10 Texts for Christmas Day


It is my pattern to preach a text on Christmas Day at our special morning service. Since 2007 I have done this ten times. Two of these Christmas Days were Sundays so there was no special service and once I preached in Aberystwyth and someone else was here. I preached Luke 2:19 on two occasions. These are the ten
  1. Matthew 1:21 She will give birth to a son, and you are to give him the name Jesus, because he will save his people from their sins.
  2. John 17:18 As you sent me into the world, I have sent them into the world.
  3. Luke 2:19 But Mary treasured up all these things and pondered them in her heart.
  4. John 3:16 For God so loved the world that he gave his one and only Son, that whoever believes in him shall not perish but have eternal life.
  5. 1 John 1:1-3 That which was from the beginning, which we have heard, which we have seen with our eyes, which we have looked at and our hands have touched - his we proclaim concerning the Word of life. The life appeared; we have seen it and testify to it, and we proclaim to you the eternal life, which was with the Father and has appeared to us. We proclaim to you what we have seen and heard, so that you also may have fellowship with us. And our fellowship is with the Father and with his Son, Jesus Christ.
  6. Luke 1:32 He will be great and will be called the Son of the Most High. The Lord God will give him the throne of his father David.
  7. Job 42:11 All his brothers and sisters and everyone who had known him before came and ate with him in his house. They comforted and consoled him over all the trouble the LORD had brought upon him, and each one gave him a piece of silver and a gold ring.
  8. Hebrews 1:1-4 In the past God spoke to our ancestors through the prophets at many times and in various ways, 2 but in these last days he has spoken to us by his Son, whom he appointed heir of all things, and through whom also he made the universe. 3 The Son is the radiance of God’s glory and the exact representation of his being, sustaining all things by his powerful word. After he had provided purification for sins, he sat down at the right hand of the Majesty in heaven. 4 So he became as much superior to the angels as the name he has inherited is superior to theirs.
  9. Philippians 2:6, 7 Who, being in very nature God, did not consider equality with God something to be used to his own advantage; rather, he made himself nothing by taking the very nature of a servant, being made in human likeness.
  10. John 1:14 The Word became flesh and made his dwelling among us. We have seen his glory, the glory of the one and only Son, who came from the Father, full of grace and truth.
(Before 2007, I also preached Titus 3:4, Luke 2:30, Hebrews 2:10-18 and Luke 2:14)

10 Ingredients and more in a Christmas fruitcake as told by Truman Capote


In Truman Capote's short story Buddy makes fruitcakes with his cousin and best friend. He likes the buying part best and lists the ingredients.
  1. Cherries
  2. and citron
  3. ginger
  4. and vanilla
  5. and canned Hawaiian pine-apple
  6. rinds
  7. and raisins
  8. and walnuts*
  9. and whiskey
  10. and oh, so much flour, butter, so many eggs, spices, flavourings: why, we'll need a pony to pull the buggy home.
*This looks like a slip as they spend time hunting for pecans earlier on.

Jesus Christ - Christmas song by The Monkees

Originally done by Big Star this one is on the final Monkees album Christmas Party (2018)

Snow Scene in the South of France Joséphine Bowes, c.1867


 

Breton Village in the Snow Gaugin 1894

 


10 Things Buddy's cousin did according to him (& Truman Capote)


In the Truman Capote short story "A Christmas memory" Buddy says of his older cousin and friend
"Here are a few things she has done, does do:

  1. killed with a hoe the biggest rattlesnake ever seen in this county (sixteen rattles),
  2. dip snuff (secretly),
  3. tame hummingbirds (just try it) till they balance on her finger,
  4. tell ghost stories (we both believe in ghosts) so tingling they chill you in July,
  5. talk to herself,
  6. take walks in the rain,
  7. grow the prettiest japonicas in town,
  8. know the recipe for every sort of old time Indian cure, including a magical wart remover." We know too
  9. she always spends thirteenths in bed and
  10. puts whisky in her cakes

10 Things Buddy's cousin did not do according to him (& Truman Capote)


  1. In addition to never having seen a movie,
  2. she has never: eaten in a restaurant,
  3. travelled more than five miles from home,
  4. received or sent a telegram,
  5. read anything except funny papers and the Bible,
  6. worn cosmetics,
  7. cursed,
  8. wished someone harm,
  9. told a lie on purpose,
  10. let a hungry dog go hungry.

