Tammuz Day 2024 is on Tuesday, June 25, 2024: What do we actually celebrate on Christmas day?

Tuesday, June 25, 2024 is Tammuz Day 2024. Tammuz (Hebrew month) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Tammuz is the month of the sin

Sponsored Deals
Amazon Gold Box

As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases.

What do we actually celebrate on Christmas day?

The death of Tammuz on the eve of 24th Dec when the "Yule Log" (child log) is burned on the fire & next morning when the children wake up an XMAS tree has suddenly appeared & is the re-birth of Tammuz & people all bow down to it as they get their Xmas presents from under the branches. Rank paganism all dressed up to deceive & lie to children so they will carry on the worship of ha satan in place of honoring & esteeming YHVH Elohim on His Sabbaths & Feast days as prescribed in Lev 23, none of which fall on 25th Dec.

What do people celebrate on Xmas day?? LIES ALL LIES!!!!

Can I wish everyone a happy 17th of Tammuz?

Can I wish everyone a happy 17th of Tammuz?

A happy 17th of Tammuz? You do realise it is a fast day, followed by three weeks of mourning with another fast at the end of that for the commemoration of the destruction of the Temple. So, nop, don't wish me a happy 17th of Tammuz, way too inappropriate!

Feel free to give condolences or to make a statement such as "Yibaneh haMikdash bimhera b'yameinu" "May the Temple be rebuilt speedily in our days"

Mesopotamian Myth: How does Dumuzi/Dumuzid/Tammuz/ die?

Mesopotamian Myth: How does Dumuzi/Dumuzid/Tammuz/ die?

As with all myths, the one concerning Dumuzi/Dumuzid/Tammuz changes over time and culture. One version that I learned states that Tammuz was the husband of the goddess Ishtar. Ishtar decends to the underworld to see her sister Ereshkigal who rules there. Ishtar dies, and stays in the underworld for three days. On the third day she is brought back to life but may only leave on condition that she finds a substitute for herself. She returns to the world accompanied by demons who are to get the substitute. She chooses her husband Tammuz and the demons take him to the underworld. It is eventually settled that Tammuz will spend six months in the underworld and that his sister Geshtinanna will spend the other six months in the underworld.

Another version of the story has Tammuz killed by a boar. Since he is the god of fertility and the harvest, the earth dries up and animals refuse to mate. Innana again goes down into the underworld, dies, is resurrected, and succeeds in bringing Tammuz back from the underworld, but he must go back to the underworld for six months out of the year.

The story of Tammuz was used to explain the cycle of seasons the same way that the story of Persephone/Kore was used to explain it in Greek and Roman culture.

Also on this date Tuesday, June 25, 2024...