
Many today  feel that they share in New Year’s festivities without going overboard.  Still, Christians do well to examine the origin and significance of this  popular celebration. Do New Year’s festivities conflict with Bible  teachings?
Facts From the  Past
New Year’s festivities are not new. Ancient inscriptions  indicate that they were held in Babylon as early as the third millennium B.C.E.  The celebration, which was observed in mid-March, was crucial. “At that time the  god Marduk decided the destiny of the country for the coming year,” says The  World Book Encyclopedia. The  Babylonian new year celebration lasted 11 days and included sacrifices,  processions, and fertility rites.
For a  time, the Romans too began their year in the month of March. But in 46 B.C.E.,  Emperor Julius Caesar decreed that it should begin on the first of January.  That day was already dedicated to  Janus, the god of beginnings, and now it would also mark the first day of the  Roman year. The date changed, but the carnival atmosphere  persisted. On the first of January, people “gave themselves up to riotous  excess,” says McClintock and Strong’s Cyclopedia, “and various kinds of heathen  superstition.”
Even today, superstitious rituals play a part in New Year’s  festivities. For example, in some areas of South America, many welcome the New  Year while standing on their right foot. Others sound horns and set off  firecrackers. According to a Czech custom, New Year’s Eve is a time for eating  lentil soup, while a Slovak tradition has people placing money or fish scales  under the tablecloth. Such rituals, designed to ward off ill fortune and  guarantee prosperity, merely perpetuate the ancient belief that the turn of the  year is a time for deciding destinies.
The Bible’s View
The  Bible admonishes Christians to “walk decently, not in revelries and drunken  bouts.” (Romans 13:12-14; Galatians 5:19-21; 1 Peter 4:3) Since New Year’s  festivities are often characterized by the very excesses that the Bible  condemns, Christians do not participate in them. This does not mean that  Christians are killjoys. On the contrary, they know that the Bible repeatedly  tells worshipers of the true God to rejoice—and that for a number of reasons.  (Deuteronomy 26:10, 11; Psalm 32:11; Proverbs 5:15-19; Ecclesiastes 3:22; 11:9)  The Bible also acknowledges that food and drink often accompany rejoicing.—Psalm  104:15; Ecclesiastes 9:7a.
As we have seen, however, New Year’s celebrations are rooted in pagan customs.  False worship is unclean and detestable in the eyes of Jehovah God, and  Christians reject practices that have such origins. (Deuteronomy 18:9-12;  Ezekiel 22:3, 4) The apostle Paul wrote: “What fellowship do  righteousness and lawlessness have? Or what sharing does light have with  darkness? Further, what harmony is there between Christ and Belial?” For good  reason, Paul added: “Quit touching the unclean thing.”—2 Corinthians  6:14-17a.
Christians also realize that taking part in superstitious rituals  does not guarantee happiness and prosperity—especially since participating in  such festivities can result in God’s disfavor. (Ecclesiastes 9:11; Isaiah 65:11,  12) Furthermore, the Bible admonishes Christians to be moderate and  self-controlled in their conduct. (1 Timothy 3:2, 11) Clearly, it would be  improper for one who professes to follow Christ’s teachings to be part of a  celebration that is characterized by riotous excess.
As eye-catching and  appealing to the senses as New Year’s festivities may be, the Bible tells us to “quit touching the unclean  thing” and to “cleanse ourselves of every defilement of flesh and spirit.”  To those who comply, Jehovah extends the heartwarming guarantee:  “I will take you in. . . . I shall be a father to you, and you will be sons and  daughters to me.” (2 Corinthians 6:17b–7:1) Indeed, he promises eternal  blessings and prosperity to those who are loyal to him.—Psalm 37:18, 28;  Revelation 21:3, 4, 7.
[Footnote]
Paul’s reference to “revelries  and drunken bouts” may have included those that took place during New Year’s  festivities, since these were popular in Rome during the first  century.
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