Seasonal Quiz 06 (Pantos) Oh yes it is


1. Which word is from a Greek word meaning ‘we can act anything’?
A. Panettone B. Viscum album C. Pantomime

2. What is odd about the principal boy and the dame in a pantomime?
A. There are traditionally age limits for both partsB. The principal boy is a female actor and the dame is a male actor
C. The principal boy and the dame must always wear red

3. In the Pantomime ‘Jack and the Beanstalk’, Jack receives beans in exchange for what?
A. Working in a field B. A golden goose C. His Mother’s Cow

4. Which Pantomime features the character Maid Marion?
A. Babes in the Wood B. Mother goose C. Puss in boots

5. In the pantomime Aladdin what is the name of Aladdin’s brother?
A. Wishee Washee B. Jafar C. The genie

6. In traditional pantomime, who is the sweetheart of Harlequin?
A. Pierrot B. Columbine C. Pulcinella

7. In which Christmas pantomime does Buttons appear?
A. Aladdin B. Beauty and the beast C. Cinderella

8. Which pantomime character marries Alice Fitzwarren?
A. The beast B. Ali Baba C. Dick Whittington

9. Ali Baba and the Forty Thieves, Sinbad The Sailor and Aladdin all derive from which collection of Middle East tales?
A. The Golden Bough B. The Arabian Nights C. Palgrave's Golden Treasury

10. The character "Mother Goose" first appeared in panto in 1806-07. It starred a famous clown. His surname is the same as that of the royal family of Monaco. Who was he?
A. Francesco Caroli B. Joseph Grimaldi C. Robert Armin

11. What is the name of the father of Cinderella and The Ugly Sisters?
A. Archduke Tremaine B. Baron Hardup C. Count Uppe

12. Fe Fi Fo Fum I smell the blood of an Englishman is a classic line from which pantomime?
A. Puss in boots B. Jack and the Beanstalk C. Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs

13. Which traditional pantomime features a character called Dandini?
A. Aladdin B. Babes in the wood C. Cinderella

14. What name is given to the lead male role in a pantomime, usually played by a woman?
A. Lead person B. Principal girl C. Principal Boy

15. What does Cinderella’s Fairy Godmother turn into a coach?
A. Pumpkin B. Marrow C. Squash

16. What told Dick Whittington to ‘turn again’?
A. The clock in the crocodile B. The Bells of London C. The River Thames

17. What is the occupation of the Seven Dwarves who befriend Snow White?
A. Carpenters B. Farmers C. Miners

18. In which pantomime would you meet a ticking crocodile?
A. Dick Whittington B. Peter Pan C. Mother goose

19. In which year was the word pantomime first used for a stage performance in Britain?
A. 1717 B. 1817 C. 1917

20. What is the name of Aladdin's mother?
A. Jasmine Agrabah B. Morgiana Ali C. Widow Twankey

Key; CBCAABCCBB
BBCCABCBAC

Seasonal Quiz 05


1. The Little match girl is the sad story of a destitute barefoot girl selling matches on a cold New Year's eve. She lights the matches to warm herself and sees visions, including a luxurious holiday feast and an amazing Christmas tree. Who wrote it?
A. The Brothers Grimm B. Hans Christian Anderson C. Charles Dickens

2. "I heard the bells on Christmas Day Their old familiar carols play." Who wrote the poem Christmas bells?
A. Charles Dickens B. Clement C Moore C. William Wadsworth Longfellow

3. Who died on December 25, 1977?
A. The singer Dean Martin B. The actor Charlie Chaplin C. The singer Johnny Ace

4. Who said "The only real blind person at Christmas-time is he who has not Christmas in his heart."
A. Charles Dickens B. Stevie Wonder C. Helen Keller

