22/12/2024
*JUST TO CORRECT WRONG IMPRESSION* X-Mas or Christmas?
What is the difference in these two words?
Or are they the same? Hmmm!
Let us take a look at this..π
The difference
between the word
*CHRISTMAS*
and the word
*X-MAS.*
CHRISTMAS is the
combination of
two words:
*Christ and Mass.*
Before Christ was born, many years ago,
25th Dec used to be
*PAGAN'S day for SACRIFICES.*
Later, in the year
533 AD, Constantine,
the head of the then
Roman Church, which is today the Roman Catholic,
changed the day from
*pagan's day of*
*sacrifices to*
*Jesus Christ's birth commemoration.*
He called the day
*THE MASS FOR CHRIST*
*ie CHRISTMAS*
1. CHRIST in
Hebrew means,
*The Anointed One* or
*The Chosen One.*
2. MAS in
Greek means
*A Big Gathering*
*of People*
Thus
CHRISTMAS means
*The Gathering of*
*People of Christ,*
*(His Followers/Disciples)*
Then,
where did the word
*X-MASS*
come from?
Be ware!!
It's believed that after
the day of gathering of
Christ's Followers
*{CHRISTMAS},*
*became famous and respected worldwide,*
*Atheists & Antichrists decided to change it by*
*removing the name Christ for an X to mean*
*that there is no Christ.*
It changed the meaning
by reading X-MASS to mean *"there is no gathering*
*of Christ's Followers."*
*Merry CHRIST-MAS*
*& NOT Merry X-MAS*
X is often used to
designate a *person,*
*thing or factor,*
*whose true name is*
*unknown/withheld.*
"X" has nothing
to do with
*"Christ"*
*"The Anointed One,"*
Let's not replace
*Christ with "X"*
Therefore as a Christian,
don't use X-MAS but use
"CHRISTMAS".
You might have made
that mistake last year by
wishing people
X-Mas
instead of
CHRISTMAS.
Why don't you share this message with your Christian friends?
God bless you as you
help and join in
correcting this big error.
"MERRY CHRISTMAS"
AND NOT
MERRY X-MAS