HAPPY HOLYDAYS 2024

HAPPY HOLYDAYS 2024



November 28 (Thursday) – American Thanksgiving Day.

December 1 – The First Sunday of Advent of the Four Sundays before Christmas.

December 6 (Friday) – Saint Nicholas Day is a tradition Christian celebration of Pastor Nicolas of Myra who is the patron saint of children and sailors. He was known, as a role-model for gift-giving, and died December 6, 346 AD. Our English name, Santa Claus, came from Sante Klaas which is from the Dutch version of the name of Saint Nicholas, “Sinterklaas.” [So, yes, there really is a Santa Claus. His name is Pastor Nicholas of Myra and is presently in heaven.]

December 8 – The Second Sunday of Advent of the Four Sundays before Christmas.

December 15 – The Third Sunday of Advent of the Four Sundays before Christmas.

December 16-25 – Posadas Navidenas is the Hispanic Christian feast of “The Lodgings” commemorating the journey of Mary and Joseph to Bethlehem in preparation for the birth of Jesus.

December 19 (Thursday) – “Orthodox Saint Nicholas Day” is celebrated by Christians in the Easter Orthodox Church who still use the old Roman Julian Calendar and have this date of the 19th as their 6th of December. These are The Churches of Jerusalem, Russia, Serbia, Georgia, Poland, Ukraine, Ethiopia, the Republic of North Macedonia, Montenegrins, the Republic of Moldova, The Assyrian Church of the East in Iraq, Iran, Syria, Lebanon, and Turkey, and The Coptic Church in Egypt.

December 21 (Saturday) – Christian Yule is a Scandinavian Christianizing effort of taking the northern European pagan celebration of the winter solstice [first day of winter] called Yule. Their word, spelled “Jul” (or Jol or Joulua, where their j is like our y) is used for “Christmas.” This first day winter begins the time, when the day begins to become longer and longer, as the dawning light depicts the coming of Jesus.

December 22 – The Fourth Sunday of Advent the Four Sundays before Christmas.

December 24 (Tuesday) – Christmas Eve, as the traditional evening before Jesus’ birth.

December 25 (Wednesday) – Christmas Day, as the traditional date of Jesus’ birth, also called The Feast of the Nativity.

December 25 (Wednesday) – At sunset through January 2, 2025 (Thursday) at sunset are the 8 Days of Hanukkah. Hanukkah is “The Feast of Rededication” in winter that John specifically mentioned in John 10:22. See more details below.

December 26 (Thursday) – The Feast of St. Stephen and The Feast of the Holy Family of Jesus, Mary, and Joseph commemorating the love within the family of Jesus.

December 28 (Saturday) – Holy Innocents is the Christian day of solemn memory of the male children killed by King Herod in the attempt to destroy Jesus in Bethlehem.

December 31 (Tuesday) – Watch Night is the Christian occasion to thank God for bringing people safely through another year. It was developed by the African American community in the U.S. at the time of Emancipation around 1863.

– 2025 –

January 5, 2025 – Twelfth Night after Christmas Eve, the close of Christmastide.

January 6 (Tuesday) – Epiphany is the 12th day after Christmas to commemorate the visit of the magi or wise men to the Christ Child, signifying the extension of salvation to the Gentiles.

This is Dia de los Reyes, a special day among Hispanic Christians.

“The Armenian Orthodox Christmas” – Armenian Christians believe that, until the fourth century, Christ's birth was celebrated by all Christian churches on January 6th, so they still do today (using the Gregorian Calendar). Their heritage is that 2 apostles of Jesus, Bartholomew and St. Thaddeus (Jude), brought Christianity to Armenia in the first century. Because of these two founding apostles, the official name of the Armenian Church is the “Armenian Apostolic Church.”

January 7 (Wednesday) – The Nativity of Christ, as “Orthodox Christmas Day,” celebrated by Orthodox Christians who still use the old Roman Julian calendar and have this, as their “December 25.” These are the Orthodox Churches of Jerusalem, Russia, Serbia, Georgia, Poland, Ukraine, Ethiopia, the Republic of North Macedonia, Montenegrins, the Republic of Moldova, The Assyrian Church of the East in Iraq, Iran, Syria, Lebanon, and Turkey, and The Coptic Church in Egypt.

January 19 (Sunday) – “Orthodox Epiphany,” as the 12th day after Christmas, according to the old Julian calendar (“January 7”), to commemorate the visit of the magi or wise men to the Christ Child, signifying the extension of salvation to the Gentiles.

“The Armenian Christmas” in Jerusalem – Since they use the Julian Calendar Armenian, their celebration of their Christmas on January 6th is January 19th on our Gregorian Calendar. The Armenian neighbors and friends in the Old City of Jerusalem wish each other in Armenian: “Congratulations for the Holy Birth”!



