Libmonster ID: DE-1922

Christmas in Jerusalem: Topography of the Sacred Event and Multiconfessional Reality


The celebration of Christmas in Jerusalem is a unique phenomenon where the theological significance of the location of the event intersects with complex modern politics, jurisdictional disputes, and the diversity of Christian traditions. It is not just a religious holiday, but a living laboratory for studying the interaction of history, faith, and space.

Topography of Christmas: from Bethlehem to Jerusalem

Although the actual birthplace of Jesus Christ, according to tradition, is in Bethlehem (10 km from Jerusalem), Jerusalem itself as a spiritual and administrative center plays a key role in Christmas events. Historically, Bethlehem was closely linked to Jerusalem, and many rituals begin or end in the capital.

Pilgrim's Path. The traditional route of the pilgrim on Christmas included arrival at the port of Jaffa, then the journey to Jerusalem and from there to Bethlehem. The Jerusalem temples (primarily the Church of the Holy Sepulchre) were mandatory points of prayer preparation for the holiday.

Administrative Aspect. Obtaining permits to enter Bethlehem (especially in the modern period) is often coordinated through the Jerusalem patriarchates and Israeli authorities based in Jerusalem.

Multiconfessional Calendar: Three Christmases

The main feature is the celebration of Christmas according to different calendars, creating an effect of a "stretched" holiday.

December 25th according to the Gregorian calendar. This day is celebrated by the Roman Catholic Church, most Protestant churches, and part of the Orthodox Church (e.g., the Jerusalem Patriarchate, the Greek Orthodox Church — since 2023). The Basilica of the Nativity in Bethlehem becomes the center, but solemn services are also held in the Church of the Holy Sepulchre and Catholic churches in Jerusalem (e.g., the Church of St. Anne or the Cathedral of St. Jacob in the Armenian Quarter). An important event is the procession of the Catholic Patriarch from Jerusalem to Bethlehem, which symbolically repeats the journey of the Magi.

January 7th according to the Julian calendar. This date is observed by the Russian, Georgian, Serbian, Ukrainian Orthodox Churches, the Ethiopian and Coptic Churches. Pilgrims from these traditions arrive in large numbers in Jerusalem at this time. Their liturgies are concentrated in the Church of the Holy Sepulchre and the Monastery of St. Helen within it, as well as in their own chapels (e.g., the Russian Spiritual Mission).

January 19th (January 6th according to the Julian calendar). The Armenian Apostolic Church celebrates Christmas and Epiphany on the same day (Epiphany) according to its own calendar. Their main liturgy takes place in the Armenian section of the Church of the Holy Sepulchre and the Cathedral of St. Jacob in the Armenian Quarter. This highlights the ancient tradition of a single Epiphany celebration.

Status Quo: A Fragile Balance in Holy Places

Any celebration in Jerusalem is regulated by a special legal regime — the Status Quo of 1852 (established by the Ottoman Firman). It meticulously regulates the rights and obligations of six Christian denominations (Greek Orthodox, Roman Catholic, Armenian, Syrian, Coptic, Ethiopian) in holy places, including the Church of the Holy Sepulchre and the Basilica of the Nativity.

Schedule of Services. Each denomination is allocated strictly defined hours and places for worship in common temples. On Christmas, this schedule becomes particularly tense and requires complex coordination. The slightest violation (such as a delay in the service or the movement of an object) can lead to interdenominational conflict.

Keys to the temple. A paradoxical but famous fact: the main doors of the Church of the Holy Sepulchre have been in the custody of two Muslim families (the Nuseibeh and Judah families) since 1192, who open and close the temple every day. This tradition was established by Salah ad-Din to prevent disputes between Christians. On Christmas, this procedure becomes part of the ceremony.

Symbolic Routes and the Modern Context

Pilgrim's Path: Traditionally includes visiting Bethlehem, the shepherds' fields (Beit Sahur), and in Jerusalem — Mount Zion (the Room of the Last Supper), the Garden of Gethsemane, and of course, the Church of the Holy Sepulchre.

Political Context: Since 1967, East Jerusalem, including the Old City, has been under Israeli control. The celebration of Christmas takes place against the backdrop of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Palestinian Christians from Bethlehem and other cities on the West Bank must obtain special permits to enter Jerusalem for the holiday, which is not always guaranteed. The Separation Wall between Israel and the West Bank becomes a physical and symbolic barrier.

Interfaith Background: Jerusalem is also a holy city for Jews and Muslims. Christmas decorations and processions coexist with Hanukkah (often falling in the same period) and the daily life of Muslim quarters. This creates a unique, sometimes tense, multicultural landscape.

Examples and Interesting Facts

Christmas procession of the Latin Patriarch. The Catholic Patriarch of Jerusalem makes a solemn entry into Bethlehem through the checkpoint at the Separation Wall, which is a powerful political and religious gesture.

"Christmas pudding" at the Anglicans. The Cathedral of St. George (Anglican Church) holds traditional British Christmas services with carols, which contrasts with the eastern atmosphere.

Ethiopian and Coptic ceremonies. Colorful services with the use of drums and specific chants take place on the roofs and in the chapels of the Church of the Holy Sepulchre, belonging to these ancient churches, which have changed little over the centuries.

The absence of commercialization. Unlike the West, there is virtually no street commercial Christmas paraphernalia (lights, Santa Clauses) in Jerusalem. The focus is exclusively on the religious, not the consumer, aspect.

Conclusion

Christmas in Jerusalem is not a cozy family holiday, but a large-scale, multi-layered, and often ascetic event. It is a pilgrimage holiday, a reminder holiday, and a test holiday. Here, chronologies (three dates), theological traditions (different understandings of the event), and political realities (conflict, wall, permits) collide. It is in this complexity that its uniqueness lies: Jerusalem offers not a romanticized fairy tale, but an immersion in the historical and spiritual "depth" of the Christmas event, experienced in the very city that became the scene of subsequent biblical events. It is Christmas without snow and trees, but with stone, the flame of lamps, the smell of frankincense, and intense prayer at the main shrines of Christianity, where every stone remembers millennia of faith and disputes. It shows how the sacred event continues to live and share in the very center of the world, remaining a source of hope and a point of intersection of many paths.


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Weihnachten in Jerusalem // Berlin: German Digital Library (BIBLIO.COM.DE). Updated: 13.12.2025. URL: https://biblio.com.de/m/articles/view/Weihnachten-in-Jerusalem (date of access: 26.05.2026).

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