Yule: circa December 21 
by Mike Nichols
copyright by MicroMuse Press
copyright by MicroMuse Press
This  file contains 10 seasonal articles by Mike Nichols. They may be freely   distributed provided that the following conditions are met: (1) No fee  is  charged for their use and distribution and no commercial use is made  of them;  (2) These files are not changed or edited in any way without  the author's  permission; (3) This notice is not removed. An article may  be distributed as a  separate file, provided that this notice is  repeated at the beginning of each  such file. These articles are  periodically updated by the author; this version  is current as of  9/28/88.  
Our  Christian friends are often quite surprised at how enthusiastically we   Pagans celebrate the 'Christmas' season. Even though we prefer to use  the word  'Yule', and our celebrations may peak a few days BEFORE the  25th, we nonetheless  follow many of the traditional customs of the  season: decorated trees,  carolling, presents, Yule logs, and mistletoe.  We might even go so far as  putting up a 'Nativity set', though for us  the three central characters are  likely to be interpreted as Mother  Nature, Father Time, and the Baby Sun-God.  None of this will come as a  surprise to anyone who knows the true history of the  holiday, of  course. 
In  fact, if truth be known, the holiday of Christmas has always been more   Pagan than Christian, with it's associations of Nordic divination,  Celtic  fertility rites, and Roman Mithraism. That is why both Martin  Luther and John  Calvin abhorred it, why the Puritans refused to  acknowledge it, much less  celebrate it (to them, no day of the year  could be more holy than the Sabbath),  and why it was even made ILLEGAL  in Boston! The holiday was already too closely  associated with the  birth of older Pagan gods and heroes. And many of them (like  Oedipus,  Theseus, Hercules, Perseus, Jason, Dionysus, Apollo, Mithra, Horus and   even Arthur) possessed a narrative of birth, death, and resurrection  that was  uncomfortably close to that of Jesus. And to make matters  worse, many of them  pre-dated the Christian Savior. 
Ultimately,  of course, the holiday is rooted deeply in the cycle of the year.  It  is the Winter Solstice that is being celebrated, seed-time of the year,  the  longest night and shortest day. It is the birthday of the new Sun  King, the Son  of God -- by whatever name you choose to call him. On  this darkest of nights,  the Goddess becomes the Great Mother and once  again gives birth. And it makes  perfect poetic sense that on the  longest night of the winter, 'the dark night of  our souls', there  springs the new spark of hope, the Sacred Fire, the Light of  the World,  the Coel Coeth. 
That  is why Pagans have as much right to claim this holiday as Christians.   Perhaps even more so, as the Christians were rather late in laying claim  to it,  and tried more than once to reject it. There had been a  tradition in the West  that Mary bore the child Jesus on the  twenty-fifth day, but no one could seem to  decide on the month.  Finally, in 320 C.E., the Catholic Fathers in Rome decided  to make it  December, in an effort to co-opt the Mithraic celebration of the  Romans  and the Yule celebrations of the Celts and Saxons. 
There  was never much pretense that the date they finally chose was   historically accurate. Shepherds just don't 'tend their flocks by night'  in the  high pastures in the dead of winter! But if one wishes to use  the New Testament  as historical evidence, this reference may point to  sometime in the spring as  the time of Jesus's birth. This is because  the lambing season occurs in the  spring and that is the only time when  shepherds are likely to 'watch their  flocks by night' -- to make sure  the lambing goes well. Knowing this, the  Eastern half of the Church  continued to reject December 25, preferring a  'movable date' fixed by  their astrologers according to the moon.  
Thus,  despite its shaky start (for over three centuries, no one knew when   Jesus was supposed to have been born!), December 25 finally began to  catch on.  By 529, it was a civic holiday, and all work or public  business (except that of  cooks, bakers, or any that contributed to the  delight of the holiday) was  prohibited by the Emperor Justinian. In  563, the Council of Braga forbade  fasting on Christmas Day, and four  years later the Council of Tours proclaimed  the twelve days from  December 25 to Epiphany as a sacred, festive season. This  last point is  perhaps the hardest to impress upon the modern reader, who is  lucky to  get a single day off work. Christmas, in the Middle Ages, was not a   SINGLE day, but rather a period of TWELVE days, from December 25 to  January 6.  The Twelve Days of Christmas, in fact. It is certainly  lamentable that the  modern world has abandoned this approach, along  with the popular Twelfth Night  celebrations. 
