The holiday known as Epiphany is almost here. It is celebrated on January 6th, one day after The Twelfth Night.
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This banner is hanging in our church sanctuary right now and depicts the "epiphany" of the Magi, as they finally found the infant Jesus. His Light revealed Him to them.
In searching for information about Epiphany, I ran into many mentions of "The Twelfth Night", which is the twelfth day of Christmas. In times past, The Twelfth Night was an important holiday in England, with its own special traditions.
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Here's some info from a Twelfth Night website:
To Englishmen perhaps the best known feature of the secular festival is the Twelfth Cake. Some words of Leigh Hunt's will show what an important place this held in the mid-nineteenth century:—
“Christmas goes out in fine style,—with Twelfth Night. It is a finish worthy of the time. Christmas Day was the morning of the season; New Year's Day the middle of it, or noon; Twelfth Night is the night, brilliant with innumerable planets of Twelfth-cakes. The whole island keeps court; nay, all Christendom. All the world are kings and queens. Everybody is somebody else, and learns at once to laugh at, and to tolerate, characters different from his own, by enacting them. Cakes, characters, forfeits, lights, theatres, merry rooms, little holiday-faces, and, last not least, the painted sugar on the cakes, so bad to eat but so fine to look at, useful because it is perfectly useless except for a sight and a moral—all conspire to throw a giddy splendour over the last night of the season, and to send it to bed in pomp and colours, like a Prince.”
“Christmas goes out in fine style,—with Twelfth Night. It is a finish worthy of the time. Christmas Day was the morning of the season; New Year's Day the middle of it, or noon; Twelfth Night is the night, brilliant with innumerable planets of Twelfth-cakes. The whole island keeps court; nay, all Christendom. All the world are kings and queens. Everybody is somebody else, and learns at once to laugh at, and to tolerate, characters different from his own, by enacting them. Cakes, characters, forfeits, lights, theatres, merry rooms, little holiday-faces, and, last not least, the painted sugar on the cakes, so bad to eat but so fine to look at, useful because it is perfectly useless except for a sight and a moral—all conspire to throw a giddy splendour over the last night of the season, and to send it to bed in pomp and colours, like a Prince.”
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The Twelfth Night: The Holiday That Time Forgot
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And, last and least......my blogpost from a year ago,
Quantum Epiphany, which describes a Sunday School activity we did for Epiphany last year, and then somehow moves on to other strange ramblings......which you may not wish to read, as they are mostly random, weird thoughts........my pitiful attempt at connecting religion and science.
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Wishing you a day of enlightening epiphanies!
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12 comments:
I did not know there was a holiday! Boy, am I sheltered! Bev and I used the word when something makes sense to us and things fit into place regarding a God thought.
So I guess we were using it correctly.
Thanks for the knowledge.
Thanks for the link to Quantum Epiphany. It was an interesting read.
At our Episcopal church, the Epiphany is one of the real highlights of the year. The children put on a pageant that is charming and beautiful. I'm looking forward to it.
An award awaits you At The Farm.
Jeannelle, two very interesting posts! I'm talking about this one and the one from a year ago to which you provided a link.
Mrs. RWP grew up in the Albanian Orthodox Church in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. She says her family always celebrated January 6th as "Orthodox Christmas" so they had two Christmases each year. I think the confusion over "twelfth night" and Jan. 5 versus 6 also has something to do with the change to the Gregorian calendar from the old-style Julian calendar. It was even more confusing, I'm sure, in the sixteenth through eighteenth centuries, when some countries used one calendar and some countries used the other.
I loved your Sunday School lesson and felt I was there with the children, discovering the Nativity snow globe. And it was good that you included the dream and then returned home by another way. Very scriptural. You may have just "coincidentally" changed those three little lives forever.
Hi, Gail,
Don't feel bad.....I didn't know anything about Epiphany either, until I joined the Lutherans. Baptists didn't follow the Church year.
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Hi, sempringham,
How wonderful your church has an Epiphany pageant.....I think I'm envious. There's alot of meaning in that day.
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Hi, Gail,
Thank you.....I'm hosting a family gathering today, so will be over later.
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Hi, rhymsie,
Thanks for the tidbit of info....about the Orthodox Christmas on Jan. 6. Interesting! And, you're probably correct about the calendar disparities. We're so used to a standard clock, calendars, etc.....it wasn't always that way.
Wonderful information...another newbie for me as I had no clue that such a holiday existed. Thank you for taking the time to share this info with us.
Quantum Epiphany was the very best part.
Thanks for re-linking it, we would have missed it and it was a worthy read.
Hi, Deserthen,
I like the meaning of Epiphany.....discovering something exceptional. Thanks for stopping by.
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Hi, Reamus,
Glad you liked the Quantum Epiphany ramblings. I had completely forgotten about that part of the post.
Ooo, pretty banner! We have several advent & Christmas banners in our church, but I don't think we have any for Epiphany or of the wise men.
Hi, sugarcreekfarm,
Thanks for stopping by. Yes, we have a very talented lady in our church who makes all the lovely banners.
I like your blog
I think I come to the right place, because for a long time do not see such a good thing the!
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