Christmastide

Posts in The Copybook tagged ‘Christmastide’

7
Christmas Bells Alfred, Lord Tennyson

The sounds of an English country Christmas helped Tennyson in his deep mourning for an old friend.

The material trappings of Christmas – the tree, the lights, the presents, the dinner and its customs – are sometimes the only things left to cling to when faith wavers, as Tennyson found, mourning his close friend Arthur Henry Hallam.

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8
Aaron’s Rod Elfric of Eynsham

The Victorian practice of hanging sugared nuts on a Christmas tree was bursting with Biblical symbolism.

Victorian Christmas celebrations included hanging nuts, typically sugared almonds, on the tree. This symbolic gesture goes back to a Christian interpretation of a passage from Numbers, which was known in England as long ago as the 10th century.

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9
How St Euphemia Saved Christmas Clay Lane

The martyr St Euphemia played a vital role in preventing the message of Christmas from being watered down.

In 314, the Roman Empiror Costantine lifted all restrictions on Christianity, but intellectuals still held the philosophy of Plato in awe. Sometimes the Greek view of the Divine – remote, impersonal, unsullied by contact with Creation – tempted Christian clergy to back-peddle on the much more characterful God of Israel, who will dare all for love.

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10
The Adoration of the Magi Clay Lane

Persian star-gazers hasten to Israel for the birth of a royal heir, but find that King Herod has had his fill of them.

According to Pliny the Elder (23-79), a Roman contemporary of St Paul, ‘magi’ were believed to be followers of Zoroaster, interpreters of dreams, worshippers of the stars and secret knowledge, not to mention conjurors and charlatans.

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11
The Martyrdom of St Stephen Clay Lane

Stephen was the first person to lose his life because he was a follower of Jesus Christ.

In about AD 34, St Stephen became the first person to be executed for his belief in Jesus Christ. Most of what is known about him comes from St Luke in his ‘Acts of the Apostles’, though Eastern tradition adds a little more.

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12
Queen Charlotte’s Christmas Tree Clay Lane

Cromwell’s killjoys almost silenced the English Christmas, but thanks to a royal family tradition the message is still being proclaimed.

England lost many long-standing folk-traditions during the republican Commonwealth (1649-1660), which banned Christmas celebrations along with music, plays and dancing. Some were reinstated after the Restoration in 1660, but there was plenty of room for fresh ideas.

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