Of  course, the Christian version of the holiday spread to many countries  no  faster than Christianity itself, which means that 'Christmas' wasn't  celebrated  in Ireland until the late fifth century; in England,  Switzerland, and Austria  until the seventh; in Germany until the  eighth; and in the Slavic lands until  the ninth and tenth. Not that  these countries lacked their own mid-winter  celebrations of Yuletide.  Long before the world had heard of Jesus, Pagans had  been observing the  season by bringing in the Yule log, wishing on it, and  lighting it  from the remains of last year's log. Riddles were posed and  answered,  magic and rituals were practiced, wild boars were sacrificed and   consumed along with large quantities of liquor, corn dollies were  carried from  house to house while carolling, fertility rites were  practiced (girls standing  under a sprig of mistletoe were subject to a  bit more than a kiss), and  divinations were cast for the coming Spring.  Many of these Pagan customs, in an  appropriately watered-down form,  have entered the mainstream of Christian  celebration, though most  celebrants do not realize (or do not mention it, if  they do) their  origins. 
For  modern Witches, Yule (from the Anglo-Saxon 'Yula', meaning 'wheel' of  the  year) is usually celebrated on the actual Winter Solstice, which  may vary by a  few days, though it usually occurs on or around December  21st. It is a Lesser  Sabbat or Lower Holiday in the modern Pagan  calendar, one of the four  quarter-days of the year, but a very  important one. This year (1988) it occurs  on December 21st at 9:28 am  CST. Pagan customs are still enthusiastically  followed. Once, the Yule  log had been the center of the celebration. It was  lighted on the eve  of the solstice (it should light on the first try) and must  be kept  burning for twelve hours, for good luck. It should be made of ash.   Later, the Yule log was replaced by the Yule tree but, instead of  burning it,  burning candles were placed on it. In Christianity,  Protestants might claim that  Martin Luther invented the custom, and  Catholics might grant St. Boniface the  honor, but the custom can  demonstrably be traced back through the Roman  Saturnalia all the way to  ancient Egypt. Needless to say, such a tree should be  cut down rather  than purchased, and should be disposed of by burning, the proper  way to  dispatch any sacred object. 
Along  with the evergreen, the holly and the ivy and the mistletoe were   important plants of the season, all symbolizing fertility and  everlasting life.  Mistletoe was especially venerated by the Celtic  Druids, who cut it with a  golden sickle on the sixth night of the moon,  and believed it to be an  aphrodisiac. (Magically -- not medicinally!  It's highly toxic!) But aphrodisiacs  must have been the smallest part  of the Yuletide menu in ancient times, as  contemporary reports indicate  that the tables fairly creaked under the strain of  every type of good  food. And drink! The most popular of which was the 'wassail  cup'  deriving its name from the Anglo-Saxon term 'waes hael' (be whole or  hale). 
Medieval  Christmas folklore seems endless: that animals will all kneel down  as  the Holy Night arrives, that bees hum the '100th psalm' on Christmas  Eve,  that a windy Christmas will bring good luck, that a person born on  Christmas Day  can see the Little People, that a cricket on the hearth  brings good luck, that  if one opens all the doors of the house at  midnight all the evil spirits will  depart, that you will have one lucky  month for each Christmas pudding you  sample, that the tree must be  taken down by Twelfth Night or bad luck is sure to  follow, that 'if  Christmas on a Sunday be, a windy winter we shall see', that  'hours of  sun on Christmas Day, so many frosts in the month of May', that one  can  use the Twelve Days of Christmas to predict the weather for each of the   twelve months of the coming year, and so on. 
Remembering  that most Christmas customs are ultimately based upon older Pagan   customs, it only remains for modern Pagans to reclaim their lost  traditions. In  doing so, we can share many common customs with our  Christian friends, albeit  with a slightly different interpretation. And  thus we all share in the beauty of  this most magical of seasons, when  the Mother Goddess once again gives birth to  the baby Sun-God and sets  the wheel in motion again. To conclude with a  long-overdue paraphrase,  'Goddess bless us, every one!' 
by Mike Nichols
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