5. In what year was Rudolf the red nosed reindeer invented (by Robert L May)?
A. 1939 B. 1946 C. 1955

6. In the song on the first day of Christmas how many geese a laying did my true love send to me?
A. Six B. Seven C. Eight

7. What does Schlafe in himmlischer Ruh mean?
A. Late in time he comes B. Sleep in heavenly peace C. He hath opened the heavenly door

8. Who said "I stopped believing in Santa Claus when I was six. Mother took me to see him in a department store and he asked for my autograph."
A. Shirley Temple B. Oprah Winfrey C. Elizabeth Taylor

9. What was Scrooge's first name?
A. Ezekiel B. Everard C. Ebenezer

10. What happened for the last time in England on a Christmas Day in 1960?
A. TV closed down for the day B. There was a full postal service C. Professional football teams played

Answers: BCBCAABACC

The Dawn of Grace by Sixpence None The Richer


The Dawn of Grace is a Christmas album by alternative rock and indie pop band Sixpence None the Richer. It was released on October 14, 2008.
Produced by Steve Hindalong, it consists of eight traditional Christmas songs, including "Angels We Have Heard on High" and "Silent Night", featuring guest vocalist Dan Haseltine of Jars of Clay, and two original Sixpence Christmas tunes called "The Last Christmas" and "Christmas for Two".
The subtitle on the cover reads: A Collection of Original and Traditional Christmas Songs.
No singles were released from the album but two animated music videos were released for "Angels We Have Heard on High" (see below) and "Silent Night (https://youtu.be/N6ml_YbgJsQ).
The album reached No. 47 on the US Christian Album Chart. After spending four years apart, the band reunited for this album.
Track listing
"Angels We Have Heard on High" — 4:15
"The Last Christmas" (Matt Slocum, Steve Hindalong) — 3:12
"O Come, O Come, Emmanuel" — 3:06
"Silent Night" (featuring Dan Haseltine of Jars of Clay) — 4:28
"Riu Riu Chiu" — 3:06
"Carol of the Bells" — 2:24
"Christmas Island" (Lyle Moraine) — 2:33
"River" (Joni Mitchell) — 3:57
"Christmas for Two" (Leigh Nash, Kate York) — 3:09
"Some Children See Him" (Alfred Burt) — 4:14


10 Ways to say Happy Christmas




  1. Nadolig Llawen - Welsh
  2. Feliz Navidad – Spanish
  3. Feliz Natal – Portuguese
  4. Joyeux Noël – French
  5. Buon Natale – Italian
  6. Frohe Weihnachten – German
  7. Prettige Kerstdagen – Dutch
  8. God Jul - Swedish/Norwegian
  9. Krismasi Njema - Swahili
  10. Mele Kalikimaka - Hawaiian

Even More Christmas Jokes

Why does Santa have three gardens?
So he can ’ho ho ho’!

What’s the first thing Santa’s little helpers learn in school?
The elf-abet

Bob Phillips speaks of the three stages of man at Christmas:
1. You believe in Father Christmas
2. You don't believe in Father Christmas
3. You are Father Christmas

Christmas really is a magical time of year. We just watched all our money magically disappear.

What did the ewe say to her lambs for Christmas?
Fleece Navidad!

What do dogs say for Christmas?
Fleas Navidad.

What’s the difference between knights and reindeer?
You see knights slaying dragons and you see reindeer draggin sleighs.

Mild at Christmas


I read these lines in a novel some time ago

"It was one of those mild indefinite days, which we now associate with Christmas in England, a day which had in its clouded sunlight nothing of autumn and nothing of winter, but seemed rather to suggest the spring — a feeble spring seen in a looking-glass. ... These meteorological reflections of mine were prompted entirely by the feeling that I was perhaps wearing too thick an overcoat. ..."

Sounds bang up to date? This C H B Kitchin in Crime at Christmas first published in 1935!
Apparently, the idea of Christmas being snowy can be traced back to the fact that eight of Charles Dickens' first Christmases were white. It is suggested that he associated snow and Christmas in his successful Christmas novellas and we all followed suit.

