But I don't feel as though I am following any pagan custom if I celebrate people's birthdays. I am not doing it because I am following some ritual. I just don't see anything wrong with it.
That is hardly surprising. These things have been around so long, that most people never even ask where they came from and how God feels about them....they are too busy concentrating how 'they' feel about them. (Isa 55:8, 9)
Giving is natural....but when it is dictated by a date, you have to wonder why? God is certainly not restricted by a date, nor is he motivated to hold something good back from his human creation because it can only come on a certain date. (Matt 5:45)
Just because some pagans in the past had a ritual of some kind about births, that doesn't have anything to do with the celebrating of birthdays nowadays.
Since God's worshippers never celebrated their birthdays but it was common among pagans, (it was against God's law to imitate them. Deut 18:9-12) there can be no doubt that the practice did not infiltrate Judaism or Christianity until they had both apostatised. Jesus rejected the Jewish nation for this very reason. He said that the traditions of men had invalidated the word of God. (Matt 15:3, 6-9)
It was foretold by Jesus that "weeds" (seeds of false Christianity) would be sown by the devil in the world.
The celebration of birthdays was associated with spiritism and its customs with false worship....it still is. People just carry on the traditions without a single thought as to what they are doing or where it comes from.
The devil gets his kicks by getting sincere people to offend their God by making disobedience to God, appealing and even beneficial.....isn't that how he seduced Eve? "Is it really so?" is how he planted the seed of doubt.....the rest went to plan. He knows what works because he's had thousands of years to perfect his craft. (2 Cor 2:11)
Try thinking of it this way: If, sometime in the past, a non-Jewish and non-Christian religion used to music to worship, does that mean we have to do away with singing in various Christian Churches?
This is the flaw in the argument. It is not the giving of gifts, but the whole concept of birthday celebrations and the customs that are carried on to this day.
Why for example are there candles on a birthday cake? Why is there even a birthday cake? Why is blowing out the candles done by making a wish? Why the song, always the same one, sung to young and old, conveying the wish for a "happy birthday" regardless of whether the person has anything in their life that would make them happy?
No birth dates are recorded in scripture....not even Jesus' date of birth. That means that the date chosen to celebrate his birthday was chosen for a specific reason....it was the very date on which the sun worshipping Romans celebrated the birthday of their sun god. All the traditions....the merry making, feasting and exchanging of gifts featured in the original celebration just as they do today. Swapping the name of the "god" doesn't 'Christianize' the celebration, it paganizes Christianity.
(I know of at least one Christian denomination that doesn't use music in their services for that reason). Of course not, we sing in Church. I have been to Kingdom Hall in the past, so I know they sing during the services, as well.
Singing has always featured in God's worship. Just because the pagans also do it doesn't mean we can't. The angels were singing in heaven long before man came into existence.
The point is, it is not the singing but the origin of the songs that we have to be concerned about. Are they extolling truths about Jehovah and his son or are they promoting the paganise form of Christianity planted by God's enemy in the hope of deceiving God fearing people into performing rituals mindlessly, that are designed to lead them to unwittingly disobey their God?
Its a fine line, but Jehovah is a God who does not tolerate any deviation from his clearly stated laws. The devil is good at blurring the line between what is acceptable and what is not. Faulty perception is no excuse.
Justification is dangerous. If we cannot be faithful in the small things, there is no point in being faithful only in the big things. (Luke 16:10)