|
|
|
Episcopal Basics: Christmas is a Season! |
| Print |
|
E-mail
|
|
Written by Wayne Floyd
|
|
Monday, December 24, 2007 |
A users' guide for Episcopalians
The Christian church calendar starts each year with the first Sunday of Advent, the season of anticipation of God’s coming in the Christ Child. Advent continues until December 25th. Christmas in the church year isn’t a day, it’s a season of celebration that only begins on Christmas Day and continues for the Twelve Days of Christmas.
The ending of the Christmas Season is the Twelfth Night celebration the evening of January 5th; the next day begins the season of Epiphany, which lasts until Ash Wednesday, which begins the season of Lent, leading up to Easter, which is also not just a day but a season of 50 days.
So savor the season. Merry Christmas for a while longer! The Wise Persons from the East, the Magi, are still on the way to Bethlehem; their arrival is part of what we celebrate on Epiphany, which means the “showing” or manifestation of Jesus as God Incarnate to all the world. Merry Christmas! And keep saying it until Epiphany!
|
|
Join the Parish Mailing List
Stay up-to-date with parish news and announcements, sign up to receive emails from the parish today.
»
Sign up now!
Blogging Thomas
|
St. Thomas' Parish at Dupont Circle - Washington, DC |
|
|
-
The Church?s Mission as Promoting Justice
[The final installment in a 4-part series by The Rev. Dr. Nancy Lee Jose, Rector, exploring the calling and mission of St. Thomas' Parish] Christians all know that Jesus taught us not just “to love God” but ?to love our neighbors as ourselves.? ?Love? here isn?t just a feeling, or a desire, or a goal. [...]
-
The Church?s Mission as Promoting Peace and Love
[The third in a 4-part series by The Rev. Dr. Nancy Lee Jose, Rector, exploring the calling and mission of St. Thomas' Parish] Talking about ?peace and love? can sound like something straight out of the hippie 1970s, easily lampooned by people who want to write off Christians as soft-hearted and soft-headed – peaceniks who [...]
-
Worship as a Laboratory for Reconciliation
[The second in a 4-part series by The Rev. Dr. Nancy Lee Jose, Rector, exploring the calling and mission of St. Thomas' Parish] ?The mission of the Church is to restore all people to unity with God and each other in Christ? (The Book of Common Prayer, page 855). At St. Thomas? Parish, the most [...]
|
|