tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6559692.post514321206937595809..comments2024-03-06T11:07:23.753-05:00Comments on Ocracoke Island Journal: SantaPhiliphttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01572532603071469799noreply@blogger.comBlogger4125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6559692.post-26418028299811090212013-12-27T09:48:44.962-05:002013-12-27T09:48:44.962-05:00Burning a Bird's Nest on the Winter Solstice i...Burning a Bird's Nest on the Winter Solstice is a Pahl family tradition, but one that just might become an Ocracoke Island tradition, and from here.....who knows!Philiphttps://www.blogger.com/profile/01572532603071469799noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6559692.post-77475351014753950212013-12-23T15:35:02.686-05:002013-12-23T15:35:02.686-05:00Thank you for the reference to the length of the C...Thank you for the reference to the length of the Christmas season. I have always considered the week before through the week after.<br /><br />However I have been trying to find an historical reference to the tradition of burning a bird's nest to no avail. I did discover a recipe for a yule log cake called a Buche de Noel. It looks good and easy enough that I just might try it for a New Year's get together. It'll be fun to try.Bear MacDonaldnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6559692.post-13057794258261002982013-12-23T08:45:19.645-05:002013-12-23T08:45:19.645-05:00From THE CATHOLIC LECTIONARY WEBSITE
by Felix Just...From THE CATHOLIC LECTIONARY WEBSITE<br />by Felix Just, S.J., Ph.D.<br /><br />When and how long is Christmas?<br /><br /> Christmas Day, liturgically called "The Solemnity of the Nativity of the Lord" in the Catholic Church, technically includes both Christmas Eve (Dec. 24, after sunset) and Christmas Day (Dec. 25) itself. For religiously observant Christians, however, Christmas is not just one day, but an entire season, lasting anywhere from 12 days to 40 days in different ecclesial traditions.<br /> In the modern secular world, Dec. 26 already begins the "after-Christmas" sales, and Christmas decorations are often removed before New Year's Day! The "Christmas Season" (for shopping, decorating, parties, music, etc.) used to begin just after Thanksgiving Day (in the United States), but now seems to begin just after Halloween (Oct. 31), if not before! When people hear about the "Twelve Days of Christmas" (or sing the song by that title), they might think it refers to the last 12 shopping days before Christmas.<br /> In most Christian traditions, however, the "Christmas Season" properly begins with Christmas Eve (after sunset on Dec. 24), while the "Twelve Days of Christmas" refers to the period from Dec. 25 to Jan. 5.<br /> In different Churches, the Christmas Season might end on Jan. 6 (the traditional date of the Feast of the Epiphany), or might last until the Feast of the Baptism of the Lord (usually the Sunday after Epiphany), or might even last all the way to Feb. 2 (the Feast of the Presentation of the Lord, 40 days after Dec. 25).<br /><br />Philiphttps://www.blogger.com/profile/01572532603071469799noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6559692.post-22595900689923132432013-12-23T08:35:02.506-05:002013-12-23T08:35:02.506-05:00Is it me or are things backward? When Dec 25 arri...Is it me or are things backward? When Dec 25 arrives does not the 12 days of Christmas begin-- I mean all the stress that can lead up to the "deadline" celebrating a Birth, I mean gee whiz it is the mass marketing retailers that have this point on their total sales chart that are group thinking everyone to buy before the deadline, --- Dec 25 comes and goes, you can still send presents, bake cookies post greeting cards in the mail I mean what the heck else is there to do in the dead of winter. the music stops in the stores I suppose but on your cd player --probably not-- and now I understand the neighbors that leave their tree up til Feb..... either they are exhausted, they forget it is there or they are some folk that get it. Sure there is Advent but how the organized religions deal with the the weeks following 12/25 escape me right now .or is it they are too busy preparing for Easter to let us contemplate the holy spiritAnonymousnoreply@blogger.com