In Deep Winter Drasche-Wartinberg


This is In Deep Winter by German artist Richard Freiherr von Drasche-Wartinberg (1850-1923)

Seasonal Quiz 04 (12 days of Christmas)


1. In the song `The Twelve Days Of Christmas` what did my true love give to me on the 12th day?
A. Lords a-leaping B. Pipers piping C. Drummers drumming

2. When do `The Twelve Days Of Christmas` traditionally begin and end?
A. Dec 25-Jan 5 B. Dec 14-25 C. Dec 21--Jan 1

3. In `The Twelve Days Of Christmas`, what were there two of?
A. French Hens B. Turtle Doves C. Gold Rings

4. What type of bird features on the seventh day of Christmas in the song `The Twelve Days Of Christmas`?
A. Goose B. Swan C, French Hen

5. According to the song `The Twelve Days of Christmas`, how many gifts in total did my true love give to me?
A. 364 B. 365 C. 366

6. In the song `The Twelve Days Of Christmas`, how many people are mentioned among the gifts?
A. 42 B. 50 C. 61

7. In `The Twelve Days Of Christmas`, which gifts represent the six days of creation?
A. Geese a-laying B. Maids a-milking C. Lords a-leaping

8. True or false? The French word for partridge is perdrix so the opening line could be a partridge, une perdrix.

9. In the song `the twelve days of Christmas`, what did my true love send to me on the ninth day?
A. Maids a-milking B. Lords a-leaping C. Ladies dancing

10.  In the song `the twelve days of Christmas` as it is presently sung, how many birds are there?
A. 31 B. 23 C. 18

11. True or false? The total cost of all the items has gone up from £7,662.62 ($12,623.10) in 1984 to £25,185.72 ($33,862.18 ) in 2020.

12. The song is French in origin. In what year was it first published in English?
A. 1680 B. 1780 C. 1880

Key: CABBABATCBTB

10 Instances of the Jingle Bells Motif in Popular Music


1. Joni Mitchell River (Beginning and Throughout Piano)
2. Nat King Cole Christmas Song (end Guitar)
3. T Rex Xmas Riff (Throughout Piano)
4. Kate Rusby (While shepherds watch) Cranbrook (End Brass band)
5. Beatles Another Christmas Beatles Record 1964 (Beginning Kazoo)
6. Trans-Siberian Orchestra Siberian Sleighride (Beginning Guitar)
7. Bruce Springsteen Santa Claus is coming to town (End Piano)
8. Stan Freberg Green Christmas (End Medley Sung)
9. Tijuana Brass America (Beginning Trumpet)
10. Jingle Bell Rock Bobby Helms (Beginning Guitar)

Christmas Convictions

(This article was published in the December 2012 edition of Grace Magazine)

Christmas Convictions
Gary Brady
No not the results of the government's latest drink driving offensive but a look at one man's personal convictions about celebrating Christmas
I am sometimes involved in interviews at a theological college. We ask most of the questions but at the end they can ask what they want. I remember an occasion when one student asked about celebrating Christmas and Easter. He had come to the conviction this is something he did not want to be involved in and knowing that not all Christians take the same view he wanted to flag up his viewpoint. We assured him it would be no problem.
He is not alone in his convictions. I know of a minister with similar convictions who regularly goes on holiday at this time of year knowing that most of the church take a different approach to the season. The late Professor John Murray of Westminster Theological Seminary, Philadelphia, apparently used to really enjoy having the place to himself each December 25, which was for him an ordinary working day.
At the other extreme are Christians who keep Christmas as enthusiastically as anyone. Some will have a crib in their front room, pipe endless Christmas carols through the house and send cards with nativity scenes and texts. Some even talk of celebrating Christ's birthday and the idea of not being in church on Christmas day of all days makes them rather nervous.
What about you? Did you tut a little when you saw that the magazine theme was a Christmas one? Or were you pleased that the subject has been raised again? Whatever your reaction you need to hold firm convictions on this vexed subject but you need to hold them with grace, recognising that not all will hold the same convictions as you do.
What I want to do here is to set out my own convictions so that if you are undecided on the issue it may help you to come to firm convictions, which we all need, and if you are decided you will have a good opportunity to test your convictions and consider whether there might be need for change.

