THE celebration of birthdays is regarded by
most people today as merely an innocent custom. But the Bible does not paint a
positive picture of this tradition. For one thing, the Scriptures contain no
indication that any of God’s faithful servants celebrated birthdays.
The only two birthdays the Bible does mention
were for rulers who were enemies of God. Each celebration included an
execution, so that the guests could gloat over the death of one who had
displeased the king. In the first instance, Pharaoh, the king of Egypt,
executed his chief baker. (Genesis 40:2, 3, 20, 22) The Egyptian ruler did
so during the feast because he had grown indignant with his servant. In the
second instance, Herod, the immoral ruler of Galilee, beheaded John the
Baptizer as a favor to a girl whose dancing at the party had pleased him. What
repulsive scenes!—Matthew 14:6-11.
Yet has not the Bible focused on two very
exceptional birthdays? Not really. The ancient Jewish historian Josephus
reveals that these incidents were not unique. He records other instances of the
practice of birthday executions for entertainment.
For example, some occurred after Jerusalem’s
destruction in 70 C.E., when 1,000,000 Jews perished and 97,000 survived
to be taken prisoner. En route to Rome, Roman general Titus took his Jewish
captives to the nearby seaport of Caesarea.
Josephus writes: “While Titus remained at
Caesarea, he celebrated his brother Domitian’s birthday with great splendor,
putting over 2,500 prisoners to death in games with beasts and flames. After
this he moved to Berytus [Beirut], a Roman colony in Phoenicia, where he
celebrated his father’s birthday by killing many more captives at elaborate
exhibitions.”—The Jewish War, VII, 37, translated by Paul
L. Maier in Josephus: The Essential Writings.
It is no wonder that The Imperial
Bible-Dictionary comments: “The later Hebrews looked on the celebration
of birth-days as a part of idolatrous worship, a view which would be abundantly
confirmed by what they saw of the common observances associated with these
days.”
Faithful first-century Christians would not
have felt like joining in a custom so darkly presented in the Bible and so
gruesomely celebrated by the Romans. Today, sincere Christians realize that the
Bible accounts about birthdays were among the things written for their
instruction. (Romans 15:4) They avoid celebrating birthdays because such
observances bestow undue importance on the individual. More significant,
Jehovah’s servants wisely take into account the unfavorable presentation of
birthdays in the Bible.
www.jw.org
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