The dates of celebrating Christmas — 25 December and 7 January — are a vivid reflection of deep historical and culturally-religious divisions in the Christian world. This difference is not due to different theological interpretations, but to the use of different calendars: the Gregorian (introduced by Pope Gregory XIII in 1582) and the Julian (introduced by Julius Caesar in 45 BC), which today is 13 days behind the astronomical year. Thus, 25 December by "new style" (Gregorian calendar) corresponds to 7 January by "old style" (Julian).
This is the overwhelming majority of countries in the world with Christian traditions that historically belong to the Catholic and Protestant branches of Christianity, as well as a number of Orthodox churches that have switched to the New Julian calendar (which coincides with the Gregorian until 2800).
Europe and America: Practically all countries in the European Union, the United Kingdom, the United States, Canada, Latin American countries, Australia, and New Zealand. Here Christmas is the main family holiday, combining religious content (masses, liturgies) and secular traditions (tree, gifts, Santa Claus).
Orthodox countries celebrating Christmas on 25 December:
Greece, Cyprus, Romania, Bulgaria: The local Orthodox churches of these countries switched to the New Julian calendar for movable feasts (including Christmas) in the 1920s, while retaining the Julian calendar for calculating Easter. This decision was made to synchronize with the civil calendar.
Constantinople, Alexandria, Antioch, and some other Orthodox churches also celebrate Christmas on 25 December by the New Julian calendar.
Interesting fact: In Israel, 25 December is a working day but recognized as a day off for the Christian minority. In Lebanon, where there is a significant influence of Maronite Catholics, Christmas on 25 December is a national holiday, which is unique in the Arab world.
This is primarily countries with a dominant influence of the Russian, Serbian, Georgian, Jerusalem Orthodox churches and a number of ancient Eastern churches that continue to use the Julian calendar for the entire festive cycle.
Russia: After the Soviet Russia switched to the Gregorian calendar in 1918, the Russian Orthodox Church retained the old style. 7 January is an official non-working holiday in the civil calendar of the Russian Federation.
Belarus, Ukraine: 7 January is also a national holiday. In Ukraine, the situation is complicated by the schism within Orthodoxy: the Orthodox Church of Ukraine (OCU) has also allowed celebrating 25 December since 2023, but 7 January remains the main day off.
Serbia, Montenegro, North Macedonia: The Serbian Orthodox Church adheres to the old style. Badniidan (Christmas Eve) on 6 January and Christmas on 7 January are the main family holidays.
Georgia: The Georgian Orthodox Church celebrates on 7 January.
Moldova: With a significant influence of the Romanian Orthodox Church (25 December), the country has two Christmas celebrations, but 7 January remains a day off.
Egypt, Ethiopia, Armenia: Here the tradition is different — this is the ancient Eastern (non-Chalcedonian) churches. The Coptic Orthodox Church in Egypt and the Ethiopian Orthodox Church also use their calendar cycle, and their Christmas falls on 7 January. The Armenian Apostolic Church usually celebrates Christmas on 6 January on the same day as Epiphany.
Interesting fact: In Jordan and on the Palestinian Territories (Bethlehem, Jerusalem), the Jerusalem Patriarchate conducts solemn Christmas services by the old style, 7 January. This event attracts pilgrims from all over the world and is widely covered.
In some countries with ethnically and confessionally diverse populations, both dates may be days off, reflecting the policy of respecting the traditions of minorities.
Bosnia and Herzegovina: In different regions (Republika Srpska and Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina), both 25 December (for Croatian Catholics and part of Bosniaks) and 7 January (for Serbian Orthodox) are days off.
Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan: 7 January is a national holiday, considering the significant proportion of ethnic Russians, Ukrainians, and Belarusians. 25 December is a working day.
Ukraine (de facto): After granting the right to celebrate 25 December, a practice of "two Christmases" is forming in the country, especially in regions with different confessional composition.
The date also affects the ritual aspect.
For those celebrating on 25 December: The central event is Christmas Eve on 24 December (evening mass, family dinner). The main winter character is Santa Claus (or local analogs), giving gifts on the night of the 25th.
For those celebrating on 7 January: The culmination is the night festive liturgy from 6 to 7 January. A strict fast is required until the first star appears in the evening of 6 January, after which a festive meal is served (in Russia — with kutia). Gifts are more associated with New Year and Grandfather Frost, who comes on 31 December. Christmas itself has a more church-family character, less commercialized.
Conclusion
The division in the dates of celebrating Christmas is not just a calendar anomaly, but a living historical monument reflecting the paths of civilization development, church decisions, and national identity policy. The map of celebrating Christmas on 25 December and 7 January is the map of the influence of the Roman and Byzantine Empires, the map of religious reforms and cultural resistance. In a globalized world, this difference is gradually eroding (as in the case of allowing to celebrate on 25 December in Ukraine), but it continues to remain an important marker of cultural and religious belonging for millions of people. This calendar dualism vividly demonstrates how a technical solution (calendar reform) can for centuries determine the cultural landscape of entire peoples and states.
New publications: |
Popular with readers: |
News from other countries: |
![]() |
Editorial Contacts |
About · News · For Advertisers |
Digital Library of New Zealand ® All rights reserved.
2025-2026, ELIB.NZ is a part of Libmonster, international library network (open map) Preserving New Zealand's heritage |
US-Great Britain
Sweden
Serbia
Russia
Belarus
Ukraine
Kazakhstan
Moldova
Tajikistan
Estonia
Russia-2
Belarus-2