Nicholas and Santa Claus



December 6 is St. Nicholas Day. Over the centuries it was a special day for giving and receiving gifts anonymously during the Christmas Season. Nicholas of Myra was born to a wealthy, elderly couple in Pataria, a city in what is now Turkey in the year 280 AD. When his parents died, he generously gave to the poor. Upon hearing a merchant had gone bankrupt and that creditors were planning on taking the merchant's daughters, Nicholas threw some money in the window at night to provide a dowry for the daughters to marry, thus saving them from a life of forced destitution, and even prostitution. When the father discovered who gave the money, Nicholas made him promise not to tell as he wanted the glory to go to God, thus inspiring the tradition of secret gift-giving during the Christmas season.

Nicholas became a pastor of the church in Myra. He became renowned for his generosity and kindness. However, he was imprisoned during Emperor Diocletian's persecution of Christians, where he languished for more than five years. Nicholas was released, when Emperor Constantine came to power. He continued his acts of generosity and kindness all the way to his death on December 6, 343 A.D. So traditionally, December 6 has been designated Saint Nicholas Day after Nicolas of Myra who is the patron saint of children and sailors and bakers and pawnbrokers [“the poor man’s bank”]. Our English name, Santa Claus, came from Sante Klaas which is from the Dutch version of the name of Saint Nicholas, “Sinterklaas,” a role-model for gift-giving.


The Christmas Story according to John

Hanukkah, The Festival of Light points to The Light of the World,

as Jesus in John 1:1-5, 14; 10:22-23


John’s Christmas story can be found in the Gospel of John, chapter 1, verses 1 & 14: “In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God…. And the Word was made flesh, and dwelt among us, and we beheld his glory, the glory as of the One of a Kind of the Father, full of grace and truth.”

There is no life without light. Jesus is the Light of the World who reveals, warms, protects, and heals. Light shines, and we either reflect His colors or do not, as we live in darkness. You can turn a light on, but you cannot turn on the darkness. The darkness is already there. The light dispels darkness, as even a distant campfire in a pitched dark night can be seen. Darkness cannot put out the light. 

The events of Hanukkah were all prophesied in Daniel 11:21-35. Jesus commemorated it in Jn. 10:22. Prophetically it foreshadows a yet future prophecy in Daniel 9:27 and Mat. 24:15. Its popularity among the early Jewish Christians may have had its date of 25th of Kislev influence the 25th of December, as a special day. It was not a part of The Mosaic Law, as were the seven religious holydays in Lev. 23, but more like our “Fourth of July, Independence Day.” In John 10:22-23 is found the earliest historical Jewish record of the celebration of Hanukkah: “It was at Jerusalem the feast of the (re)dedication, and it was winter. And Jesus was walking in the temple in Solomon's porch.” This feast or festival of Rededication, called Hanukkah begins on the 25th Kislev (Nov.-Dec.) and is celebrated for 8 days to commemorate the purification and rededication of the temple by Judas Maccabaeus on that date in 165 BC with the “9-branched” menorah (1 Maccabees 4:36-61.)

With this symbolic backdrop of the Festival of Rededication, John describes the last act of Jesus’ offer of salvation to the Jews. This feast commemorates the last great deliverance that the Jews had known with their hope of God delivering them again. He is the One who will eventually restore Israel to God’s future kingdom. He will be our hope until then. In John 10:22 Hanukkah found a place of direct reference in the Bible.

Hanukkah [or Channukah] is a nice tie-in of how God preserved the nation of Israel for Jesus’ First Coming celebrated with Christmas (in spite of Antiochus Epiphanes in Daniel 11:21-35 some 160 years earlier) and pictures prophetically of how He will do the same for Israel right before Jesus’ Second Coming (in spite of The Beast, aka Antichrist, in Daniel 11:36-39 and Revelation 13).

Christmas is a time to remember that The Light of the World is Jesus. Jesus is also prophesied, as “The Sun of Righteousness,” in Malachi 4:2 – “But to you who fear My name, The Sun of Righteousness, shall arise with healing in His wings…” His light dispels the darkness of this world. No darkness from those trying to secularize Christmas can ever put out the Light of CHRISTmas. Remember: There is a “t” and it is pronounced “Christ-mas.” 


The Armenians Christian Church


Christianity was declared as the national religion of Armenia in AD 301, making Armenia the first nation in the world to do so, before the Roman Empire did a couple of decades later. Sadly, over the centuries, especially since Islamic assaults, the Armenians have been battered like a discarded “ragdoll” with a WWJD heritage of meekness. Armenia has endured centuries of invasions and persecutions, especially Islamic, and political fragmentation, with the more commonly known “1915-1922 Armenian Genocide” of 1.5 million Armenians at the hands of the Turks, some 70% of their country’s population, worse per capita than any other genocide of the past two centuries, including the Jews of WWII. And now things are heating up against them again.

You can find some details here: https://time.com/6327596/turkey-armenia-azerbaijan-invade-united-states/ - even amid all the other momentous things happening in the Middle East to their south.

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