The Holiest Thing – A Guest Post

posted in: Faith | 2

the holiest thing

In case you weren’t sure…we’re actually still in the Christmas season. The twelve days of Christmas is an actual thing, except I don’t know what the partridges and lords a leaping are all about. Harry’s should receive nine ladies dancing according to the song. Lucky him. But I digress…the Christmas season on the church calendar actually does extend through January 6.

After January 6 we enter the dead zone of church holidays or Ordinary Time. 

This week I have the honor of contributing at The Glorious Table for their Orindary Time Series. I have to admit that I’m really ready to get back to ordinary time. I’m ready to get the house back in order, to put the decorations away and to get back to a normal schedule. However, I’m keeping in mind that within the ordinary we can still find the holy.

Here’s a little taste of the post from The Glorious Table

In just a few days, we will enter what is known as Ordinary Time on the liturgical calendar. Or, as I also like to call it, The In-Between-Special-Candy Season. The candy and treats that come through our house between October and New Year’s Day can get out of hand. As much as I love mini Milky Ways, pumpkin everything, cake balls crusted in crushed candy canes, and chocolate dipped [insert your favorite fruit and/or cookie here], I’m ready for a break from the sweets and overindulgences.

Click HERE to read the rest to find out what peanut butter and jelly has to do with finding the holy in the ordinary.

2 Responses

  1. Michelynn McKnight

    “Dead Zone”? Unless you are Roman Catholic or in a strongly catholic culture. Epiphany (January 6) not only celebrates the arrival of the magi (kings) with lots of King Cake, but also the beginning of the parties, balls and parades of “carnival”. While technically “Mardi Gras” and “Lundi Gras” are the Tuesday and Monday before Ash Wednesday, everything between January 6 and Ash Wednesday is carnival season (from the Latin for “farewell to the meat”) The colors of the kings are green, gold and purple – colors you will see on King Cake. If you find the hidden plastic infant in the cake, you have to bring the next cake. In South Louisiana , people often replace the red decorations from the Christmas decorations with purple … so the trees and strings of lights, etc. stay up in green, gold and purple. And all the decorations, rich food and drink disappear on Ash Wednesday.

    • Stephanie Clinton

      By Dead Zone…I mean that most mainstream Christians don’t really observe or celebrate religious holidays between Christmas day and Easter. I never participated in Ash Wednesday or Lent until I started attending our church. I didn’t even know what Maundy Thursday was before FCC! The only reason I know all about king cakes and the fun that comes with it is b/c my mom comes from Cajun country!

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