On the Second Day of Christmas, December 26th, the Feast of St. Stephen, Protomartyr, the key word is FORGIVENESS. In the AIC Seasonal Video series, The Twelve Days of Christmas, the theme music for the day is an adaptation of It Came Upon the Midnight Clear (Edward Hamilton Sears, 1846 A.D.).
At the Shibley household Christmas begins on Christmas Day and does not end until January 5th, Epiphany Eve. We don’t take down the tree until 1/5 and leave the lights, inside and out, working through all twelve days. I invite you to join the tradition and keep your lights burning. And please join us daily for the remainder of the Twelve Days of Christmas. Tomorrow’s theme word is PEACE.
Merry Christmas to all the followers of the Anglican Internet Church around the world. May the gracious Lord God bless you today and all the days to come.
Here’s an encore performance of Lessons & Carols for Christmas Eve with Christian art through the ages blended with Scripture readings and music in the Anglican Christmas tradition. The program has a bonus reading with voice responses from the AIC’s Antiphons for Christmas Eve which I used at my former parish.
The key phrase for Dec. 20th in the 12th C. observation, The Great “O” Antiphons, is O Radix Jesse, or Key of Jesse. It’s such a shame that the modern Church rarely uses these great teaching assets, but you can still enjoy and, hopefully, learn from them here.
I’m very pleased to announce that initial problems with producing The St. Chrysostom Hymnal in a single volume are being resolved this month. The first effort resulted in a volume far to large to transmit to our printer unless the book was separated into two volumes. The problem was resolved using file compression technology and by making the file compatible only with the most recent versions of Adobe Acrobat.
For Christmas Eve, a modern version of the evocative traditional English style of carols and lessons can be watched using the link below. It picks up where the Great “O” Antiphons ended with a series of prayers and responses for Christmas Eve:
One of the best programs the AIC has created is the series devoted to key theme words for each of the days from Christmas Day to Epiphany Eve. Below are the links for Dec. 25th through December 31st. Next week I will post the remaining links. The series has nothing whatsoever to do with the silly song of the same name.
The 4th edition of the St. Chrysostom Hymnal is almost ready for publication. The preliminary design for the cover follows our new white on black color scheme and a quotation from St. Athanasius: “the act of singing effects harmony in the soul.”