Conviction 1 The New Testament does not require believers to keep any particular festival
Talking about Jewish customs in Colossians 2:16 Paul says do not let anyone judge you by what you eat or drink, or with regard to a religious festival, a New Moon celebration or a Sabbath day. In Romans 14 he says (6, 7a) One man considers one day more sacred than another; another man considers every day alike. Each one should be fully convinced in his own mind. He who regards one day as special, does so to the Lord.
Obviously the Lord's Day is to be kept special as it is part of the moral law but with everything else, it is up to the individual. If you wish to celebrate Passover or Israeli independence or your birthday or Christmas or (to a limited extent) Ramadan for that matter, you are free to do so.

Conviction 2 Christmas or the midwinter festival as some want us to call it is a pagan festival
It is certainly possible that Jesus was born on December 25 or thereabouts but the truth is that we do not know, we cannot know and we do not need to know if that is so. It is true that large numbers of people celebrate his birthday at this time of the year but that is undeniably tied into the pre-Christian traditions that existed in communities in the northern hemisphere long before they heard the gospel.
Wherever Christians have gone, they have attempted to transform pagan customs into something more Christian. There is some evidence, for example, that Boniface the sixth century missionary to the Germans tried to stop pagan tree worship but still encouraged the custom of cutting down a fir tree and bringing it into the house in winter.
We may feel that pagan customs are better abandoned rather than adapted but the fact is that year by year we are confronted by pagan traditions, often with but increasingly without a Christian veneer, and we need to decide how to react. To do so we must try not to confuse what is allowable for a Christian to do with what it is necessary for him to do. It is allowable for a Christian to put a tree in his house and decorate it or eat plum pudding or wear a paper hat and blow a party puffer. It is allowable for him to celebrate Christ's birth with songs and readings and sermons any day of the year. None of these things are necessary for him to do.

Conviction 3 Christmas or the midwinter festival is a good idea for many
If you live in the northern hemisphere, winter is long and dreary. Splitting it up with a celebration in the middle makes good sense psychologically. If at the same time lots of people want to say it is a time to celebrate Christ's birth then rather than complaining about it, take advantage of the opportunity to talk about his birth, his life and his death too and how to come to him.
Having said that it is a pagan festival, if we are going to celebrate it then we must nevertheless be careful to celebrate it in a Christian way. Can we justify the amount we are spending albeit on other members of the family? Is slumping in front of the TV for more than a few hours a good idea? What about all that food and drink – is it right to so indulge? Are we just being swept along with it all and not thinking about how to glorify God? These are the sorts of questions to ask.
More positively, many will want to go further and not simply seek to shun the commercialised and pagan Christmas that is so common but really celebrate the fact of our Saviour's birth. When he saw Christmas trees Luther would famously speak about how Jesus the Light of the World has come into this dark world. That fact beats anything the world has to offer.

Conviction 4 No celebration should be allowed to unduly interfere with the Lord's Day
I do not know how you celebrate Christmas Day. For many people it includes a number of things that they would not normally do on the Lord's Day. It is important not to let anything interfere with keeping the Lord's Day, as far as possible and so when Christmas Day falls on a Sunday, as it will this year, it is wise for those who mark it to think ahead and consider how best they can handle possible conflicts. For many of us, it will be wisest if, this year at least, we do many of the things that we normally do on December 25 the day before or the day after.

