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I heard that Xmas is a secular way of "taking Christ out of Christmas". When and why did this practice originate? Is there any truth to the claim that it has a secular or "un-Christian" origin?

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    Congrats, you made the "hot network questions" list.
    – ThaddeusB
    Nov 5, 2015 at 21:28
  • That was the quickest "popular question" I've ever received. What a pleasant surprise this morning. Nov 6, 2015 at 16:02
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    You can thank Jon Ericson for fixing the hot network questions formula recently. :) And also yourself for asking a question interesting to the general public, thus keeping in on the list through sustained upvotes. P.S. It is still pretty high on the hot list, so you'll probably get a "notable question" badge out of it too.
    – ThaddeusB
    Nov 6, 2015 at 16:12
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    Ironically, since the original English name for the holiday Yule (geol in Anglo-Saxon, and cognate with Jul in several Scandinavian languages) originated from a Pagan holiday (since it was another 12-day holiday around the same time of the year), the mediaeval Xmas rather put the Christ into Christmas.
    – Jon Hanna
    Nov 6, 2015 at 17:33
  • Since I don't have enough 'reputation' to comment (joined StackExchange to write this), I just wanted to add that it is a lot faster to write "Χ" instead of "Christ" when taking notes, so when I'm in a lecture or class that mentions Christianity, Christians, etc. I will often write "Xianity" and "Xians", respectively, so as to better keep up with the speaker or professor.
    – user24260
    Nov 7, 2015 at 21:07

3 Answers 3

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Word origin

As stated in previous answers, the "X" in "Xmas" comes from the Greek word for Christ, Χριστός. However, since precision is important, I want to clarify when the abbreviation was first used in English. The 1511 date comes from the Oxford English Dictionary entry for ''Xmas'', which reads:

 1551   in E. Lodge Illustr. Brit. Hist. (1791) I. 145   From X'temmas next following.  
c1755   in B. Ward Hist. St. Edmund's Coll. (1893) 303   In ye Xmas and Whitsuntide  Vacations.  
 1799   S. T. Coleridge Let. to R. Southey 24 Dec. (1956) I. 552   My Xstmas Carol is a quaint performance.   1801   S. T. Coleridge Let. 31 Dec. (1956) II. 778   On Xmas Day I breakfasted with Davy.  
 1875   S. G. Thomas in R. W. Burnie Mem. & Lett. (1891) 55   We are not going to have any Xmas festivities or visitors of any kind.

For those unfamiliar with OED the format is original publication date, work (year of printing consulted), page, quote. As you can see, the form from 1551 is actually X'temmas. The OED has made a judgement call that this form is closely enough related to Xmas to count. The first usage of the exact letting Xmas is 1755.

This is an interesting judgement because it appears X'temmas is actually a unique formulation and not a shortening of the then-current word for Christmas, Cristmas (according to the OED entry for Christmas).

However, the twelfth century (so Old English) form of Christmas, Cristes mæsse ("Christ's mass", OED, from Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, 1134), actually does have an attested shorter form, Xp̃es. mæssan (Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, 1123). (Xp=Chi rho, the first two letters in Χριστός.) The Dictionary of Misinformation (1975), however, suggests that the Xp̃es form is actually the originally form of the word which was then lengthened into Cristes. I believe the OED agrees with that judgement by listing Xp̃es. mæssan under the Christmas entry instead of the Xmas entry.

The use of Χ as an abbreviation for Χριστός dates back to some of the earliest extant Greek manuscripts, in the third century, by the way.

So, the answer to the question is, it depends on how you consider the history of the word. In one sense, something like X mass was the original English way of rendering the holiday, which was then lengthened in the twelfth century and shortened again in the sixteenth, with the exact modern lettering not appearing until the eighteenth century. So, before 1123, around 1511, or around 1755 are all valid answers to the question as to when Xmas first appeared, depending on how one decides if something is the same word or not.

"Secular" claim origin

In contrast, the claim that Xmas is a secularization of Christmas is pretty recent. It seems likely that C.S. Lewis was the first to (indirectly) popularize the idea. In 1955, he wrote a satirical essay called "Xmas and Christmas: A Lost Chapter from Herodotus" which contrasted "Exmas," a holiday devoted to drinking and commercialism and "Crissmas," a religious holiday which just happened to occur on the same day. Although his intent was not to attack the abbreviation of "Xmas," his association of "Exmas" with commercialism seems to have entered (or captured the existing) the public conscious, as attacks on the "unholy" abbreviation start appearing in Christian publications shortly thereafter.

Conclusion

The origin of Xmas has nothing to due with secularism. The next time someone claims you are "taking the Christ out of Christmas" tell them you are actually "putting the chi back into chi-rho-mass."

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Great Britain monks used "X" for "Christ" nearly a thousand years ago. They used "X" for "Christ" while transcribing manuscripts in Old English. They did so because the Greek word for Christ, ΧΡΙΣΤΟΣ, begins with the letters "chi" (or “X”) and "rho" (or "P"). And the monks used either "X" or "XP" in writing as an abbreviation for "Christ." The first recorded use of "X" in Christmas dates back to 1551.

There is nothing wrong with using Xmas except from the confusion which may be derived from it. That is, Xmas may be less politically correct and offensive to some, so just say Christmas.

All references above originally came from Origins of the Specious: Myths and Misconceptions of the English Language I am verifying each of them.

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  • Do you mean the word "say" literally? I've never heard anyone say something sounding like "Ex-mas", so I assumed Xmas was just an abbreviation for Christmas (the same way etc. is pronounced "et cetera").
    – hypehuman
    Nov 5, 2015 at 23:04
  • @hypehuman It's fairly unusual in my experience to pronounce "Xmas" as "ex-mas" rather than "Christmas" but you do need to pronounce it literally sometimes -- for example, if you were reading this answer out loud to somebody! In Futurama, which is set a thousand years in the future, the characters call it "ex-mas" (and don't know that it was ever any different) as an example of the future not being quite the same as the present. Nov 6, 2015 at 10:18
  • While rare, and I have no explicit references, I have heard people literally say "xmas" in conversation. Personally, my mouth finds it mildly harder to say "ecksmus" than "crissmus" (the hard x vs the soft s does it), and there's no speed advantage to either. So I wouldn't expect it to catch on unless someone was trying to deliberately avoid the religious connotation -- but then you generally hear "winter holidays" or similar.
    – MichaelS
    Nov 7, 2015 at 9:38
  • Does this mean that "Xmas" should be pronounced similar to "Christmas", and only the written form is different? Just like "Ye olde ..." was pronounced similar to "The old ...", just the spelling was different?
    – vsz
    Nov 8, 2015 at 14:26
  • I would suspect that it should be pronounced "Christmas". "XMas" is just shorthand writing. Nov 11, 2015 at 3:33
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The Greek letter Χ <"chi"> is the first letter in the word Χριστός < Christ >. It was often used in the past for easier transcription of scripture (from Greek to English).

There is nothing wrong with using it, but the common mortal on the street most likely does not know its origin. Just use "Christmas".

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