THE IMPORTANCE OF FESTIVALS IN THE BAPTIST CHURCH
This School Based Assessment (SBA) has been conducted in accordance with the requirements for the General Proficiency Social Studies CXC Examinations – May – June 2013
Candidate’s Name: Wilkiens Martin
Teacher’s Name: Mrs Rose Edwards
School: Clement Howell High School
Centre Number:________________
Registration Number: ___________
Proficiency: General
Territory: Turks & Caicos Island
Year of Exam: 2013
Student’s Name: Wilkiens Martin
Teacher’s Name: Mrs. Rose Edwards
School: Clement Howell High School
Centre Number: __________________
Registration Number: _____________
Proficiency: General
Territory: Turks & Caicos Island
Year of Exam: 2013
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(Bill knot). The Christmas season is celebrated in different ways around the world. Elements that are common in many areas of the world are the lighting of Christmas trees, the hanging of wreaths, Christmas stocking, candy cane, exchanging of gifts, sending of Christmas cards. During Christmas, houses are nicely decorated, stores closed up very lately, many parties are going on and many churches have concerts. Christmas has a great impact on the wider society because it binds people together and let them have fun together and during that time, many non-believers take the decision to become a believer during that season. In the Baptist Church Christmas is celebrated by having a concert that based on Jesus Birth and teachings, they also prepare nice meal to share among the members of the church, they also decorate the church beautifully by hanging streamers, curtains and balloons.
The Birth of Jesus
The Season of Easter
Theme:
Celebrating the Resurrection of the Lord
Dates:
Easter Season begins on Easter Day and lasts 50 days, ending on Pentecost. Thus in 2013 it begins on 31 March 2013 and ends on 19 May 2013.
Colors:
In most churches, the decorations are white, gold, or white and gold. White represents the angels who announced the resurrection, while gold symbolizes triumph.
Easter is a Christian festival and holiday celebrating the resurrection of Jesus Christ on the third day after his crucifixion at Calvary as
Christmas is a Christian occasion that is commended on December 25 to pay tribute to the introduction of Jesus Christ or the timeframe that precedes and after this occasion. Christmas developed more than two centuries into an overall religious and mainstream festivity, fusing numerous pre-Christian, agnostic conventions into the celebrations along the way. Today, Christmas is a period for family and companions to get together and trade presents. Christmas is celebrated within the church of the Lord.
(Villalba). While some religions honor Halloween, others honor Easter. Easter is a holiday celebrated by Christian faith. Easter day represents the death of Jesus Christ and his resurrection. For Christians, Easter marks the end of Lenten fasts, which is why Easter is usually celebrated with a feast. Some Christians believe that by following the process of fasting, baptisms, and sacraments, is their way to get into heaven.
The holiday season is among us. Halloween begins in the fall when the leaves start to change colors and fall of the trees. Christmas begins in winter when the snow hits the ground and the weather gets mighty cold. Halloween is when the spookier things come out. When most people think of Halloween they think of pumpkins and candy. Christmas is a time for giving gifts and being with family. Christmas is usually associated with Santa Clause and his worker elves. Although to most people these holidays may seem very different, there are also some similarities between the two. These differences and similarities can be seen in the dressing up, the celebrations, and the giving.
Passover is one of the oldest festivals in the world. This festival falls in spring, in the first month of the Hebrew year, called Nisan (March-April), and lasts for eight days, from the fifteenth to the twenty-third. It commemorates the release of the Israelites from Egypt and the fact that God “passed over” their houses when he sought the first-born in that land.