10 Surprising Facts About Snow


Radio 4 say It’s cold, it falls from the sky and we love it. But how much do you really know about "white rain"? As Snow – the new Book of the Week by Marcus Sedgwick – comes to Radio 4, we present a few little known facts… (to which I have added one more to make 10 - perhaps the most interesting one)

1. There Was Once an Entire ‘Land of Snow’
Don’t get too excited, it’s just Iceland. Yes, our favourite country that Björk was born in was initially dubbed Snowland (Snæland) by Naddoddur Ástvaldsson, the snappily named Norseman who discovered the country, accidentally, around 800 AD. The first Viking to go to Iceland on purpose was Flóki Vilgerðarson, who was dubbed "Raven-Flóki" Vilgerðarson for his unusual practice of taking ravens with him on voyages for navigational purposes. Despite his pioneering avian directional techniques, in the 9th century he reached the country, nearly died, and quickly left again. But not before he called it Iceland. The name stuck - the way ice does sometimes. One organisation who would love the country to return to their previous Snowland moniker is Iceland – the frozen food people. They are currently wrangling with the Icelandic government over use of the name.
2. Cocaine Was Used To Treat Snow Blindness
Everyone knows about the remarkable Ernest Shackleton and his almost disastrous Nimrod Expedition to the South Pole. But what isn’t readily reported are the contents of his medical kit, which reads more like a rambunctious weekend in Ibiza than an esteemed adventurous endeavour. As well as lashings of whisky given liberally to the crew, suspected diarrhoea was to be combated by a substance containing a mixture of "chalk ground up with opium". Cases of colic were to be treated with a tincture made up of chilli powder and cannabis, while those stricken with snow blindness would have cocaine dripped directly into the eye. It may not have worked, but it must have been the most convivial antarctic expedition going.
3. Most Snowflakes Aren’t Symmetrical
As we all know, not everything we were taught in school was 100% correct and this is true of snow. From day one we had it pounded into us that no two snowflakes are alike and that they are all hexagonal and symmetrical. Turns out this was a ruse adopted by lazy primary school teachers who wanted to keep us all busy with pieces of paper and safety scissors. Destroying all those childhood dreams is Professor Kenneth G Libbrecht who has compiled The Field Guide to Snowflakes, specifically for all the snowflake collectors out there (you will need a fridge). He has surmised that flakes come in all shapes and sizes: pointy ones, triangular ones, 12-sided ones and, mainly, lumpy ones.
4. Snow Isn’t White Either
Because scientists just love messing with our heads, various random eggheads have also declared that snow isn’t actually white. Even though it is called "the white stuff", "white glory" or "cold milky joy". Snow is actually translucent, with the light reflecting off it making it appear white. The many (often lumpy) sides of the snowflake scatters the light in many directions, diffusing the whole colour spectrum. Though dust or cryophilic fresh-water algae can colour it pink, orange or blue. Pink snow can be found at high altitude and was referred to as Watermelon Snow in the early writings of Aristotle.
5. Blizzards Are More Complicated Than You Think
When there’s a mild coating of sleet on the bonnet of the Mondeo, most people will understandably start impulsively hoarding dry goods, dust off the generator and begin to scream "BLIZZARD, BLIZZARD!" at all and sundry. But chances are it’s not actually a blizzard. Technically snowfalls have to adhere to a strict set of stipulations to qualify. Wind speeds have to reach a healthy 30 mph or more, and visibility must be reduced to 200 metres or less. Anything less than 30 mph or with visibility over 200 metres just WISHES it was a blizzard.
6. One City Tried To Outlaw Snow
After frequent mounted attacks from the white stuff every winter, the city of Syracuse in New York finally decided that enough was enough. During the winter of 1991/1992, they suffered a record snow deluge of more than 162.5 inches which, we can all agree, is a lot. Thoroughly sick of the tyranny of ploughs and gritting, the local council decreed: "Be it resolved, on behalf of the snow-weary citizens of the city of Syracuse, any further snowfall is expressly outlawed in the city of Syracuse until December 24, 1992." Mother Nature, who appears to have a sense of humour after all, then deposited EVEN MORE snow during the next winter with a whopping 192.2 inches cursing the beleaguered town. The moral? Snow knows no laws and laughs in the face of legislation.
7. Some People are Scared of Snow
Turns out that Chionophobia is not a fear of chins. It is in fact a fear of snow. The fact that this is an article about snow might have tipped you off. It’s claimed that famous explorer Scott of the Antarctic almost certainly didn’t suffer from this condition.
8. For the First Eight Years of Charles Dickens' Life, Every Christmas Was a White Christmas
As a nation we are obsessed with the notion of a White Christmas, in part because of that song. But also due to the fact Charles Dickens seemed to insist that snow blanketed every urchin in old London town during the month of December. Dickens was born at the tail end of the period known as the "Little Ice Age" which stretched from around 1550 to 1850 during which time a colder climate endured. So Little Charlie D grew up literally caked in snow. But if we define a "white Christmas" as one where snow is actually lying on the ground, they are quite a rare occurrence with only four happening during the last century.
9. There’s a Reason It Seems Quieter After Snow
Fresh, lovely, fluffy ducking-like snow that has freshly fallen absorbs sound waves, giving everything a seemingly hushed and delightful ambience. Perfect for ice-based horror movies such as The Shining, Murder at the Ice Hotel or The Unwrappening. But be warned. If the snow melts and then refreezes as ice, it can reflect sound waves making sound travel further and clearer. So snow can make things both quieter and louder. You don’t get these problems with hail.
10. Snowflakes can be alike
A commonly heard statement about snow is that no two snowflakes are ever alike. However, in 1988 Nancy Knight (USA), a scientist at the National Centre for Atmosphere Research in Boulder, Colorado, USA, found two identical examples while studying snow crystals from a storm in Wisconsin, using a microscope.

