Christmas is our shortest season--often there is only one Sunday between December 25, Christmas Day, and January 6, the Feast of the Epiphany.
Christmas is the season when we become a complete Christian family on earth, as God himself comes to earth in the form of a child.
Christmas is a season of great joy:
the child that God promised would save the world from its sins was born
on Christmas Day after hundreds of years of waiting. But even as we celebrate
the birth of this one special baby, the Baby Jesus,
we remember the children who were killed by King Herod.
When the Wise Men asked Herod where
they could find the child who was born to become the King of the Jews, Herod
became worried, because he already had a small son whom he wanted to become
the King of Israel.
So Herod ordered that all the babies younger than his own son should be
killed, so his son would be sure to inherit the kingdom from his father
when he grew up. An angel warned Joseph
of the danger in a dream, so Joseph took Mary and
the Baby Jesus to Egypt to keep them safe. But on the Slaughter of the Holy
Innocents, we remember all those babies who were killed.
The first Festival Day of the season is Christmas Day itself.
The second special day we observe during the Christmas season is the Name of Jesus on January 1. The Baby Jesus was circumcised in a Jewish ceremony called a bris when he was eight days old and given the name Jesus, which is the name the angel Gabriel told Mary to give him.
Christmas is a special time to celebrate the love of God who came to earth as an infant to live the complete life of a regular person, to be with us and to be one of us. It is a season of children, celebrating new life and the hope of a savior for the world.
We often celebrate the season with Lessons and Carols on Christmas Eve.
The color of Christmas is white.