Libmonster ID: ID-2020

Christmas as a Victory Over Death: The Eschatological Meaning of the Bethlehem Joy

The traditional perception of Christmas as a touching story about the birth of a Baby in a manger often obscures its profound theological and cosmological significance. In Christian dogma and liturgical tradition, the Nativity of Christ is understood not as an isolated event, but as the first and decisive act in the drama of salvation, the beginning of the ontological war against death. The joy of Bethlehem is not just an emotion, but a proclamation of victory, whose roots lie in the very nature of the Incarnate God.

1. Theological Foundations: From "First Adam" to "Last Adam"

The key to understanding lies in the doctrine of original sin and its consequences. According to Christian anthropology (developed by the Church Fathers, especially St. Athanasius the Great), the fall of Adam introduced mortality and death into human nature. Death became not just a biological end, but an existential tyranny, oppressing man through fear (Heb. 2:15).

Christmas is God's response to this situation. God the Word (Logos) takes on human nature in its fullness, except for sin. This perception is described in the famous formula of St. Gregory the Theologian: "What is not taken on is not healed, but what is united with God is saved." Christ, the "Last Adam" (1 Cor. 15:45), takes on the damaged human nature to heal it from within. His birth is an injection of immortality into the very fabric of the perishable human nature. Already in the manger lies He Who voluntarily accepts death to strip the power from "the one having dominion over death, that is, the devil" (Heb. 2:14).

2. Liturgical Proclamation: Worship as Interpretation

Orthodox and Catholic Christmas services are rich in images of victory over death.

The troparion of the feast: "Thy birth, O Christ our God, has shone upon the world the light of wisdom…" The light of wisdom is the light of true knowledge about God and man, dispelling the darkness of ignorance and the fear of death.

The kontakion of the feast (author – St. Roman the Hymnographer): "Today the All-Holy Mother gives birth to the Pre-eternal One… As a Baby, Existing from All Eternity… may He put an end to idolatry…" Here the goal is explicitly stated: to put an end to idolatry, the highest form of which in the Christian perspective is the slavery to death and corruption.

The Christmas stichera: "Thou hast abolished death, being born of a Virgin…" — a direct and unambiguous statement sounding on the day of Christmas.

Interesting fact: "Theophany" as a synonym. In the early Church (3rd-4th centuries), the feast of Theophany (January 6) united the remembrance of Christmas, Baptism, and the adoration of the Magi. The common theme was the manifestation of God in the flesh ("theophany") as the beginning of salvation. The division of feasts did not cancel their common eschatological meaning.

3. Iconography: Symbolism of Victory in Images

The classic icon of the Nativity of the Byzantine type contains several symbols indicating victory over death:

The cave (manger): Portrayed as a dark crevice, symbolizing hell, the underworld, and death, into which the Light descends ("The Light shines in the darkness" – John 1:5).

The manger: Not just a feeding trough, but a prototype of the Lord's Tomb. The body laid in the manger prefigures the body laid in the grave. But if the grave will be empty, then the manger already contains Him Who will make the grave empty. This is "victory is foreshadowed from the very beginning."

The swaddling clothes: The tight wrapping of the Baby is already an image of the shrouds, symbolizing decay and mortality which He voluntarily accepts to break them.

The donkey and the camel (based on the prophecy of Isaiah 1:3): Symbolize the Jews and Gentiles, but also all created nature, which, according to the liturgy, "receives the Saviour" – that is, is freed from the slavery to corruption.

4. Patristic Interpretation: Birth as the Beginning of Healing

The Fathers of the Church saw the Nativity as the beginning of the healing of humanity.

St. Athanasius the Great in his work "On the Incarnation of the Word of God" claimed: "He [the Word] became incarnate so that we might be deified." Incarnation is the necessary condition for deification (theosis), that is, the participation of man in the immortal, eternal life of God.

St. Gregory of Nyssa taught that Christ, by uniting with human nature, as it were "implants" in it the seed of immortality. Nativity is the sowing, and Resurrection is the harvest.

St. Symeon the New Theologian wrote: "Now, since God has united with human nature, men can unite with God… and become partakers of the divine nature and eternal life."

5. Victory Over Death as a Cultural and Existential Code

This theological concept has deeply penetrated into Western and Eastern culture, transforming into art and literature.

Example in literature: In Fyodor Dostoevsky's novel "The Brothers Karamazov," the elder Zosima says in his pre-death sermon about the love of life that overcomes the fear of death, and this thought is rooted in the Christmas faith: life revealed in the Bethlehem Baby is stronger than death.

Example in music: Many Christmas carols, such as "Hark! The Herald Angels Sing" by Charles Wesley, contain lines: "Born that man no more may die, / Born to raise the sons of earth, / Born to give them second birth" ("Born that man no more may die, / Born to raise the sons of earth, / Born to give them second birth").

Conclusion: Joy as an Eschatological Category

Thus, Christmas joy is not just everyday merriment, but eschatological joy, anticipating the final victory. Christmas puts death in a paradoxical situation: He Who comes into the world is born to die, and dies to rise, destroying death from within. The manger of Bethlehem becomes a platform for the invasion of the kingdom of death. Therefore, in Christian understanding, the feast of Christmas is fundamentally antisentimental. It proclaims that God loved the world so much that He descended into its depths, into the conditions of perishability and limitation, to transform them.

The victory over death begins not on an empty tomb in the morning of Easter, but in the crowded cave of Bethlehem at night of Christmas. Every Christmas tree, every lit candle, every festive hymn in this perspective is not just a remembrance of the past, but a banner raised in the very heart of the hostile territory, and a triumphant assertion that the last word in the history of humanity belongs not to death, but to Life, revealed in the Baby.


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Christmas as a victory over death // Kampala: Uganda (LIBRARY.UG). Updated: 06.01.2026. URL: https://library.ug/m/articles/view/Christmas-as-a-victory-over-death (date of access: 07.06.2026).

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