10 Seasonal Traditions that are perhaps not so old


"It's a long Christmas tradition" we are often told but some Christmas traditions are perhaps not as old as you think.

1. Seeing the John Lewis Christmas ad – only since 2007
2. Hearing on the radio Merry Christmas Everybody and I wish it could be Christmas every day – only since 1973
3. Watching league football on Boxing Day – only since 1960 (1971 in Scotland)
4. Watching the Queen's speech on TV – only since 1952
5. Hearing the little drummer boy carol – only since 1941
6. Hearing Rudolph the red nosed reindeer – only since 1939
7. Tuning into Carols with nine lessons from Kings – only since 1928 (the thing itself goes back to 1918)
8. Pulling Christmas crackers – only since 1847
9. Sending Christmas cards – only since 1843
10. Putting up a Christmas tree in England – only since 1840

A Forgotten Christmas Song - By the Kinks


For some reason this Christmas song by the Kinks gets very little airplay.
I guess it's not sentimental enough,

All Aboard for Christmas Thomas Kincade


This is an old video (2012). TK died at the age of 54 in 2012 and was a professing Christian.

Christmas Strikes Back

One of my sons made this last year. You might enjoy it.

Some Christmas Films 2020


Over the Christmas I didn't get to see It's wonderful life but I did watch Elf once again and enjoyed and Christmas with the Kranks, which lived up to expectations and more.

A guest introduced us to A Christmas Story from 1983, which is from a Jean Shepherd novel and is based in the 1940s. It gently tells the story of a young boy named Ralphie attempting to convince his parents, his teacher and Santa that a Red Ryder BB gun really is the perfect Christmas gift. Great nostalgia and Christmas feeling. I also caught a large chunk of the 1984 version of Dickens' A Christmas Carol with George C. Scott, Frank Finlay and Angela Pleasence. Both films have the advantage of being period pieces but inevitably it is not hard to see when they were made.

We also watched on Netflix a newer film (2019) Klaus a cartoon that gives a nice twist on the Christmas legend.

The other thing we saw over the holiday worth mentioning here is the BBC TV mini-series Black Narcissus, an adaptation of the 1939 novel by Rumer Godden in which a group of nuns face challenges in the hostile environment of a remote old Himalayan palace that they wish to make a convent. This version was in three parts. I found the first a bit slow but the second part was better and quite Christmassy with snow. Not everyone will want to watch this series due to the overall content.

Trivia: Peter Billingsley, the child star of A Christmas Story makes a cameo 20 years later as an elf at the beginning of Elf.