Christians commonly celebrate the New Year January 1st, according to the Julian calendar; For orthodox Christians whom follow the Gregorian calendar New Year is marked on January 14th or sometime around that date. (Christian Observances and Rituals) Orthodox or not the New Year is a day celebrated most Christians, many attending mass. Another commonly celebrated day is, “Epiphany Sunday, commonly known as Three Kings’ Day in the United States, is on January 6. It celebrates the three wise men’s visit to baby Jesus and also remembers his baptism, according to the Christian Bible’s events. The United States (US) Virgin Islands observe the day as a public holiday.” (Epiphany in the United States) On this day children, bake cookies and cakes in honor of the Three Wise Men. This day is exactly twelve days after Christmas, another Christian
Most people would probably not associate these two seasons together, but while they have their differences, they also share similarities. First, both the Christmas season and Carnival season are around five weeks long. The Christmas season starts the day after Thanksgiving and ends on December 25th. There are no set dates for Carnival
There is no doubt that Christmas is a religious event but nowadays Christmas becomes more commercialized, as it has been defined as a high consumption season because the gifts giving culture becomes the most important part of Christmas and the consumers want to please their children
Christmas can have many meaning to different people depending on how they interpret it. However, if looking at the Christian aspect of it. The
Holidays are an important part of every culture in the world. They are times of festivity where friends and family gather together to celebrate special events at different points of the year. Oftentimes these affairs aren’t limited to a single day and each country has their own set of specific rituals that they perform to commemorate the occasion. Many holidays also have religious origins that are a mix of Christian and pagan beliefs.
Such as, the Holiday of “Easter” the painting of the eggs and the finding of the eggs, relates to Jesus Christ’s resurrection from death. After reading Paganism, I learned that “Easter” is a holiday not only celebrates the resurrection of Jesus, but a holiday of the Spring Equinox. Easter is a goddess known for fertility. In German she is called Ostara and in Anglo-Saxons she is known as Eostre. It’s celebrated the balance of light and darkness and the arrival of spring a renewal of the life force. In which, would explain why the Holy Roman Church would choose that date for Christ’s resurrection, so the people could not practice their religion. However, it didn’t stop the people because it’s we still practice paganism tradition that’s taken place today.
Most of Kevin’s family is Lutheran and because of this they make Christmas and Easter huge events. During the whole month of December, Kevin’s family home has Christmas everywhere you turn, with decorations, Christmas trees, and nativity scenes everywhere in their house. In a ways, they almost bleed Christmas and it culminates with the family going to Christmas Eve service and then having a large Christmas Eve feast with many members of the family attending. They then end the holiday by going to the Christmas service at their church and eating the leftovers of the feast from the night before. Easter happens in the exact same way except Kevin’s family goes for the more religious aspect of the holiday then what they do with Christmas because they believe that it is with Easter that their faith is strengthened and can be supported with evidence. Even though food is a big part of his family traditions around the holidays, there is not central dish that accompanies every holiday meal. For the most part it is the basics of ham, potatoes and other traditional holiday food that his family
The reality of full churches and choir stalls, lively Sunday schools, and overflowing basements is dead in today's Church. The unexpected has happened. Christ's followers, gripped by fear, are now scattered, or remain silent. Parishes, at worst, carry on blindly, or at best, look for comfortable compromises and expediency. They ignore cultural diversity in general. The rhetoric of denial continues to pour out of parish bulletins, newsletters, and diocesan and national journals. It is status quo.
We celebrate Christmas holidays and Easter holidays. However, there is a third holiday, a third observance, a third sacred event that is just as central to our understanding of what it means to be a Christian and what it means to belong to the church.
The holidays have sprung upon us. There is a chill in the air. In some places, the ground covered with snow. It is a time where stores are filled with candy canes, Christmas trees, and chocolate Santas. When you look at storefronts there may be snowflakes in the windows, or Christmas trees in your local malls. Christmas, it seems so magical to most, it’s the holiday most know. However, there are some who celebrate Hanukkah or Kwanza, or they just belong to a different culture and their holidays are filled with their own traditions. For some, December is not marked by going to a tree filled the parking lot, inhaling that pleasant smell of pine, while searching for the perfect tree. Instead, their December starts with a tradition not as widely
As aforementioned, the initial true meaning of Christmas is religion - one that has now been muchly downplayed. Of course at first glance religion is only an important element of Christmas for those who are actually religious, for which then religion plays the dominant role of what Christmas is to them. However, religion means to show obligation to something through faith, it could be argued that the majority of society is actually religious. We follow a society which has