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Tag Archives: Scottish Reformation
Spirit of Christmas
Every Christmas season we are told to believe in the Spirit of Christmas, and as Christians we try to personalize this spirit as the Holy Spirit. But it’s not. It’s make-believe. The pagan’s inform us: “Take the spirit of Christmas … Continue reading
Posted in Babylon, Chanukah, Christmas
Tagged 1605 Christmas tree, A Visit from Saint Nicholas, Acts 15 Apostolic Decree, and love of children, Apis, “BE” ticket, Babylonian Tammuz, ban of Roman holidays, believe, Bishop Nicholas of Myra in 4th century, Bishop of Myra, Black Jack, Black Man, Black Peter, Catholic Church, Catholic Encyclopedia, Catholicism, Christ’s birth, Christianity, christmas, Christmas European folklore, Christmas golden calf, Christmas golden calf of America, Christmas History, Christmas in Scotland, Christmas Origins, Christmas outlawed in Scotland, Christmas Season, Christmas tree, Clement Clarke Moore, Clement Moore professor of Oriental languages, David Calderwood, devil lives in far north, Devil's nickname Old Nick, doctrine of infallibility, eating the fly agaric mushroom, Essential Commandments for ALL Believers, Father Christmas, fertility cult, Fort Collins Symphony Guild’s Christmas Concert, generosity, George Otis Jr., God's Kingdom, golden Christmas, great reindeer spirit, holiness, holy, Holy Spirit, idolatry, Illustrated London Times, Jeffrey Burton Russell, Jesus reason for season, John Calvin, John Knox, John Matthews, King James of England, King of kings, Knox’s History, make-believe, Martin Luther Christmas, miracles, mixture of Christmas, Old Nick, Old St. Nick, origins of Christmas, pagan Christmas, Phrygian Attis., Prince Albert, Protestant Reformation, purification, Queen Victoria, reformation, Reformation hits holiday, returning of the sun, Roman holidays, Roman Saturnalia, Saint Nicholas, Santa Claus, Santa Claus sleigh, Santa descend chimney, Santa fill stockings, SANTA-TIZING: What’s wrong with Christmas and how to clean it up, SANTATIZING, Satan, Satan as Santa, Satan’s Grotto, Saturn, Saturnalia, Scottish Reformation, shamans, shamans midwives of the sun, Sinter Class, sola scriptura, Spirit of Christmas, Spirit of Christmas Rejoicing, Strasbourg in Alsace, Syre Christemas, Tammuz, Teutonic, The Night Before Christmas, The Polar Express movie, The Prince of Darkness, The Twilight Labyrinth, totem figure Santa Claus, tribal shaman, true spirit of Christmas, Truly Believe, Twas the Night Before Christmas, Victorian Christmas, Where Christmas Comes From, Winter Solstice, worship of Saturn, yurt
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Christmas Outlawed in Scotland
Scots… not only thrifty, but zealous. William Wallaces… the lot of them. We can trace back our modern “War on Christmas” to the height of The Reformation. The year was 1583. The culprit was a passionate kilt-laden people who had … Continue reading
Posted in Christmas
Tagged American Christmas, anti-Christmas, ban on Roman Holidays, Battle for Christmas, brazen serpent, Calvinist, Christian Christmas, christmas, Christmas Day, Christmas History, christmas nostalgia, Christmas Origins, Christmas outlawed in America, christmas over centuries, Church of Scotland, David Calderwood, English Civil War, five-shilling penalty, Geneva, height of The Reformation, John Calvin, John Knox, King Edward VI, Martin Luther, Mary, Mary Tudor, Oliver Cromwell, pagan Christmas, Presbyterianism, Protestant Reformation, Puritanism, Puritans, Queen of Scots, Reformed theology, reformers, regulative principle of worship, rise of capitalism, rise of democracy, rise of individualism, Roman holidays, Roman superstition and idolatry, Scotland, Scottish Reformation, sola scriptura, The Reformation, The Scottish Christian, War on Christmas, William Wallace
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Christmas Outlawed in England
Although Oliver Cromwell is England’s poster boy for their banishment of Christmas, it was actually the Puritan Parliament that clamped down on the celebration for approximately 16 years from 1644-1660. Perhaps Cromwell’s sympathetic heart and actions were read more than … Continue reading
Posted in Christmas
Tagged anti-Christmas, Banishment of Christmas, Battle for Christmas, birth of Jesus, Christ-tide, christmas, Christmas ban, Christmas excess, Christmas Outlawed, Christmas outlawed in America, Christmas outlawed in England, christmas over centuries, Cromwellian, Directory of Public Worship, drunkenness, English Christmas, English Civil War, English Parliament, English Puritans, gambling, gluttony, holidays, Holy Days, John Knox, King Charles I, King Charles II, misrule, old english christmas, Oliver Cromwell, pro-Christmas, promiscuity, Protestant Reformation, Puritan Parliament, Scottish Presbyterians, Scottish Reformation, St. Margaret’s Church, The Reformation, Twelve Days of Christmas, War on Christmas, William Laud
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Christmas Outlawed in America
Hand over the candy cane, and place your hands behind your head. No, I’m not describing a scene from Bad Santa – the fourth best-selling feature film Christmas DVD of all time according to Home Media Magazine research 2000-2008 (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q1MHXYx2820). … Continue reading
Posted in Christmas
Tagged 1659-1681, American Christmas, Ban on Christmas, Baptists, Bible, Bible sole authority, Boston, Chirstmas illegal, Christian Christmas, christmas, Christmas ban, Christmas banned, Christmas Day, Christmas History, Christmas Origins, Christmas Outlawed, Christmas outlawed in America, christmas over centuries, Christmas Season, co-opted midwinter, December 25th, disproval of Christmas, early church fathers, education in Puritan, first American Christmas, great hope of the gospel of the kingdom of Christ, Harvard, invented by man, John Calvin, John Knox, John Winthrop, King Edward VI, Mary Dyer, Massachusetts Bay Colony, Methodists, more righteous society in the New World, New England, New Town College, not prescribed by the Bible, pagan, pagan Christmas, Pilgrims, Presbyterians, Protestant Reformation, purify, purify Christmas, Puritanism, Puritans, Quakers, Roman holidays, Scottish Reformation, Sir Edmund Andros, sola scriptura, The Reformation, War on Christmas, William Bradford, Winter Solstice
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