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Christmas
Christmas is the annual feast commemorating the birth of Jesus Christ, over 2000 years ago. For Christians, it is not just a single day (December 25), but an extended liturgical season of joy and celebration, involving many different symbols and traditions, special music and activities, which vary significantly among different countries and cultures. For religiously observant Christians, the Christmas Season begins at sunset on Christmas Eve, December 24, and lasts from 12 days to 40 days. In some ecclesial traditions the Christmas Season might end on January 6 (the traditional date of the Feast of the Epiphany); in others it might last until the Feast of the Baptism of the Lord (usually the Sunday after Epiphany), or might even last all the way to February 2 (the Feast of the Presentation of the Lord, 40 days after December 25). January 6, usually celebrated as Epiphany, carries different significance in various church traditions. Due to different calendars in use in various eras and locations of the church, some cultures and church traditions celebrate Christmas on January 6 (in the older Julian calendar still used as the religious calendar in Eastern Churches, January 6 corresponds to December 24 on the modern Gregorian calendar).
Although we cannot know the exact date of Jesus' birth, it has been celebrated on December 25 since the early fourth century, when most of the Roman Empire adopted the Christian religion. It replaced the mid-winter Roman festival of "the birth of the sun god" (sol invictus), celebrated just after the winter solstice.
Etymologically, the word "Christmas" derives from Old English "Cristes mæsse" (literally "Christ's festival"). It is similar to Dutch Kerstmis, but is significantly different in derivation and meaning in many other European languages: German Weihnachten ("Blessed Night"), Italian Natale, Spanish Navidad, French Noël (all ultimately derived from Latin natalis, "birth"), and Scandinavian jul (from which is derived the English yule).
The official liturgical color of the Christmas Season for most Churches is white or gold, not green and red, as many people assume because of their prevalence in secular celebrations.
Earth'n Sisters: Tiffin, Ohio
Earth 'n Sisters Pottery continues the long history of the Sisters of St. Francis of Tiffin, Ohio with the earth. As the Sisters have farmed the land for over 100 years, Sister Jane Frances Omlor forms earthen clay into original ritual pottery pieces made to enhance the spiritual. Sister Jane began her pottery business in Spencer, West Virginia in 1981. After 26 years there, Sister Jane moved back to her hometown of Tiffin Ohio. Her present studio is in the former laundry of the Sisters of St. Francis. She also teaches pottery to children and adults.
The Sisters of St. Francis of Tiffin, Ohio, were founded in 1869 by Father Joseph Bihn and Elizabeth Schaefer to care for orphans and the elderly. What began as a response to a local need became a community that continues to respond to the needs of the Church and the world. The Sisters' ministries include care of the elderly, parish ministry, health care, education, retreat work, home mission outreach, and missions in Chiapas and Cuernavaca, Mexico.
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