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Natal Day
Both the form natalis (sc. Dies) and natalicium were used by the Romans to
denote what we call a birthday, i.e., the anniversary of the day when a man was
born. Also the Greek words genesia and genethlios were similarly employed. But
in both Greek and Latin a certain extension of this primitive use seems to have
taken place even in pre-Christian times. In Latin natalis apparently came, at
least sometimes, to mean little more than anniversary
, and it was used of the
accession day of the emperor as well as of his birthday. Moreover we know that
the games celebrated on an emperor's birthday during his life, were often
continued after his apotheosis upon the anniversary of his birthday as if he
were still living. In Greek genesia came to be frequently used in connection
with the annual commemoration of a dead person by sacrifices and other rites (cf.
Herodotus IV, 26). This commemoration is said to have taken place not upon the
anniversary of the day of death but upon the actual birthday of the defunct
person (C.I.G. 3417, and Rhode, Psyche, 4th ed., I, 235). When, therefore, the
Christians of Smyrna about A.D. 150 write to describe how they took up the bones
of St. Polycarp, which are more valuable than precious stones and finer than
refined gold and laid them in a suitable place, where the Lord will permit us to
gather ourselves together, as we are able, in gladness and joy and to celebrate
the birthday of his martyrdom
(epitelein ten tou martyriou autou hemeran
genethlion), it is not easy to say how far they were influenced by pre-existing
pagan usages. This phrase the birthday of his martyrdom
certainly seems to
indicate the commemoration of the day on which he died, and all the subsequent
history of the Church confirms the practice of keeping this as the usual feast
of any saint or martyr. None the less, knowing as we do that the Greeks also
commonly celebrated what they called nekysia (commemorative sacrifices), on the
anniversary of the death of parents, it would seem that the faithful of the
early Church did little more than christianize a pagan custom. This they
accomplished, first by offering the holy sacrifice of the Mass in honour of
their deceased brethren instead of the blood of flesh of animal victims, and
secondly by giving to this commemoration of a true believer's passage to another
life the name genethlios, or in Latin natalis, rather than to the day upon which
he had been born into this world.
One cannot however entirely eliminate the doubt whether at the introduction
of Christianity genethlios and natalis had not already come to mean little more
than anniversary
or commemoration rite
. Tertullian says oblatones pro
defunctis pro nataliciis annua die facimus
(De Coronoa, cap. 3), which seems to
mean we offer Masses for the dead on their anniversary as a commemoration rite.
Similarly the Chronographer of 354 notes in his calendar against 22 February,
VIII Kal. Martias Natale Petri de cathedra; where natale clearly signifies
anniversary rather than birthday. Indeed where we find the Fathers emphasizing
the etymology of the word, their language rather suggests that they expected the
primary meaning of birthday
to pass unnoticed. In any case the sense of
anniversary alone fits a wide range of phrases which meet us in the calendars
and other documents of the fifth, sixth, and seventh centuries. Avitus of Vienne
(d. 518) and Eligius of Noyon (d. c. 650) both refer to Maundy Thursday under
the name natalis calicis
(the commemoration of the chalice), a reference, of
course, to the institution of the Blessed Sacrament at the Last Supper, and the
feast appears under the same name in the calendar of Polemius Silvius of 448.
Again in the Leonian Sacramentary we have the phrase in natali episcoporum
,
which the context shows to mean the anniversary of a bishop's consecration (cf.
Probost, Die ältesten röm. Sacramentarien, 124 and 247, and Paulinus of Nola,
Epistle 20), while the Gelasian Sacramentary uses such expressions as natale
consecrationis diaconi
, etc. So also in the Hieronymian Martyrologium (c. 590),
besides the constantly recurring natale applied to the festivals of martyrs we
have, e.g. on 2 August, In antiochia natalis reliquiarum Stephani protomartyris
et diac. None the less a certain stress was often laid in Christian sermons and
in mortuary inscriptions upon the idea that the day of a man's death was his
birthday to a new life. Thus St. Ambrose (Serm. 57, de Depos. St. Eusebii)
declares that the day of our burial is calledour birthday (natalis), because,
being set free from the prison of our crimes, we are born to the liberty of the
Saviour
, and he goes on wherefore this day is observed as a great celebration,
for it is in truth a festival of the highest order to be dead to our vices and
to live to righteousness alone.
And we find such inscriptions as the following
PARENTE FILIO MERCURIO FECE
RUNT QUI VIXIT ANN V ET MENSES VIII
NATUS IN PACE ID FEBR
Where natus in pace
clearly refers to eternal rest. So again Origen had
evidently some similar thought before him when he insists that of all the holy
people in the Scriptures, no one is recorded to have kept a feast or held a
great banquet on his birthday. It is only sinners (like Pharaoh and Herod) who
make great rejoicings over the day on which they were born into this world below
(Origen, in Levit., Hom. VIII, in Migne P.G., XII, 495). Naturally a certain
amount of confusion resulted from this use of the same word natalis sometimes to
signify natural birth, sometimes the passage to a better life. The former was
consequently often distinguished as natale genuinum, natale de nativitate, the
latter as natale passionis or de passione, sometimes abbreviated as N.P.
KRIEG in KRAUS, Realencyklopadie; KELLNER, Heortology (Eng. Tr. London, 1907); PROBST, Kirch. Disciplin in den drei ersten Christ. Jahrhunderten (Tübingen, 1873).
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