Radio Blue Heart is on the air!
workingclasshistory:
“On this day, 25 December 336 CE, the first recorded celebration on this date of the birth of Jesus Christ, a Jewish refugee and radical born in what is now Palestine, took place.
The bible makes no mention of Jesus’s birth date,...

workingclasshistory:

On this day, 25 December 336 CE, the first recorded celebration on this date of the birth of Jesus Christ, a Jewish refugee and radical born in what is now Palestine, took place.
The bible makes no mention of Jesus’s birth date, but Christians in Egypt chose to celebrate it on 6 January. The Western church later adopted the date of 25 December – winter solstice in the Julian calendar – which some scholars believe was in order to assimilate ‘heathen’ celebrations of the sun on that day.
While most Christian institutions today espouse conservative views, Jesus’s early followers in the Middle East practised a form of communism. Historian Roman Montero explains that: “what happened was two general kind of practices; one that we can call ‘formal communism,’ in that it was a regulated and formal system, and another that we can call 'informal communism’ in that it was a general moral dictate that governed behavior and attitudes.
“The 'formal communism’ was the collection of goods and the distribution to widows, orphans, and those in need. This was done to the extent to where there was an organised daily distribution to widows, and to the extent that they could actually live from the distribution — this was no pocket change, it was a full welfare system.
"The 'informal communism’ was the idea found in Acts 4:32 where it says 'no one claimed that what they possessed was their own’ (Or 'no one claimed private ownership of any possessions’). This brings us back to the moral principle of 'from each according to his ability to each according to his need,’ what the Christians were doing was re-organising their framework of obligations to one another — from things like a market framework, or a patronage framework — to a communist framework. They were creating a community in which people had a primary obligation to share with his fellow; to the point to where property lines became increasingly irrelevant’.” https://www.facebook.com/workingclasshistory/photos/a.296224173896073/1884147898437018/?type=3

  1. meantoys reblogged this from workingclasshistory
  2. undergroundfornow reblogged this from workingclasshistory
  3. dej11 reblogged this from workingclasshistory
  4. howbyronic reblogged this from workingclasshistory
  5. micha72 reblogged this from workingclasshistory
  6. iangeleyesblog reblogged this from reasonandempathy
  7. joviala7 reblogged this from workingclasshistory
  8. astheniadawn reblogged this from thoughtportal
  9. thoughtportal reblogged this from workingclasshistory
  10. mentally-homeless reblogged this from workingclasshistory
  11. everything-minni reblogged this from reasonandempathy
  12. stink-a-taco reblogged this from workingclasshistory
  13. eye-lantern reblogged this from reasonandempathy
  14. reasonandempathy reblogged this from workingclasshistory
  15. workingclasshistory posted this