, gave us the word yule. Yule was one of the principal feasts among the northern nations, though it survives today in name only. The lighting of the yule log became a Druidic custom. The log was stored from the previous year and was set ablaze to scare away evil spirits. Among the Druids, the oak was sacred, and the yule log was supposed to be from an oak tree because of its alleged mystical powers to guard and protect. England, under the dominion of the Romans, still indulged Druidical rites, and though there were temples to Diana and Minerva, such as those of London and Bath, and doubtless numerous altars to Jupiter and Venus, the inhabitants of these islands were chiefly worshippers of the sun, moon, mountains, rivers, lakes, and trees. The ceremonies of All-Hallow Mass, which some still observe as Halloween or the day before All-Saints Day, May Day, and Midsummer's Eve, are all of Druidical origin. With the veneration of the sacred mistletoe, a parasitic form of evergreen, we find a tangible link with such pagan times. Among the Romans, the sacred tree was the evergreen fir tree, which was decorated with red berries during the Saturnalia. The Scandinavian god Odin was believed to bestow special gifts at Yuletide to those who approached his sacred fir tree. All of these pagan beliefs and their accompanying rituals were coincident with the Roman Saturnalia. which itself harked back to the sun worship of the Egyptians and in those ancient observances had their true origin. From these pagan cultures we have, over the centuries, absorbed and renamed many of their traditions and adopted their songs. Christianity began to take firmer hold upon the people during the fourth century with Constantine as protector of the faith. The Feast of Christmas is mentioned by Gregory Nazianzen who died in 389 A.D. and his seems to be the last voice of reason crying out against the adoption of the pagan customs of the times. In his writings, he cautioned those who observed the Feast of the Nativity to guard against excess and protested against dancing and crowning the doors with boughs and evergreens which he affirmed was a heathen practice. He exhorted them to celebrate the feast after a heavenly rather than an earthly manner. In his warnings, he cites the scriptures of Jeremiah chapter 10 verses 2 through 5. Quote, Thus saith the Lord, Learn not the way of the heathen, and be not dismayed at the signs of heaven, for the heathen are dismayed at them, for the customs of the people are vain, for one cutteth a tree out of the forest, the work of the hands of the workmen with the axe. They deck it with silver and with gold, they fasten it with nails and with hammers that it move not, they are upright as the palm tree but speak not, they must needs be born because they cannot go. Be not afraid of them, for they cannot do evil, neither also is it in them to do good. Close quote. Even in the days of Jeremiah, believed to have lived around the year 660 BC, the custom of decorating evergreen trees with ornaments was recognized as a pagan religious ritual symbolic of resurrection and eternal life. an old Babylonish fable told of an evergreen tree which sprang out of a dead stump. The old stump symbolized the dead Nimrod, and the new evergreen tree symbolized that Nimrod had come back to life again as Tammuz. The evergreen trees mentioned in Jeremiah were elegantly carved into idols, and the round gold and silver ornaments with which the evergreen idols were decorated were symbolic of the sun and moon. Some things never change, and the tradition of decorating evergreen trees in a nativity celebration predates the birth of Christ by many centuries. It has, in fact, absolutely nothing to do with Christ or Christianity in any way. This is but one more indication of how we have unquestioningly adopted pagan customs, dressed them in Christian garb, and think that by making these annual religious observances we are doing something pleasing to God. We have simply forgotten to ask, which God? Writers of the fourth century mention the feast of the nativity, which appears to have been widely known and observed as a regular feast by the end of that century. St. Jerome writes that primitive carols were in use in the fifth century in the religious celebrations of the nativity. In 407 A.D., the Romans had already withdrawn from England. Druidism continued in Ireland, where St. Patrick began his work in 432, long after the Roman withdrawal. This period gave us the word wassail, which so aptly applies to many of the Christmas songs. Wassail derives from reshal, meaning Be Thou Whole, and is thus a form of salutation in a festive context. We will cover the wassail custom when we reach its musical place in our timeline. Throughout the fifth and sixth centuries, we observed the growth of so-called sacred music and the establishment of schools of sacred singing. At the beginning of the seventh century, Pope Gregory had the magnificent liturgical music of the time collected, music which we have come to know as Gregorian chant. These chants represent the earliest known form of Christmas music and predate the development of the carol as we now know it by approximately 200 years. An example of this earliest Christmas music is Chodier Christus Natus Est, meaning Today Christ is Born, traditionally sung at Vespers on Christmas Day. Chodier Christ Christ Christ Christ Natus Est, Chodier Salvator of Our Our Our Our Our Our Our Our Our Our Our Our Our Our Our Our After the coronation of Charlemagne in 800, the common music and dancing of the booths and fairs gave birth to a new form of entertainment. Dancing, music, and mimicry, by a natural development, led to a simple dramatic exhibition. The priests of the Catholic Church, unable to suppress these presentations, either by proscription or excommunication, actually copied them, substituting sacred for profane material. Here, then, was the assumed origin of the mystery or passion play and religious drama. However, this phenomenon finds a much more ancient derivation, tracing back to the religious plays of Constantinople in the 4th century. Behind those simple experiments loomed the great tragedies of Sophocles and Euripides. It is certain that the Greeks introduced dramatic performances with music in their religious services, having in their turn drawn from those most ancient of cultured peoples, the Egyptians and the Indians of Asia. Thus the clergy of the 9th century turned actors, and in both churches and fairs presented episodes and legends from sacred books and the Bible, and later on the passion play. Writes Sir John Stainer of the period, There can be no doubt, whatever, that the singing of Christmas carols as we know them grew out of the medieval mysteries, and the habit of the priests of placing a crib containing either a living baby or a carved bambino in the chasels of churches, in this way trying to teach rustics by means of pictorial representations. In all such exhibitions music naturally played a prominent part, and it is precisely here that some claim the origin of the carol, though it was doubtless in existence in a primitive form long before. Moreover, as Charlemagne largely increased the number of fairs, most lasting several days, these succeeded in attracting merchants and traders of all countries, so that the influence of monkish exhibitions accordingly grew. It appears that the priests went further than their forerunners as the buffoons of the fairs. License begot extravagance and libertinism, which ran their full career of riot in the religious establishments. A decree of the Roman council forbade both bishops and clergy to use weapons or to maintain female musicians. It further interdicted all concerts of music and plays and buffooneries. Yet the fact remains that throughout Europe, mysteries were openly indulged, especially in times of festival. From the religious houses, such performances naturally passed to the public schools and universities, so that long before the 15th century, all Europe, and especially England, indulged in the full liberties of an untrammeled stage. During the 9th century, two-part harmony developed, and the infancy of musical counterpoint had its western origin. Friends is particularly rich in carols, and French writers fix upon the 9th century as that in which they actually came into existence, although no country can justly claim to have invented this type of song which spread throughout Europe. Nevertheless, in 858, Gautier, Bishop of Orléans, condemned rustic songs and female dances in the Presbytery feasts. About the same time period, Pope Eugenius II prohibited dancing in secular songs. Neither of these rulings from on high seemed to have the slightest effect on the common people who sang and developed song as a vehicle for the expression of emotion apart from religion. The antiphonal song sung in celebration of Christmas, Gaudete, is usually placed historically during the Middle Ages. However, its lyrics and basic melodic structure are much, much older. There is also some controversy over whether this song has its roots in Celtic tradition or in that of the French, as both countries claim an ancient attachment. Just the same, as it has come down to us in a modernized form, the Gaudete is quite beautiful, and because of its ancient origin, deserves to be placed historically after the development of Gregorian chant and before the folk song carol period of subsequent centuries. In this recording, the Gaudete is harmonized in four parts, a characteristic it did not originally possess, and is sung as a processional, with the singers entering at the back of the church, marching in song to the front, and then circling back to exit the sanctuary. Here is Gaudete. Gaudete. Gaudete. Gaudete. Gaudete. Gaudete. God bless you. God bless you. God bless you. God bless you. God bless you. God bless you. God bless you. God bless you. God bless you. God bless you. God bless you. God bless you. God bless you. God bless you. God bless you. Here is an excerpt from a 12th century manuscript known as the Laudario di Cortone, composed in celebration of the birth of Christ. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Stevens Day, or December 26th. And there it has remained, in spite of its pagan origin, in the traditional repertoire of holiday music. Here is a recording of Tempus Adest Floridum, in celebration of the fertility of spring, with its new adornments of Christianist lyrics sung in English. Tempus Adest Floridum Tempus Adest Floridum Tempus Adest Floridum Tempus Adest Floridum Tempus Adest Floridum And the light is dark and dark, and the wind will blow to, In my heart I know the calm, I can go no longer. But I took them for thy pain, breath thou with us for thee, Now that I know in the grave, breathe thy heart and stormy. In his heart the tentacle, heaven's holy he hid, He falls in the very low, grace the pain that blinged. Therefore, we can make his home, while the light is possessing, He who now will let the Lord die of the fire's blessing. For the record, there was in Bohemia a wise and good man named Wenceslas, who lived from 903 to 935. He was the Duke and patron of Bohemia. Having received a Catholic education, He encouraged that brand of Christianity in Bohemia, Following the death of his father, And very much against the wishes of his mother. While noted for his piety, Wenceslas was nevertheless murdered by his brother, Bulaslav. Over the years his legend grew, Until he became known as King Wenceslas, And ultimately as Good King Wenceslas. And now, with the tune forever linked with his name and charitable reputation, The song is often sung at town carol concerts, Just before an appeal for funds is made, When the lyrics quoted are from the carol's fifth verse, Quote, Ye who now will bless the poor, Shall yourselves find blessing. End quote. Another traditional carol of Christmas Had its origins in pagan ritual. Midsummer carols marked the summer solstice, Which, like that of Yuletide, Was represented by a wheel in the old runic fashti, Because of the sun's annual rotation. In old times, The people of Britain lighted fires on Midsummer's Eve, And danced before them with singing. More anciently, The Watch of London Used to march 2,000 strong on this eve, A custom arising with Henry III. One particular 13th century Midsummer carol, Generally believed to be of Welsh derivation, Sings of love and the abundance of summer, With all of the latent sexuality of those warm and languid days. One of its verses reads, Quote, Oh, how soft my fair one's bosom! Oh, how sweet the grove in blossom! Oh, how blessed are the blisses! Words of love and mutual kisses! End quote. This is, of course, a far cry from any observation of the birth of Christ. The traditional Midsummer's Eve love lyrics are no longer sung, But the tune remains. You will recognize it instantly, When you realize that the end of each line of its verses Concludes with the phrase, Fa-la-la-la-la-la, La-la-la-la. Fa-la-la-la-la-la-la-la. Strike the heart and join the path on, La-la-la-la-la-la-la-la. Once the words shall be heard, You will notice that the fowl along, By your hands are no longer sung, But the glory is another rinsed and the트를 landscaper, La-la-la-la-la-la-la-la-la-la-la-la-la-la. Boat the way, Behold dear planet, Mais where do your feet have access! La-la-la-la-la-la-la. Sing, rejoice, for the dead, la-la-la-la-la-la-la, Here comes the great, la-la-la-la, la-la-la-la-la. By the time we finally reach the 14th century, we at last encounter a wide selection of carols, easily recognizable and joyously sung still today. One of the most important carols to come out of the 14th century was Indulce Jubilo, more commonly known today as Good Christian Men Rejoice. Its melody is recorded in manuscripts dated 1537, but its lyrics were not finalized until 1545. The original words are said by a 14th century writer to have been sung by angels to a man named Henry Souza, a mystic who died in 1366. Legend has it that Souza was drawn in by the carols who dance with his celestial visitors, a most unlikely premise, as we can find no scriptural evidence that angels ever sang to anyone, much less engaged them in a quick do-si-do. Nevertheless, the carol does appear in the last hymn book produced for Martin Luther and carries to this day his final text editorship. Luther himself is credited with writing the third stanza. Here is Indulce Jubilo sung in English with the traditional lyrics, Good Christian Men Rejoice. Good Christian Men Rejoice. With honor, Lord, and loyal. In the people of the day, June, June, Jesus, right in the wonderful day. Offer, happy, boy, now, and leaving, on the day, Christ is born today. Christ is born today. Christ is born today. Good Christian Men Rejoice. With honor, full and loyal. Christ is born today. Christ is born today. Christ is born today. F Christ is born today. Call to God and call to all, who gave me their love before, Christ was born today, Christ was born today. There is much proof of the popularity of carol singing at this time in Germany. Martin Luther has left it on record that, quote, At the time that the festival of Christ's birth was celebrated, we went from house to house and village to village, singing popular Christmas carols in four-part harmony. Luther had studied music at Erfurt as a boy and knew what he was talking about when he used the phrase popular Christmas carols in four-part harmony. This brings us to the 15th century, and here we must stop for tonight. The vast majority of carols recognizable to us today were written during the 16th and 17th centuries. It is here on our Christmas carol timeline that we will begin in the next episode of this special holiday presentation of The Hour of the Time. Until then, may God bless you and send you a happy new year. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you.